Showing posts with label beauty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beauty. Show all posts

Friday, May 10, 2019

My Mother Is Beautiful.

It's something I've heard all my life: "Your mother is so pretty."

There was a little boy in a department store who thought she looked like Eva Gabor. Might have been Zsa Zsa, but the kid was referencing Green Acres, I am pretty sure. I've heard Kim Novak suggested, too, and I personally think she's a little closer to target.

She has delicate features and lovely skin and a smile that warms the coldest room like a roaring fireplace. She has sparkling brown eyes a suitor once proclaimed "like pools of black ink." (He was not a poet.)

Her sartorial style is elegant and tasteful. She favors classics in beautiful colors and a vintage rhinestone brooch to sparkle alongside her.
Her sparkle wins. Every time.

These are all lovely attributes, but they don't constitute my mom's beauty. There is so much more than meets the eye when you're talking about an entirely beautiful person.

To see beyond, you'd have to know about the little girl in her Sunday School class years ago, who had perfectly serviceable parents of her own, but chose my mother to cling to constantly and regard as hers.
Because she saw Mom's heart.

You have to know about the ladybug houses she helped my Cousin Debi build, the adventures and projects she concocted to entertain an entire generation of my family.

About her fried baloney sandwiches made especially for my Cousin Hal.

About her incredible musicianship at a baby grand piano, and how she encouraged me to sing along even though cats have sounded better in midnight alleys.

She can produce an oil painting of flowers so detailed and vivid, they've been proudly displayed in other people's homes for generations.
She was about sixteen when she painted those roses.

You have to see her completing a crossword puzzle containing words no normal person has ever heard.
In record time. In ink.

You have to witness her love affair with books, which has translated into an astounding body of knowledge and a curiosity that is never sated.

Her lady in Publix who waits for her with a smile and a hug every time, or countless other people in countless other stores she frequents who light up when she walks in.
They call her by name.
They remember her because she's kind and they've witnessed that kindness over and over.

She is an extraordinary grandmother who took our toddler son into a North Carolina creek daily to move rocks that probably didn't need moving, but it was their project. Together.

Her granddaughter remembers Gran taking her downstairs to her meticulously tended garden at night to pay a magical, candlelit visit to a frog.

And I remember my mom, reading Hiawatha to me at bedtime, holding my hand through every joyful and heartbreaking thing in my life, building me up, making me laugh, constantly teaching kindness, thoughtfulness, thank you notes, generosity, and graciousness. 

She is love, in one lovely package.

My mother is beautiful.
Yours is, too, whether she's by your side or in your heart.

Happy Mother's Day.

One of my all time favorite photos: My mother with her mother and a couple of questionable characters




Love from Delta.

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Hope In A Jar



There are no better cosmetics than a severe temperance and purity, modesty and humility, a gracious temper and calmness of spirit; and there is no true beauty without the signatures of these graces in the very countenance.
  - Arthur Helps
  
     Okay, but I like my mascara. Most of the time. As I contemplated the oversized wand of my latest lash enhancer this morning (it looks appropriate for Mrs. Jolly Green Giant or perhaps Shrek's beloved Fiona), I wondered how other women feel about their cosmetics. For instance, a new mascara always holds great promise when I bring it home—my most recent purchase was Almay, which lured me with "light interplay technology" but mostly because it's hypoallergenic. I wear contacts and that is hugely important. After my tube of "intense i-color" and I have shared a couple of weeks, I am getting frustrated with clumpiness and gloppiness as usual.

     Don't get me wrong: I've dallied with the best Estee Lauder potions and sampled the wares of Prescriptives, Laura Mercier, Smashbox and countless other pricey options. I usually end up back at Walgreen's, trying to decide whether to embrace Great Lash once more or date a new make-up brand for a while. (Only to break up . . . possibly after breaking out . . . later.)

    I get just as giddy as you do in Sephora, and love trying on all sorts of exciting new stuff. Invariably I am reminded of Charles Revson's words, though: "In the factory we make cosmetics; in the drugstore we sell hope."

     I have watched a friend purchase wrinkle-releasing cream for $45.00 in Nordstrom's, asking for my reassurance that indeed, her crow's feet did look diminished after the saleslady applied it. (They didn't—but I would be the last person ever to rain on anyone's skin potion parade.)

     Faith Hill said, "I think beauty comes from within. If you're happy and look at life in the best way you can, even when there are problems, it can make you beautiful on the outside."

     This is easy to say when you have Faith's genes, but I think she's right. However, I have found similar statements by emaciated supermodels earning $15,000.00 per day mighty irritating. I'm guessing Naomi Campbell thinks she is gorgeous even when she's beating an assistant with her cell phone, no matter what she might proclaim about inner beauty and sweetness enhancing her features.



     




I entered the cosmetics industry because I wanted more women to use cosmetics made with safe, healthful ingredients. 
Gloria Swanson





     


     Well, she was certainly ready for her close-up.

     Back to mascara. One reason I am writing this is to conduct an informal poll of my female friends (and any males who happen to wear make-up). What mascara do you use, and why? What is your favorite item in the drugstore's beauty aisle? From department stores? Do you have any at-home secrets to share? Just post your answers in comments, or email me at bethidee@gmail.com if you prefer to keep things private.

     If we garner sufficient wisdom and advice, I'll compile it in a future blog in which all will be revealed.

     Just don't tell me all I have to do is smile. Puh-leeze.






 Love from Delta.
 

Thursday, March 10, 2011

You Are So Beautiful.



“The innocent and the beautiful have no enemy but time.”

-William Butler Yeats

 

This is definitely one of the most adorable little girl pictures I've ever seen. She was photographed around 1900 in Pennsylvania, the very picture of innocence. What a precious image . . . I love the way she's tenderly cradling that rose.

I have no idea who she was, or what her life was like. I like to think she grew into an exquisite young woman who had the world at her feet. She certainly looks like she might have.


“A witty woman is a treasure; a witty beauty is a power.”

This is my all-time favorite beauty quotation. It is attributed to George Meredith, a brilliant English poet and novelist who 
lived from 1828 to 1909.

George was really smart. I'll bet he got on with the ladies very well.

That's "Beauty's Altar" you see above. It was pretty racy in 1910 (still is). I'll bet old George would have deeply appreciated her wit if he'd still been around. 

Of course, George also said this: I expect that Woman will be the last thing civilized by Man.”
I will politely ignore that. 







This is actress Helen Mirren at the age of sixty-four (two years ago).
"How old would you be if you didn't know how old you were?"  ~Satchel Paige

That's another favorite of mine, and my ninety-five-year-old grandmother's, as well.  I think Helen thinks she's about forty, and more power to her - she's right. She is out-and-out gorgeous. Russell Brand, of all people, has admitted to a teeny obsession with her.
And he's married to Katy Perry. No slouch in the beauty department, either.

Everything is beautiful in its own way
Like a starry summer night
Or a snow-covered winter's day
And everybody's beautiful, in their own way
Under God's Heaven
The world's gonna find a way
- Ray Stevens
Ray said it very well.
 
 Check out this poster from 1896. 
Rice's "Beautiful Evangeline"
 was indeed beautiful.
 
 
 
 
I know a lot of beautiful women. I know a lot of beautiful, witty women.
Many of them are in my own family. I would like to post photos of every single one, but that's impossible.
So . . . as space and photo availability permit, here are a few. (If you are related to me and not pictured here, it's because you're just too beautiful to appear in public.)
 


Obviously, I count some very beautiful women among my friends, too. You know who you are. Like I said, just too beautiful to appear in public (and too numerous to picture on one page).

Here's to amazing, wonderful, pretty, witty, ageless, inspiring, smart, funny, creative, loving, warm, terrific women everywhere.

I leave you with an eloquent tribute by Alabama's very own Taylor Hicks. 




Love from Delta.