We who with songs beguile your pilgrimage / And swear that Beauty lives though lilies die, / We Poets of the proud old lineage / Who sing to find your hearts, we know not why ... (James Elroy Flecker)

21.4.25

Looking Into the Lens

 

‘Do you think I look like a clown?’ I mean to ask my chiropractor today. Because she's a sweetie and she tells truths. 


I am an old lady still wearing make-up, because that is what I’ve always done. But I see the other painted old ladies and notice the incongruity between their cosmetics and their wrinkles. Would I be better to leave the colours off? Leave the bare face to exist quietly, fading into the background? It’s not that the make-up makes us look young. 


To make something up is to tell a lie, isn’t it? When I was very young, I told truths and was disbelieved. There were things I saw which others didn't. Fairies at the bottom of my garden ... They thought I made it up. 


No-one thinks my make-up on my face is telling the truth; I’m sure they never did. And yet we speak of ‘bare-faced lies’! 


I meant to ask my chiropractor, but I forgot. We had other things to discuss. Her mother here for a visit, how to ride a boogie board at 80, the exact location of my pain ... that her mother’s mother lived to 102.


Afterwards I take a couple of selfies instead. But it won’t be a true test. I know that the made-up face looks better in photos than my elderly skin. Also I pose the image for best effect. (I know, you see, that I’m really un-beautiful. The girl within me knows how deeply this matters.)


‘Hello, lovely,’ she greeted me. I thought, of course, she referred to the fact that she likes me. We have a rapport. Now I allow myself to wonder. Did she mean she likes the way I look? Does she see what I cannot see?


Lightning flashes outside. The warning app on my phone crackles. I’m glad I don’t have to walk around out there now. I’m glad to be safely back home with my old face, painted or not. And with a cessation of pain.


The wallpaper on my screen is a bare, dead tree I used to love. I passed it every time I drove to town. It had, I thought, a stark beauty. I’m glad I preserved it. I photographed it only a couple of days before it was felled to the ground by a lightning strike. 



NaPoWriMo Day Twenty-One


This wandered away from the prompt – except for being a prose poem, which was the bit that wasn't specifically requested anyway. 



(With great restraint I resisted editing the selfies.)






Sharing with Poets and Storytellers United for Friday Writings #175: StormyWeather. Although not written for that prompt, it does  contain mention of stormy weather.



26 comments:

  1. This one resonates with me, Rosemary. I love the pondering about truth and lie, especially “No-one thinks my make-up on my face is telling the truth; I’m sure they never did. And yet we speak of ‘bare-faced lies’!” and how the thunderstorm takes over.

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    1. I let my mind ramble, and then tried to weave various non-sequiturs into a coherent whole. I'm glad I managed to make it meaningful.

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  2. I liked the conversational tone of this, and the thoughts around what is beauty, and does it need dressing up and how that leads to your love of the bare tree with its stark beauty. I've read the poem a few times now and just love it.

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  3. "(I know, you see, that I’m really un-beautiful. The girl within me knows how deeply this matters.)"💔

    You're breaking my heart, Rosemary. The girls inside us always see the worst in themselves. You're lovely.💜

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    1. Thank you, my dear! I wasn't half fishing, of course. (Grin.) But the girl inside will probably never quite be convinced.

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  4. It's a very thoughtful treatment of a subject people may dismiss as superficial. We all have to put on some kind of face to meet the faces that we meet, so to speak. I have long been too lazy for makeup, but doubt that reflects well on me. When I look at your selfies, the one on the left looks like you're looking at your phone & the one on the right looks like you're looking at me (or any other viewer) & I warm to that. It seems all is right when people look you in the eye, even though you aren't really doing that. We're all makers of a kind, yes? Thanks for the thought-provoking post.

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  5. You look beautiful with or without makeup- and long may you enjoy knowing you speak the truth as well - Jae

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    1. Thanks, Jae. Now I'm reminded of Keats: "Beauty is truth, truth beauty.' Which is a beautiful thought!

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  6. You are beautiful. The inner beauty carries the day.

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  7. I like how you frame your thoughts around aging and how "lovely" takes on a new meaning. Also, the makeup is gently and artfully applied ... just enough dab of colour to enhance without masking the light within.

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    1. Ah, there's an interesting perspective, that make-up may mask 'the light within' – and I'm very glad to think I may have such light.

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  8. I like the thoughts expressed in this prose poem. Foreboding? No. Paranoid? Not really. Perhaps just a poem to celebrate life.

    There is a certain stark beauty in dead, bare trees. When I was in the Netherlands in the winter, I used to photograph these bare trees, marvel at their strength, that comes spring, green leaves will burst from those bare limbs again. Perhaps only poets are interested in dead trees. 😅

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    1. Well, I think poets are kind of hard-wired to perceive beauty wherever it may be found.

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  9. Oh Rosemary, this is a beautiful barefaced truth about how we cover up our pride....so beautifully and truthfully written. Loved it and loved your pic too bringing the calmness of knowing it all.

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  10. She sees every inch of you, inside / outside. Your lovely essence, your beautiful smile, your spirt, energy, caring nature, generosity, creativity ~~~ as all your fans do!!!!!

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  11. Aww, thank you, Helen! (I have fans?!!!)

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    1. I found the missing haiku in a book of poems I self-published:
      Parked in a downpour
      My breasts timidly exposed
      Gentle hands fumble

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    2. Thank you. I think it's sweet! Also excellently crafted: 'timidly' and 'fumble' perfectly conveying the awkward youthful inexperience of both parties. And it gives me gentle amusement that we prolific poets have to go hunting to find things we've written in the past.

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  12. Loved this. What is beauty in the final analysis? And what is truth? I loved your style of writing as well. I believe, I should be able to carry myself well with or without make up it any other masquerade. Confidence and conviction. That's it

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    1. Thank you. And yes – reading this comment, I'm reminded that when I was in my early teens going to school dances, my dad advised me that boys would be more interested in asking me to dance if I looked happy and confident rather than shy and self-conscious.

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  13. I can relate well to this one. I still wear makeup, trying not to look
    in the mirror with my glasses on. We don't fool anyone, but if it
    makes us feel good, it's worth it. I love the addition of the bare tree's beauty.

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    1. Thank you. It's so nice to be so perfectly understood!

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