Ladies, Are You Afraid to Let a Man See You Without Makeup? Men, Do You Ever Wish You Could Wear Something to Cover Acne? (Skin Problems.)

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Subhumanoidal

Well-known member
Sep 17, 2018
4,044
3,147
113
#41
I had a greasy face as a teen. So I had my share of pimples. In my early 20s i still got an occasional one. But that didn't last very long. Since then I've not had any real skin problems, except a little eczema on my leg recently.
I've never been super worried about trying to look attractive. Didn't really feel I ever was very good looking anyways.
Now I have a long scar across my throat, my mouths a bit off kilter, especially noticeable when I talk, missing a lot of teeth, a crappy, scraggly goatee, eye shape (not eyeballs) don't match, as well as the eyelids look quite different so one eye looks more open than the other, I tend towards saggy and/or dark below my eyes, my nose is crooked, nostrils different shapes and sizes, neck looks a little thin and is quite sunken in, another little scar at the bottom of my throat, my cheeks are different shapes and stick out at different levels, red swelling on part of my face... stomach area has multiple smaller scars and one long scar... I think that's all or most of it.
I also wear a mask when out in public, not for getting or giving illness, but due to another issue that could be embarrassing. And I use a crutch to walk. Not to mention I tend to hunch over and it's getting worse.
I've had the crutch 8 years. The dark/saggy eyes most of my life, and used to have a crooked nose, but it was fixed a number of years back, so it's off again. Hunching started years ago. Everything else has only been the past two years.
So do I worry about wearing makeup? Nope haha. Do I worry about my appearance as a single? A little, but not too much. Nothing I can do to change it. If it's a problem to someone then they can move on.

As far as women's appearance, I'm not a fan of dating women that use makeup. A little might be ok, but I'd prefer none. So I don't have someone that looks great when I meet them and looks bad when the makeup comes off. Also hate the time it takes to do all the makeup, or them being afraid to leave the house without it.
If others want makeup or need it, that's fine. I'm not going to say anything to them.
And, of course, if using makeup for special occasions doesn't bother me.

I want to be accepted as I look and I want to accept someone for a relationship for how they look. So much simpler that way.
 

Kireina

Well-known member
Aug 26, 2020
1,474
1,391
113
#42
There was a guy I dated on the first day I wore make up (I went to a parlor to do it for me,I don't know how to put make up on my face) same like on the second date...😅

On the last day I met him with no make up lol I got tired of it. Good thing when he saw me again he still appeared excited to see me and then the rest is history 😅
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,121
9,216
113
#44
Attractiveness is in the eye of the attracted. Who is providing the data for that graph? Did you conduct the surveys in high school locker rooms?
 

shineyourlight

Senior Member
May 25, 2015
6,149
850
113
#46
I barely ever wear makeup.
As I've gotten older, I just don't want to spend 30 minutes of my morning applying it.
 

Tazzo

New member
Jul 21, 2024
29
24
3
#47
Actually I would rather want men to see me without makeup. If I would ever find someone, I wish he would like me without makeup too, because that is who I am most of the time.
If we first woul meet up when I would have full set of makeup, dolled up (which I do not know how to do anyway..), then wouldn't there be the time he would see me without it and of course I would look different...

If I wear make up, it is masara and a bit of highligher in the corner of my eyes, maybe fill my eyebrows a little. And basically I am too lazy to put makeup on on daily basis, or even monthly.

There was a time I would not even go to a nearby grocerystore without a shield of makeup, which looked horrible by the way :LOL: All the eyeliner and such..
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,121
9,216
113
#48
Actually I would rather want men to see me without makeup. If I would ever find someone, I wish he would like me without makeup too, because that is who I am most of the time.
If we first woul meet up when I would have full set of makeup, dolled up (which I do not know how to do anyway..), then wouldn't there be the time he would see me without it and of course I would look different...

If I wear make up, it is masara and a bit of highligher in the corner of my eyes, maybe fill my eyebrows a little. And basically I am too lazy to put makeup on on daily basis, or even monthly.

There was a time I would not even go to a nearby grocerystore without a shield of makeup, which looked horrible by the way :LOL: All the eyeliner and such..
Howdy and welcome to the Forum.

That's one thing I've wondered a lot. If a guy gets used to you with makeup, and you eventually marry him, do you have to keep it up the rest of your life?

That could become tedious, not to mention expensive!
 

Tazzo

New member
Jul 21, 2024
29
24
3
#49
Howdy and welcome to the Forum.

That's one thing I've wondered a lot. If a guy gets used to you with makeup, and you eventually marry him, do you have to keep it up the rest of your life?

That could become tedious, not to mention expensive!

Thanks for the welcome :D

Oh, it is like from, I can't remember what it was, movie or something;
wife would wake up before her husband and wash up, brush her hair and teeth and put makeup on, then go back to bed and "wake up" with him so her husband would not see her bare face.

I have seen that in few places, don't know if it is satire or something though.. but who actually would do that, what if she is sick, would she still put makeup on? But each to their own, maybe some would enjoy that. ..like you said; for how long, even in the grandma age? :unsure:
And yeah, it would cost a lot too.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
27,121
9,216
113
#50
Thanks for the welcome :D

Oh, it is like from, I can't remember what it was, movie or something;
wife would wake up before her husband and wash up, brush her hair and teeth and put makeup on, then go back to bed and "wake up" with him so her husband would not see her bare face.

I have seen that in few places, don't know if it is satire or something though.. but who actually would do that, what if she is sick, would she still put makeup on? But each to their own, maybe some would enjoy that. ..like you said; for how long, even in the grandma age? :unsure:
And yeah, it would cost a lot too.
Okay, add tiring to the list. That woman would get very short on sleep.
 

melita916

Senior Member
Aug 12, 2011
10,463
2,689
113
#51
I’ve only worn make up about 4 times in my life, and someone else applied it to me because I don’t know anything about it lol.

Now that I’m older, I’m considering some kind of easy routine because… this face doesn’t look like it used to 🫠😂
 

enril

Active member
Aug 18, 2024
366
167
43
15
#52
Hey Everyone,

It's no secret that some women don't look like themselves anymore after getting "all dolled up," especially if it's in a photograph that uses today's extreme filters:



Now there is no doubt this woman looks beautiful in both of the above picture. But the topic I want to talk about is when someone is suffering from skin issues, such as acne, rosacea, eczema, psoriasis, seborrheic dermatitis, etc.

As someone who has dealt with almost all of these issues on her face over the years, sometimes all at once (my current doctor and dermatologist disagree as to what I'm battling right now,) I also know the "magic" that makeup can do for one's confidence when going out in public:





Especially after going through a worldwide pandemic, going out and looking like you have a terrible affliction does not go over well in public spaces. Human beings are visual creatures, and usually distracted (and critical) of someone visibly looking like they have a serious illness. I've read about some instances where people (or their kids) have conditions like psoriasis on other larger, visible areas of the body (hands and arms, for instance,) people think they have a contagious disease and will refuse to have any contact with or even sit near them.

Now I know the first thing most will say is, "Wash your face!" or "Your skin would clear up if you didn't wear all that makeup!" And my plea would be to please, get to know that person and their story before making that judgment or offering "advice."

As a chronic sufferer of such conditions, my own experience is that it really depends. OF COURSE poor hygiene and/or the wrong products (or ones that have ingredients you are sensitive to) will make it worse. But during a time when I worked from home, I was able to go without makeup most days of the week and my skin only got worse (mostly due to the cold AND dryness from indoor heating, which for me, always causes my skin to get worse.)

Even the people I've met from CC have seen the difference in person -- I wash off all my makeup as soon as I can at the end of the day, and they were able to witness the angry red patches I was enduring at the time. But, not wanting to look like I'm diseased when I go out in public, I choose the best makeup (highest quality, least irritating ingredients) I can afford, use as light of a coating as I can to make myself look human, then wash it off as soon as I get home.

Right now I'm blessed to be in a somewhat hot and humid environment, so I only have a few isolated red patches, but as soon as I'm back in the cold, my skin will resemble the "before" pictures in the examples above.

Would I be afraid of a potential date seeing me without makeup? Absolutely, especially if we were just getting to know each other. But it's certainly not something I would hide and would accept whatever reaction he had (even if that meant flat-out rejection.) I recently read a heartbreaking account of a woman whose husband insisted she wear makeup all the time at home, because he was "sick of seeing red spots" if she didn't wear it.

On the flipside, I've always felt sorry for men with the same issues, because they don't have socially acceptable way of covering it:



Many years ago, I remember seeing a young man waiting in line at a theme park on a blistering hot day whose entire face looked like this. I was praying for him the whole time, because I knew firsthand how incredibly painful it must be, both physically and socially -- and, heartbreakingly, men don't have an option to try to cover it up, as women do.

* Do you have skin problems, or know others who do? What kinds of doctors and treatments have you been through? What worked and what didn't?

* Ladies, do you use makeup to hide redness, flare-ups, and/or scars, especially in public? Are you afraid of people seeing you without your makeup? Why or why not?

* At what stage in the dating process would you be willing to allow a potential date to see you without makeup?

* Gentlemen, what would you think if your date showed up in her natural skin, and it looked like the "before" pictures above? Ladies, are you turned off when men suffer with acne or other skin problems?

* Men, do you ever wish there was a way to cover your own skin imperfections?

I'm looking forward to an interesting, and hopefully, compassionate discussion. 🌹
I know a few girls, and a few of them especially, but all of them to a certian degree, look less attractive with more than a tiny bit of makeup. I think that makeup is a good thing, as just a tiny bit can enhance you, but, and I noticed this for one of my friends that I dance with sometimes, sometimes at dances she has no perceptible makeup, but at formaler ones she has enogh i can tell, and it actually makes her look washed out, a bit fake, and much less attractive.
so my view is, barely any, girls.

as for men, i get a bit of acne, and brief acne like skin if i run at all, but i dont really care, mostly, having longer hair, i can cover it if i want to, and it doesnt last more than a few days anyway.
 

Pipp

Majestic Llamacorn
Sep 17, 2013
5,542
2,720
113
Georgia
#53
Naw I'm not afraid. If he can't handle me at my under the bridge troll look.... he doesn't deserve me at my... under the bridge troll with makeup on look ;)
 

Tazzo

New member
Jul 21, 2024
29
24
3
#54
Naw I'm not afraid. If he can't handle me at my under the bridge troll look.... he doesn't deserve me at my... under the bridge troll with makeup on look ;)

Funny ..but accurately relatable! :LOL: