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Beauty blabber

MYSTERY GUEST

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Abhilasha Ojha New Delhi
Last Updated : Feb 05 2013 | 12:50 AM IST
Is a trip to the salon really as relaxing as it is made out to be?
 
You need two things when you hit a beauty salon: money (lots of it) and patience (in abundance). After spending three hours at a beauty salon, I realise I lack patience, and whatever money I had has been spent on a face that is "dry, dull with fine lines and prone to pimples, white heads, black heads..."
 
But let's go back to the beginning. Perturbed by some recent remarks made by a friend ("Pamper yourself. What are you earning for?") and an elderly family member ("Why do you work? Sit at home and work, and pamper yourself"), I trudge to Limelite, a unisex beauty salon in the NCR. It's a spectacularly clean salon, very spacious, with an excellent staff who greet me with wide smiles and a glass of water.
 
They proceed to show me a "rate card" with different treatments including a chocolate facial. But the one for me is skin lightening facial treatment, because, "your face is too tanned".
 
"Your face is very dark, madam. You don't take care at all?" asks beautician No. 2. "I don't get the time," I say coldly, to which she adds, "Looking at your face, no one will believe you earn so much money. You should find the time to take care of your skin."
 
Some time later, a hairdresser, holding a clump of my hair, tells me my hairstyle, "is hopeless" and can be saved only if I get hair colour, followed by a quick wash, a special conditioner and hair serum.
 
"The shampoo and conditioner," I'm told, "are available at the salon". With my hair in a "colouring" mess, I find a five-year-old kid quietly staring at me, as if he's found an alien sitting on a throne.
 
Is there anything right about me? "Oh, no. Why are your fingernails not shaped?" whines another girl, who's getting ready to give me a manicure. By now the word "patience" has vanished from my dictionary and I'm wondering why people refer to a salon trip as a "relaxing experience"?
 
Having wiped off one-third of my salary in three hours, and finding out that, genetically speaking, my skin loves to burst into pimples, I head home with a new hairstyle, a "lightened" face and neatly painted fingernails. At home, my mother opens the door, looks at me lovingly and says, "Hi, bad day at work?"

 
 

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First Published: Apr 08 2007 | 12:00 AM IST

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