Saturday, April 3

Beauty Shooty Hay Rabba

“So, Anuja cannot be beautiful.”

“That’s right.”

“Anuja can be everything but beautiful.”

“Yup. I can be pretty, attractive… but not beautiful.”

“Hmm”

I remember this dialogue a year ago between me and Bhanu at the ISABS lab in Goa.

A slightly modified version would have me saying the exact same lines to someone who would not control his/her frustration and anger as well as Guru B. Something that goes like this…

“WHY can’t you believe that you are beautiful?”
“Just ya… I don’t think I am beautiful.”
“Hell, I’m telling you! You ARE beautiful.”
“Ok. Whatever you say.”
“Humph… This is irritating you know…”

While I coerce people to accept graciously any compliment that is given to them, I myself find it very hard to concede and appreciate anybody who calls me beautiful. Surely, that person is only saying it to make me happy. I ain’t beautiful! In fact, I’d go as far as to say that beauty lies in most things and persons excepting me.

You tell me - Beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder. Yup, heard that before. Generally, I am the first one to point out the loveliness in almost anything and everything. God’s an artist, and nothing He creates could possibly be bad.

The modern version of the saying is Beauty lies in the eyes of the beer holder. Some witty guy. LOL.

But back to square one, I AM NOT BEAUTIFUL.

You ask me why? Well, I’ve got an issue with that very word. It’s almost like the word “beautiful” is an insult to me. It’s right on the opposite side of the spectrum that I have been and wish to be.

“I can be attractive,” I say, “not beautiful.”

Schoolmates and relatives have drilled into me since my baby years that “Anuja is NOT beautiful”, even bordering on “Anuja is ugly.” In a country that considers fairness the biggest omen of gorgeousness, obviously a dark-skinned girl like me was bound to be looked upon as unappealing. I was never plain, thanks to my mother’s sharp features, but my dad’s color that I inherited went against me when I made friends in school. I still recall vividly being teased as “Kaali” (=black) by more than a few classmates during my schooldays, and matters became worse when I started wearing glasses owing to poor eyesight in standard 6th. Discrimination on the basis of color and caste began right then for me, which is why I do not feel very upset when I hear about the fate of Indians in distant America and Australia.

I saw my fair-skinned peers being favored and proposed to, and always wished that I was the same skin tone as my mom and brother. Maybe that would make me popular. Maybe that would make people around me gawk with admiration and not whisper in amusement. It really hurt. Can’t tell you how much. I didn’t run to the store for Fair and Lovely, but I sure cursed God for not making me as exquisite as I wished.

My mum says she was extremely dark as a child. (You wouldn’t believe her if you’ve seen her! God, she’s a goddess! So dainty and delicate and magnificent.) She kept telling me that she was dark then and then her skin became fair as the years passed. Initially I thought she was saying it to make me more optimistic and reduce my misery. But now, I think it’s true. Most people have come up to me and stated without mincing words that I’ve become unbelievably pretty and fair. While I shrug modestly, they keep telling me I look alluring. And you know what I say in return…

And you know what they say after that…

Routine.

But then, after too many folks had expressed annoyance over my unpleasant reaction, I finally decided that maybe it was time I stopped making God feel bad for having made me the way he did. Frankly, I don’t care two-pence about my looks now, coz I know I am way better than most dames out there in almost every way. Try finding some woman who has intelligence, a good heart without ill-will, sensibility, care, dependability, love, generosity, resourcefulness, humor, objectivity, passion, knowledge, enthusiasm, good sense of music and dance and dressing, adaptability AND a face and body half as good as mine – altogether.

Yes, I do have a raging temper, but anybody will tell you that it’s extremely easy to get on my nerves and easier still to get back on the right side. Nobody’s perfect. I almost am…

So, you see, somebody who is so nice on the inside, definitely looks good on the outside.

I AM BEAUTIFUL.

:-)

And so are you…

Cheerio!
Princess

8 comments:

sumant said...

:) the world is too color obsessed..how you feel about yourself also affects how you look. if you feel that you're gorgeous, then you are ! but personally i feel its just a trival matter which always seems to take the centre stage in all those women centric talks... and not guys definitelly

Unknown said...

You should simply bang up anybody who says anything of this kind to you.

Segragating people on the basis of color, class, sex and I add BEAUTY is apartheid. And we from the land of Gandhi dont need to tolerate it. Just bang them up..... Royally!!!!

Princess said...

Hi Sumant,

I must admit I've heard more than a few guys say they prefer dusky women than fair girls. Yet when they marry, don't they look out for "gori, sundar" ladkiya?!! It's so hypocritical. Some of the most attractive women I've met are NOT fair. But that's my opinion, anyway...

Thanks for commenting.

Cheerio!
Anuja

Princess said...

Hey Ranu,

So nice to see you again! I think I'll just ignore the folks we're talking about. They're not worth acknowledging, forget banging up. But anytime you need extra fists, gime a ping ;-)

Thanks for commenting. Good day!

Cheerio!
Anuja

Parimaula said...

Dealing with color discrimination is an art. A senior friend of mine, being extremely dark faced a lot of what you have gone through during his school, college and later days. However, his upbringing was such that he never used to give a damn about his looks and used to live is life completely bindaas.

My personal analysis: during the whole process of growing up amidst the atmosphere of color favoritism, his thinking abilities grew way beyond others so did his emotional intelligence skills. He became very popular amongst his friends and then amongst a larger circle and also in the corporate world.

An opportunity in disguise...many people who live in the illusion of favoritism instead of using their abilities fall short of being truly successful at some or other point in their life.

Me being fair and good looking (i mean i was during college days :) ) was able to analyze it pretty well. It is always better to succeed based on true abilities...because in the long run what matters is how capable you are.

Quite a long comment :)

And yeah...be the way you are right now...that will set an example for the not so fair looking girls on how to carry themselves without bothering about any discrimination

Parimal

Princess said...

Hey folks,

I'm reading Palace of Illusions by Chitra Divakaruni again. And I stumbled upon Draupadi's frustration with her own color. She was extremely dark, and all the more sensual bcoz of that. Why, the entire Kaurava and Pandava clan lusted for her, and she was called the Dark Beauty. In fact, her other name is Krishnaa - the dark one.

In an age and community that only hails milk and almond hues, us women with a darker tan are alternatively criticized and admired. Guess it's finally our own acceptance and love for our complexion that can make the difference in our self-perception.

Besides, as Krishna told Dro - "A problem becomes a problem only if you believe it to be so. Often others see you as you see yourself."

Sane perspective :)

Cheerio!
Anuja

rashmi said...

omg ! ! ! trust me . . . yu spoke my heart. . .

Princess said...

Hey Rashmi,

I know you're beautiful.... and shall always be :)

Do keep reading and commenting. Good to hear from you!

Cheers!
Princess

Shadow

He looked at her like she was the air he breathed, Without, he would collapse.  He lived to see her smile, Her dimples, his prized possessio...