The
Illustrated Discovery Journal: Creating a Visual Autobiography of Your
Authentic Self
by Sarah Ban Breathnach
Chapter 1
Authentic
Style
Style is something
peculiar to one person;
it expresses one personality and one only;
it cannot be shared.
—freya stark
"a note on style" (1942)
One of the truths I learned on my Simple
Abundance journey is that you cannot begin the search for
authenticity, you cannot embark on a spiritual path within, and not see it
reflected on the outside. We're talking about style, fitness, and beauty.
Girl talk. Sister stuff. Soul speak. Chick concerns. The eternal question:
How do I look?
Let's start by making a quick cliché
collage. Flip through your magazines and catalogs and cut out the images
that embody style to you. Think about how you'd like to look. Money is no
problem. You can have any body, any clothes, and any hairstyle. This
collage should be your cosmic wish list. So cut out the most flattering
designer clothes you want, the long legs you always dreamed of having, the
eighteen-inch waist, and the cute, perfect nose. Select a few accessories,
perhaps some shoes, and a few great haircuts. Paste them all down on the
page.
Now step back. Do any of the women in the
collage resemble you? Is your body, age, shoes, bank balance, or hairstyle
reflected in the ones you see there? Or does looking at the collage only
remind you (as if you need it) that there's a big gap between how you want
to look and how you actually do? Mine did. But instead of being depressed,
I got excited. So should you. Suddenly, at least I had an inkling of what
the inner woman looked like. She had been a stranger for decades, and it
was wonderful to make her acquaintance.
Remember that you are on the hunt for your
authentic style, so eighteen-year-old professional models don't work as
role models. Instead, become your own reality model. You're going to learn
to dress, exercise, and style your Authentic Self. If you can learn to do
that while enjoying both the process and the result, you'll discover that
you're dying to show yourself off.
Doesn't that sound great?
Yes, you think. Great. But is it possible?
I promise it is. If I made it down this
road, you can too. The hard part, as always, is getting over our hang-ups.
You have to turn your self-loathing into self-loving, and you have to stop
the lifelong habit of denying your intrinsic beauty. So many women suffer
from "looking-glass shame," which is what the English novelist
Virginia Woolf called the malady of self-loathing that breaks all our
hearts. Some person or event in our childhood marked us as plain, ugly, or
fat, and now we have a hard time seeing our real reflection. Instead, we
look at the faces and bodies in magazines and use their impossible,
airbrushed comeliness to feel even worse about our own.
Women have always tried either to flee from
the looking glass or to fool it. Archaeologists in Asia Minor have found
the burial sites of women filled with elaborate cosmetic enhancements. It
seems that the ancients too, from Egypt's first female pharaoh Hatshepsut
to Helen of Troy, felt compelled to conceal their true images,
camouflaging themselves even into the next world, comfortable neither here
nor in the Hereafter with who they really were.
I don't want to carry that burden one step
farther. I'm tired of spending so much energy fighting myself and avoiding
mirrors. Aren't you?
Starting today, if you can't be with the
body you love, be willing to love the body you're with. Declare a détente
with your imperfections and lay down the brutal artillery of
self-abuse—the potions, prayers, and punitive diets that bludgeon our
souls. The cosmetic artifice and extreme, customized correction. I'm not
suggesting that there isn't a place for hair color, makeup, and cosmetic
nipping and tucking on your way to authenticity if it's going to help
awaken you to your inner beauty. But I assure you that nothing will help
you get over looking-glass shame if the transformation doesn't begin from
within.
So let's start there.
If we are good to our bodies and spirits,
our Authentic Self not only will be closer to the surface, she'll be more
fun to dress. Being good to my own body always has been a tough one for
me, as it is for many women. One way to nurture yourself is to take care
of it. But when self-care becomes a chore, we give it up almost as soon as
we start a new eating plan or exercise program.
Make a collage of the physical activities
that make you feel joyous. When our bodies move and blood pumps in and out
of our hearts, our physical and spiritual selves are happy to be alive.
They rejoice. So even if you are adamantly opposed to the very notion of
exercise, like I was, let's try to think of some way to trick your body
into creative movement for a half-hour a few times a week.
Perhaps you enjoy playing doubles tennis
with your friends? Gardening? Walking in the beautiful park down the
street? Pushing your baby on the swing (a real biceps and triceps
workout)? Making love? If you have a hard time thinking of more than one
or two physical pleasures that delight you, think back to your childhood.
I loved to ride horses when I was a child, and only rediscovered the
passion when my daughter started taking riding lessons a few years ago. If
there's an activity you used to love but gave up at some point, perhaps
you should give it another try. The rewards are worth it.
Now that we've addressed the body and the
spirit, it's time to think about what we want to wear. When you're in a
department store, surrounded by a dizzying array of outfits of every
color, cut, and make, how do you know which outfit expresses your
authentic style? How do we know which one will be the most flattering? One
thing we do know: It rarely looks as good on us as it does on the
mannequin, an essential truth that can send even the strongest woman
reeling.
A good place to start looking for authentic
fashion clues is to pull out your photo albums and find the pictures that
reveal what you believe is the essential you. You'll recognize her
authentic gleam by a twinkle in the eye, a buoyant smile, the confident
angle of the girl's chin. Is she sassy? That's the one. Look for
photographs from when you were a child, a teen, and an adult. Make copies
of them and paste them into a collage. What were you wearing? What does
that indicate about who you were at the time? What were you doing? A
friend's favorite picture of herself shows her just after she decided to
undertake a project that had previously frightened her. After having
announced that momentous and exhilarating decision at a dinner party, she
looked up to find someone taking her picture. The photograph now hangs on
her refrigerator so she can see her powerful, beautiful Authentic Self
staring back at her.
Does this sound familiar? Don't you long to
revel in your own sense of majesty and importance? Don't you hunger to
rekindle that deeply felt desire for stopping traffic? Why shouldn't you
reclaim it?
Before your next shopping trip, this is
what I want you to do. Remember the glimmer in your six- or seven- or
eighteen-year-old eye, and make a collage of the type of outfits you'd
love to wear if you were sure that all you'd hear would be fabulous
compliments about how great you look. You're after something different,
offbeat, or dramatic. After you've completed this collage, prop the book
up so that you can become familiar with this showstopping woman. Now head
to a thrift or vintage clothing shop and pick out one piece of clothing or
an accessory that captures this secret you. For example, I adore vintage
hats, especially veiled ones, and I've collected quite a few. But I had to
spend some time wearing them around the house before I could feel
comfortable enough to display my splendor to the world. Even then I did it
in baby steps, wearing a hat out to lunch with a good friend, or when
traveling among strangers. As the writer Patricia Hampl admits,
"Maybe being oneself is always an acquired taste."
Another exercise that can be very revealing
is to make a collage of colors that make you smile. This is a quick
collage, but very useful in rediscovering your authentic style. Cut out
splashes of color from magazines, or use wallpaper samples, or try to
replicate your favorite hue with colored pencils or crayons. Often the
colors that please you look wonderful on you even if your color chart says
they shouldn't! Colors you feel passionate about somehow manage to echo
your smile. Don't shy away from bright colors because you've always
thought they were too much, or too attention-grabbing. If those are the
colors you love, then your Authentic Self is just as bright and fabulous
as they are. It took me years to realize that gold was a color I should
wear. I had ignored the fact that every time I put it on, I shined.
There are some simple questions to help you
identify the external aspects of style that capture your authentic spirit.
Are you wildly theatrical, or softly romantic? What patterns do you like?
What textures? What fabrics? Do you have a favorite store or designer? Do
you like outrageous jewelry, or small, delicate pieces? Do you enter a
room quietly, but long to make a big entrance?
Okay, we're through with the warm-up
collages—now you can pull out all the stops and have some fun. Create an
envelope and start a collage celebrating your authentic style. Flip
through catalogs and magazines and photo albums. Dress your Authentic Self
in the colors and textures and style she craves. Maybe she looks sleek and
elegant in black, or wildly festive in a South American print. Pick out
her shoes, her jewelry, her purse. I had a fabulous time making my
authentic style collage, and in the process I discovered my penchant for
the glamorous clothing from the twenties, thirties, and forties. Nothing
gives me as much pleasure as putting together an entire outfit—complete
with hat, gloves, shoes, purse—and now I mix vintage accessories with
contemporary pieces. It's become my signature style.
Now that we've created expressions of our
Authentic Selves, I'm afraid it's time to get practical. We need to talk
about balance, and the realities of your life, and how they will affect
your authentic style. Because if you've found that your clothing of choice
is sequined evening gowns and Manolo Blahnik shoes and you're a working
mother of two young children, you're going to have to learn to compromise.
Just a little bit. I had to compromise too. The fringe on my favorite
black flapper-style dress just seems to get in the way when I'm at home
writing and isn't appropriate garb for business meetings.
The essence of discovering your authentic
style, which is the external, visual expression of your Authentic Self, is
finding the point of balance between how you want to look and how you do
look. You have to create harmony between the reality of your daily round
and your visions of grandeur. If you love the details of fashion and
grooming, you are betraying your Authentic Self by running around in dirty
sweatpants, no matter how little time you have in the morning. On the
other hand, it is not a betrayal if you find putting on makeup boring and
can't bring yourself to do it, no matter how much you admire it on others.
Ultimately, your new ideal may be your
"best viable" look. For example, I have a friend who looks great
with her hair cut in an intricate layered look, but it took too much
attention to style it each morning. Now she has a one-length,
easy-to-manage style that looks almost as good. Even better, she manages
to do that one well every day, whereas the other one was hit or miss on
the days she didn't have time to devote to it.
Final collage: a realistic depiction of
your authentic style. Start slowly, gathering images that project your
Authentic Self at every point during the day. What you wear when you play
with the kids. When you're at the office. When you're taking a walk. When
you're having dinner out at a nice restaurant. When you're dancing. Even
when you're sleeping. I think you'll find making this collage incredibly
freeing. Within the limits of your real daily life, you are showing how
fabulous you are. At every turn, in every moment. You'll see that your
style is a portrait of your Authentic Self. You are truth, inside and out.
"Truth is the vital breath of
Beauty," the writer Grace Aguilar wrote in 1850, "Beauty is the
outward form of Truth."
© 1999 by Sarah Ban Breathnach
Excerpt posted with permission from http://www.twbookmark.com
Many thanks to Time Warner
Bookmark (Little, Brown & Company, Warner Books, A Time Warner
Company) at: www.twbookmark.com.
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