Mothers, Role Models The gap makeup with ‘Get Un-Gati with me’

Sarah Lee, a married mother of four, is removing her – all her composition, ie.

“Going without makeup is so cheap,” Lee, 51, told The Post. “I have more interesting and important things to contribute to the world except just my physical appearance.”

And Lee of Sacramento, Calif., It is not in a hurry to reapply its redness.

Grandmother of two ticks under the age of 5, along with other mothers and role models – from everyday women to the star of “Wonder Woman” Gal Gadot and Babe Baywatch Pamela Anderson – is counterfeiting excessive use of social media foundations, glitter and filters for a long term.

And for the sake of young girls everywhere.

Lee, a mother and grandmother, recently decided to end her decades -in -law faith. Sarah Lee courtesy
Lee told the post that she hopes that general girls Alpha will feel less forced to doll constantly with the composition thanks to the “Get Un-Uo-Me” movements. Sarah Lee courtesy

‘Get to know him worth’

It is a galaze, anti-gllitzy effort towards teaching totes and adolescents to embrace their views given by God, rather than subject to the pressures of modern day-seeking days.

Holly Jessica, a mother of two, calls it the “Get Un -i with me” movement.

Holly Jessica has virally saved herself from covers and cosmetics in an effort to show her daughter the importance of being confident in one’s natural images. @Holly.jesica16

The “unjust” crusade rises as the antithesis of viral “Be ready with me” or “#grwm” challenge-ato vids cutesy from adults and children equally taking the audience on a multistep journey through a primping process of a content creator.

“I believe it is okay to want to feel good and wear the composition,” Jessica, a capable Australia influential, told The Post. “But I don’t believe we need it every day.”

Without shame, she has been removed from fake eyelashes and wiped out the brightness of Faux for all Tiktok to see, hoping to inspire tween-ager, Koko, to “love herself as she is and knows worth”.

An ‘antidot’

Call for natural beauty is getting stronger. Mother -led shakes away from composition comes to the heel of the mania “Sephora Girls”, which saw little ladies under the age of 13 gathering in beauty stores and cosmetic counters for starting products and anti -aging creams.

While there is no makeup every day for some, others are simply abandoning the foundations in unity for one day. April 26, National No Make Day celebrates the beauty with bare faces and invites Glamour Gals go without predetermined products for at least 24 hours.

But the “Get Non-Gati with me” campaign, which aims to de-implore it in impressed by packaging in facial paint, is not to prevent young people from falling every time and time.

On the contrary, makeup without makeup aims to help counteract the mental health crisis by promoting between General Zers and General Alpites and boys under the age of 18. It is a wound that has caused an increase in adolescent body image issues, low self -esteem, anxiety and social comparison thanks to the smoke and reflexes of Worldwide Web for recent research.

Experts warn that excessive use of social media can adversely affect a young person’s self -esteem and overall mental health. Pressmaster – Stock.adobe.com

Yamalis Diaz, a adolescent child and psychologist with NYU Langone Health, says initiatives like the “ready” mission can serve as an “antidote” valuable for influential internet diseases.

“Young people are experiencing psychological damage because of the unrealistic standards of beauty they are seeing online,” Diaz Post told.

Diaz said stars who choose fresh face look on the red carpet and regular mothers alike are making a big impact as well.

Pamela Anderson has famously sports a face without makeup in a number of chichi red carpets in recent years. Filmatic
Gadot recently told Dujour that she often has to remind her daughters that beauty standards driven on social media are not true. Getty Images
Keys First Ditched Cosmetics in 2016. Wires

“Parents, and even celebrities like Alicia Keys and Pamela Anderson, who are making an effort to save and reassess some of the messages of natural beauty and aging can help children understand better than most of what they are seeing [on social media] It’s not true. ”

A Gadot lesson, 39, wants to learn her birth of four girls, who reach 13 to 12 months, to learn.

“[My kids are growing] up with all these filters. With curated posts. They think it is true, not knowing that it has been fully filtered and retouched, the “Snow White” recently told Dujour magazine. ” I say to them, ‘At that time you see there, it’s false, not true.’ It is a very confusing world for a girl. “

Karp, a leather expert with Downtown dermatology in Tribeca, told the post she is teaching her 6-year-old to appreciate her beauty before being exposed on social media. Courtesy Anna Karp

Decorated, not cute

Anna Karp, a mother of one and dermatologist at the Triba, told the post she teaches her 6-year-old, Lily, that applying mascara, shadows and goops can make you look “decorated”-but they are not what make you “beautiful”.

“I tell my daughter and my patients that it is more important to have healthy skin than to cover it with makeup,” said Karp, an assistant clinical professor in NYU. She recently rejected her daily puppet routine, instead, to exchange a regular mug.

“I just wear the sun cream and I feel very safe on my skin,” added Doc, 39. “I want the message to be: We are very natural.”

For Chelsea Hollenbeck, challenging herself to go au natural for 40 days in the head of 2025 was not just to promote self-love and acceptance for her three small granddaughters.

It was an act of self-liberation.

Hollenbeck tells the post that she feels happy and free without the pressure of always looking for cosmetics. Chelsea Hollenbeck courtesy
Hollenbeck says she hopes her granddaughters, Gemini at the age of 10 and little age 6, grow to feel safe and comfortable on their skin. Jenisesubervi.com
The minimalist stylist challenged herself to go without makeup in order to practice self-love and self-acceptance she preaches to her clients, friends and loved ones. @chelsea_louise_hollenbeck

“I feel much safer for my face,” said Hollenbeck, 31, a minimalist stylist from the upper side of the birth. “I am more focused on skin care and skin health – not how do I look or what people think of me.”

“I am free from the crutch of the composition,” she was. “Without that burden, I luckily go for my day, stay in my lane and pay my rent.”


#Mothers #Role #Models #gap #makeup #UnGati
Image Source : nypost.com

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