Her Campus Logo Her Campus Logo
This article is written by a student writer from the Her Campus at Ole Miss chapter.

 

I am the last person who should be talking about beauty and fashion.

 

I am not the person who wears makeup to every class. I don’t fret when my t-shirts are wrinkled. I rarely remember to take my makeup off before bed. I don’t own foundation. I own one brand of makeup that I have used since the seventh grade. I am allergic to almost everything.

 

Throughout my lifetime, I have gone through various stages of makeup use.

 

  1. Middle School/Early High School

 

When I first started wearing makeup in middle school, I liked to overuse my makeup. I bought the cheapest kind from CVS or Kroger and loved to wear it. My normal makeup tended to look much more like stage makeup than anything else.

 

I remember one day in middle school, I was wearing purple eyeshadow and black eyeliner. One of my brother’s friends asked me if I had a black eye after lunch. I didn’t.

 

Thankfully, I grew out of the horrible one shade eyelid and thick black lines that I was sure made my eyes look bigger. (It didn’t by the way).

 

 

2. High School

 

In the middle of high school, I moved states and started at a new school. This new school was an all girls’ school, and it was not normal to wear makeup to school. I did on the first day and many people asked me where I was going after school. I was going home.

 

I soon fell into line with all the other girls in school and stopped wearing makeup all together. I soon fell in love with house shoes, much to my grandparents dismay.

 

I walked into the DMV one day wearing my house shoes. That fact did not go over well with the members of my family.

 

Fun fact: I took my picture at the DMV that day. One time someone told me that the person in the photo was not me and was most definitely male.

 

 

3. Now

 

I am better, I hope, when it comes to makeup. I have learned to be able to balance too much and nothing at all. I still hate trying new makeup. I hate being nervous that I am going to have an allergic reaction to it. I don’t wear makeup to class unless I have to go to work after class or I need to look presentable for a specific reason. I do make an effort to wear makeup each day of the weekend.

 

When it comes down to it though, makeup doesn’t matter. I don’t say that to discourage anyone from wearing makeup. I am not oblivious to the self-confidence boost that it gives or the excitement that some people have when trying new products. I simply say that because makeup doesn’t make up the person.

 

At Ole Miss, we have been going through sorority recruitment this past week. Yes, there is a stereotype that sorority girls are shallow. I don’t speak for everyone, but when I talk to a girl, I don’t remember her face, her makeup or her outfit. I remember what she said and who she talked about and her attitude when talking to me.

 

Who you are matters much more than what you look like.

https://media.giphy.com/media/pwoJlkKCjCFYk/giphy.gif

Ellie Greenberger is a junior at the University of Mississippi pursuing a degree in Journalism with a specialization in PR and a minor in English. She is a member of the Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College and Delta Gamma sorority. She also contributes to Populi, the Honors College literary magazine. Ellie was born in Memphis, TN, but also grew up in Atlanta, GA. She loves fiction and friends (both the TV show and her own). She also enjoys revolving her social life around whatever food she can eat next.
Sarah Smith

Ole Miss '20

Sarah is a Journalism student at the University of Mississippi. She is currently working on her first novel which she hopes to be published before she finishes college in 2020. Nerd to the heart, Sarah is always blasting Guardians of the Galaxy in her car, and her dorm or house is where the nerdy movie and book fest never ends. She aspires to be a lifestyles magazine writer and a novelist after college.