Mariana Rascao / Unsplash

It was a typical Sunday morning scramble. I was all dressed up, the car engine humming in the driveway, and my husband patiently waiting with the baby. I had just enough time to put in my earrings and grab extra wipes for the diaper bag. But the makeup? That would have to wait.

And with that, unintentionally, something shifted.

I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror before heading out the door. “What will people think?” I wondered. “Am I letting myself go?” My husband smiled and said I looked beautiful. I wanted to believe him.

I’ve worn makeup since I was 11 years old. First for ballet recitals, then Irish dance competitions, and later as a college student who wouldn’t leave her dorm without her lipstick and a touch of blush.

I never wore much, but I relied on that thin layer to feel put together, pretty, even presentable. Beyond vanity, it was fear. Fear of looking tired, messy, or, heaven forbid, standing out.

But now? I haven’t worn a swipe of makeup in two years. What began as a time-saving necessity has become a quiet liberation. A return to something more confident, honest, and human. Here’s what I learned.

Mesut Cicen / Unsplash

The mirror wasn’t the problem

 It’s strange how something so small can carry such weight. I didn’t realize how much I depended on makeup until I stopped wearing it.

When that first newborn stage ended and I finally found the time to open the makeup bag again, I started to hesitate.

I remember laughing at the mirror the first time I tried to glam up again for a family event. It just didn’t feel like me anymore. “Who is this?” I wondered. Not in a self-critical way, but with gentle surprise. The face I’d grown used to seeing as it was now felt hidden.

This face was selected for me by my Creator and crafted in His image. It bears my family’s legacy—my great-grandmother’s nose, my mother’s dimples, my father’s eyes—and I see part of that now passed on to my daughter. This is my face as it was meant to be. The alterations were pretty, but they weren’t needed.

For me, makeup had once been the polish that completed the picture. Now it felt like a costume. That day, I washed it all away instead, and that was that.

Michelangelo / Creation of Adam (Cropped)

An image bearer

What changed? In short: motherhood, time, and the quiet work of grace. I was blessed with two beautiful babies in two years, and with them came a new way of seeing life. Sleepless nights, sticky fingers, tearful baby cheeks—there was no room for touching up smudged lipstick in that sacred chaos. I began leaving the house with just my clean, bare skin, grateful to be out the door with everyone fed and dressed. At first, I felt guilty. But then, I started to feel free

Over time, I realized I wasn’t just letting go of makeup. I was letting go of comparison.

Social media, so often the quiet tyrant in our pockets, had fed me years of “Instagram perfect” images. Faces airbrushed and filtered, every imperfection edited away. I used to scroll and compare: her brows are so perfect, her skin so smooth. She looks so polished. Why don’t I? But comparison is the thief of joy. And worse, it can be a thief of truth.

The truth is this: God made me as I am. And in my daughter’s curls, my son’s smile, my postpartum body, I see His artistry, even when I don’t always feel radiant. Our Church teaches a theology of the body, a truth that tells us our bodies are not just vessels, but visible signs of invisible dignity. We are not problems to fix or alter. We are people to love.

And that includes loving ourselves.

Daiga Ellaby / Unsplash

Beauty beyond the brushes

Make no mistake—natural doesn’t mean sloppy. I still love dressing up, whether it’s for errands, a family dinner, or Sunday Mass. My hair is simple but styled. My skin is clean and cared for. A basic skincare routine is key when going makeup-free. For me, that’s a gentle cleanser and moisturizer daily, the occasional charcoal mask, and Vaseline for healthy lips.

Effort still matters. But I’ve come to see that effort doesn’t have to mean altering the canvas. It can simply mean honoring it.

More than anything, I’ve learned that elegance doesn’t come from highlighters or eyeshadow kits. It comes from carrying yourself with a grace that stems from the peace and joy you feel within. It’s from not worrying about how your looks compare to rom-com heroines, or whether your baby’s hug will smudge your foundation.

Armen Poghosyan / Unsplash

A new kind of confidence

Will I wear makeup again someday? Maybe. I still appreciate an old Hollywood glam look for a night out. But for now, I’m content with my natural face.

I’ve gained something far more lasting than any concealer ever offered: the ability to walk into a room with my face unpainted and know I am enough. I now believe my husband when he says I’m beautiful—not because he’s sweet, but because he’s right.

I no longer look at other women and wonder how makeup might “improve” their features. I just see beauty – real, authentic beauty.

Nastia Petruk / Unsplash

For the woman who’s wondering

If you’ve ever wondered whether you have to wear makeup to be polished, pretty, or presentable, maybe you don’t. Maybe you already are.

This isn’t a prescription or a judgment. Just an invitation. An invitation to breathe. To simplify. To believe that your God-given face, passed down through generations, is not just acceptable—it’s enough.

You don’t have to disguise or enhance your features to be worthy of love or attention. And that’s a truth all of us women, regardless of our makeup preferences, can rejoice in together.

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