Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Could You Live Without Looking at Yourself? One Woman Swears Off Mirrors for a Year

    Courtsey of Kjerstin GruysCourtsey of Kjerstin GruysKjerstin Gruys isn't looking at her reflection for one whole year (including before her wedding!)-all for the sake of having a better body image.

    Most brides obsess over every last detail of the big day and scour racks for the dream dress, but Ph.D. candidate Kjerstin Gruys has taken on a prenuptial challenge of more unique proportions. The teaching fellow at the UCLA Department of Sociology has sworn off looking in a mirror for an entire year-six months of which will lead up to her wedding.

    QUIZ: Are You Satisfied with Your Face?

    The daring idea took root when Gruys read a passage out of Sarah Dunant's "The Birth of Venus," where an order of nuns swears off the sight of human flesh-including even looking at their own bodies. Feeling the already constant pressure to look perfect intensified by wedding planning, Gruys' self-described "struggle with poor body image" made her wonder if a year without mirrors could lead to greater self-acceptance and appreciation for her body.

    "I picked out my wedding gown before the project started. Looking in the mirror for hours and feeling critical of myself was one of the main motivators [for the project]," Gruys tells YouBeauty. "I want my wedding to be about my partner, Michael, and me, and about our loved ones-not about whether or not I dropped 10 pounds to squeeze into my dress."

    MORE: A Wedding Dress to Fit Your Body Shape

    (As an aside, the young scholar's doctoral work at UCLA includes a dissertation that examines clothing size standards in the U.S. fashion industry, an especially fitting-pun intended-and introspective theme.)

    Gruys is chronicling the daily encounters and challenges of living a mirror-free life on her blog, Mirror, Mirror Off The Wall. Some may find it surprising that the experiment isn't a total strike against vanity-in fact, Gruys details self-tanner and mascara adventures without the benefit of a mirror, even in the face of detractors who say she should go all or nothing.

    "Though some of my readers have been critical of my decision to wear makeup during this project, I decided that wearing a bare minimum-tinted moisturizer, blush, mascara, sometimes a neutral cream eyeshadow-was important to me in a professional sense," says Gruys, who prepped for blind makeup application with practice sessions beforehand that honed her sense of touch.

    The idea is all the more challenging, given that recent studies have pegged the average number of times a woman looks in the mirror at over 70 times in just one day. According to Renee Engeln-Maddox, Ph.D., psychology professor and body image expert at Northwestern University, constantly checking ourselves out in the mirror can be bad for our mental health.

    QUIZ: Determine Your Body Shape

    "What you see in the mirror is what other people see-it's an outsider's perspective. When you look in the mirror, you're increasing your tendency to see yourself as an outsider would," says Engeln-Maddox. "A lot of research has shown that lowers your body satisfaction and depletes your cognitive resources, meaning that your brain-which has limited resources-is less able to think about other things."

    Some people even take the act of looking in the mirror to such extremes that there's a clinical diagnosis for it. Known as body dysmorphic disorder, a key feature of the psychological disorder is an urge to obsessively look in the mirror, sometimes for literally hours at a time. "If looking in the mirror is making you chronically late or leads you to start picking at your skin, those may be signs of concern," says Engeln-Maddox. "Make sure your hair is combed and your makeup is appropriate, then step away. The mirror doesn't provide more information the longer you look at it."

    MORE: Do You Fat Talk?

    Yet there's one day where it seems only natural to keep a mirror nearby at all the times, and Gruys admits that her wedding day will prove an especially difficult challenge-but not necessarily for the reasons you would assume.

    "I've had a lot of women tell me that looking into the mirror as a bride is important, and not just in terms of vanity. It scares me that I could miss out on something," says Gruys. "But I'm also reminding myself that those minutes in front of a mirror are minutes I could be spending with family like my grandparents."

    - Grace Gold

    More from YouBeauty.com:

    MORE: The Many Ways Women Have Mind Blowing Sex

    QUIZ: Play with Your Face Symmetry

    COLUMN: Have a Secure Relationship, from David Sbarra, Ph.D.


     

    1,063 comments

    • John  •  8 months ago
      I don't see anything wrong with her looks or weight, I think she's a beautiful woman.
    • C  •  9 months ago
      what i'm more curious about is why so many of you feel like it's your right and requirement to judge. what brave and daring things are you all doing with your lives? who are you people who think you know everything? who cares if you think this is the wrong thing to do? who cares what you think? really! who cares!!!
    • BetaAlphaRamboEchoLima  •  9 months ago
      Good for her! I've done this before unintentionally. I spent over a year and a half in my first apartment with only the tiny bathroom mirror, it was the slimmest, sexiest and healthiest time of my life honestly.
    • Sarah-beara  •  9 months ago
      wow she was my teacher at UCLA!
    • Elisabeth  •  9 months ago
      I think the plan is flawed in one area ... she should have one nice long look at herself once she is completely ready for her wedding - to see herself in her gown, all prettied up ... I think a lot of us dream of that image, and it is a positive, healthy look at yourself - a "look how beautiful I am" moment ... that positive thought should be all the stronger given that she will have six months of NOT seeing herself - to have that first look in the mirror be one of "Wow, I really am gorgeous" can only be a positive thing.
    • Angel  •  9 months ago
      Why are so many people making so many mean remarks about her? She looks fine. I think it is a good thing to shift the focus away from how people look, and concentrate more on what's inside. Bravo to her, and shame on all of the haters here.
    • sweettart  •  9 months ago
      I used to be very beautiful and in excellent physical condition. Now, ten years later, due to a medical condition I'm a hundred pounds bigger and my beauty has long faded into something I don't even recognize. But, I'm no longer sexually harassed anywhere I go. I have friends who aren't threatened by me and people take me seriously when before they didn't. Beauty can be a curse. I don't know why so many women strive to be beautiful when the only thing it brings us is grief and pain. When I talk to people, especially men, they pay attention to what I'm actually saying, instead of thinking about how I look or how they can take advantage of me. Although I'd like to be thin again, to the point of obsessing over it, I don't ever want to be beautiful, ever again. Beauty is a responsibility I do not wish to cope with. I don't know why anyone would.
    • quixoticbats  •  9 months ago
      I love mirrors! Anyway, she can't avoid her reflection everywhere she goes. What if she has to use the ladies' room while she's out and about? What if she walks past store front windows? Even in the rainforests of New Guinea she'd catch a glimpse of herself in a puddle. Yes, one can avert one's eyes when one spots a reflection, but that's after the fact.
    • tegahtay  •  9 months ago
      PLEASE oh just no mirrors okay. I see my reflections in glass windows, computer screens, over/microwave/doors just to name a few.
    • Gator  •  9 months ago
      its a woman thing . i look in the mirror to shave and the like. i dont sit there and judge myself. go see a shrink youre all f'ed up
    • Kids  •  9 months ago
      I would DIE w/o a mirror. i do my little sisters makeup and hair all the time, and she LOVES dancing in front of the mirror when i turn on the radio. i woudn't be able to live without it!
    • Big Mean Bunny  •  9 months ago
      What will she do in a public restroom, bumble around with her eyes shut? This is one of the dumbest things I've heard yet. Get a life, lady, go out and volunteer at a hospice and get some perspective. Even better, volunteer at a hospital where children with craniofacial deformities undergo surgery and get some perspective. By the way, your part is all crooked and makes you look like a badly groomed dork. Go look in the mirror and sort that you, willya?
    • Karl  •  9 months ago
      If she wants her wedding to be about their love for each other than how she looks in her wedding dress then get married in front of a judge.
    • kitty kat  •  9 months ago
      i can see where she is right in some sense, but the way she is doing it is not good. the wedding is about the woman and man, but doesnt a woman want to look beautiful for her man? what happens when her dress doesnt fit right when the date comes? we all need to look in a mirror every once in awhile.
    • Flora  •  9 months ago
      Looking into the mirror isn't about self-evalutation but self-acceptance and self-esteem. Accept who you really are, appreciate what you've got and proud of being different cause you born this way. Deliberate avoidance is only a temporaty respite, a psychological solace. It certainly won't make you look better by wearing make-ups without mirror no matter how slight they are. It won't make you happy when you find out some mirror-free-caused style mishaps in your wedding photo. It will never win the respect of others if you don't respect yourself. So, give it up, look in the mirror, true glamor comes from within.
    • Stef J.  •  9 months ago
      Actually, what you see in the mirror is NOT what other people see, because your image is reversed in reflection. :p
    • Mary  •  9 months ago
      She is gorgeous. What message is she sending to women who are less good-looking than she is?

      Avoidance is not the same as acceptance. If she really wanted to learn to accept herself, she would work on looking at herself in the mirror daily, and speaking out loud of her worth and beauty. She is believing lies about herself. She needs to hear herself speak the truth instead of the lies.
    • The_Donger  •  9 months ago
      avoidance is the worst thing this PhD. candidate can do. Best way to accept one's self is to look right into the mirror, find all the flaws and make a realization that imperfection is normal. True beauty is accepting who you are inside and out.
    • DeborahR  •  9 months ago
      I understand her message, and admire her for doing this, but I actually have reverse anorexia and NEED to look in the mirror for reality checks. If I didn't, I might leave the house in REALLY ill-fitting or inappropriate clothes. I just couldn't do it.
    • J.W.  •  9 months ago
      what a jackass! self worth does not equate to a reflection...get a clue.

    Join us on Pinterest

    DAILY SHOT VIDEO

    We apologize. An error has occurred. Please try again.