Ageism, anti-aging industry & price for tenderness

(The writer is a Ph.D scholar at the Department of Sociology, Tezpur University. Her research interests cover social
Ageism, anti-aging industry & price for tenderness
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Ahana Choudhury

(The writer is a Ph.D scholar at the Department of Sociology, Tezpur University. Her research interests cover social gerontology and inter-generational relationships as well as gender and religious polity. She can be reached at ahanachou25@gmail.com)

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Claims for inclusivity and consumerism often tags natural existence as 'exotic' and this is where the anti-aging industryharvests itself.

Marks and faces

"Lots of wrinkle creams believe, the more mysterious they sound, the more powerful you will think they are! It's time to see what power really looks like ... Wrinkles, your time is up!" This grim analogy from Neutrogena Rapid Wrinkle Repair cream, is more catastrophic for placing the cultural demands on 'how we look, affects how we feel'. Marketization has taken upon the experiences of one's way of'feeling good in one's own skin. Does this advertising statement create a rhetoric that younger, fairer and tighter skin adults have more chances of being vocal about their desires? Should the old regret over their mirror image of having rough and papery skin? Is aging a curse?

'Youth' and 'beauty' have emerged as anover-hyped source of conspicuous consumption nowadays, quite stark enough to reject notions of enjoying aging and senility. It is difficult to observe a person with crooked skin doing multiple advertisements for healthy skin. The ideology is always asserted in changing the aged skin. But this induced 'regressive change' is violating to the extent of stratifying or sub-humanizing people belonging to an age-set. Why an old woman with wrinkled skin needs to cover her blemishes in the course of biological aging? Aging is natural. It is a bio-socio-psychological process that necessitates certain changes and modifications in genes and living environment. So, wrinkles should be celebrated as beauty in its own right!

But, this natural manifestation is exceedingly turned into commercialized ethics, producing stigma on one hand and exalting promises of joviality on the other. Advertisements from popular skin brands reassert the same need time and again – the milky smooth skin, which works as a beneficial weapon for legitimizing every lotions available! It features not the product itself, but the pressurization of maintaining skin tones and youthful appearances for being valued in the society as a whole. The old within a cosmetic industry find themselves to be showcased nowhere else, but the anti-aging derma industry! Can we think of it as 'silent' repression and neglect against being aged? Do these forms of information socializes us to be apprehensive about the fact that we all age, while separating us from our own temporal and biological being? Although anti-aging products provides enough reasons to be healthy and being dermatologically tested for adding moistures into the skin, yet, it asserts to remove the patches and lines across the skin, moving between the transition images from being gorgeous and youthful to old and ugly. This cannot be unrelated to the fact that celebrities lose out options after a certain point in their age. Several soap operas or dailies demand more young skinny ladies in substantial roles than the universally imagined old feeble women, who work as mute spectators within the camera screens. William Cronon's viewpoint could be aptly settled for anti-aging industry – "None of this nature is natural, all are cultural constructions that reflects human judgements, human values and human choices".There is a constant attempt to artificialize natural growth and progression, which may be a heightening of the consumerist society we are arriving at. However, some researchers are quite sceptical about the lack of sufficient scientific evidence for anti-aging creams to have the desired effect.

The power of advertising: Best creams, best delusions

Amazon's best-selling anti-aging cream, L'Oreal Paris' Collagen Face Moisturiser, costs only $9, making it easily accessible. A reviewer who rated 5 stars for this product stated "Best cream for anyone that wants to slow down the aging process. I love this inexpensive cream, my skin soaks it up". This reflects an essentialist statement which is being imbibed into us through everyday visual interaction with TV commercials. Young women are always portrayed in the advertisements of Lux and Dove soaps, which might well place that only young girls have the capability to maintain their flawless skin. Advertisement makers attract market audiences through elements of sensuality and inherent ideas on long-lasting nature of young 'bodies'. Karl Marx would describe this as fetishism – commodities as the part and parcel of the capitalistic society, selling and masking the visibility of 'old' at the same time. Wanting to look better and furnishing negative attitudes on aging does make a difference.

Do anti-aging creams erase the implications for age? This is hard to believe that creams clean aging marks. Scientific researches do lay certain solutions for slowing down the progression of aging morbidities but cannot formulate promises, as cognitive and physical impairments are more 'common' as one reaches more than 60 years of age. The problem lies in the vicious circle of anti-aging industry, which renders scepticism on what is 'common' and implant a freakish attitude for being old. While options on healthy and nutritious diets can be valued on replenishing cells and reducing inflammatory conditions, anti-aging creams are ambiguous not only in addressing skin problems but also tampering with the personality of the old. Celebration of diversity is certainly a miss here!

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