Her make-up: His business, or not?
Tarrus Riley’s She’s Royal iconized the non-make-up wearing ‘cutie’ as the ideal, a song many Jamaican men have been singing for ages. Those in the natural-beauty movement have decried women’s use of the paint as deceptive, as what they see is often not what they really get.Roy:TT:Troy:JK:A:
But should a woman’s use of make-up really be a man’s prerogative?
I personally don’t like my woman looking like the others I see on the street, so I don’t like the whole make-up and false hair thing.
I love when my woman looks sexy and makes heads turn. It is a total turn-on for me to see other men lust after her. It makes me feel like I have a trophy, and to be honest, there is absolutely nothing wrong with that.
If the make-up is not heavy, I can live with that, but if it is heavy and looks like a mask, I will have to tell her to rub it off. I hate to see women with too much make-up on.
I take the time to tell my wife she looks amazing when she is all done up. To be honest, she is beautiful with and without make-up, but I appreciate when she puts in the extra effort.
These women are wicked. I want to see my woman’s real face from day one, because I’ve seen make-up make some women who really look like witches look like Kim Kardashian. Make-up is a wicked thing.
Men should note that most women invest in make-up because they really want to look amazing, and don’t necessarily wear it to impress men. While make-up should enhance women’s physical features and not hide or transform them, its use should be a woman’s prerogative and hers only.