There is a very specific kind of woman that corporate life quietly demands you become. She is polished but effortless. Expensive but not trying too hard. Feminine but efficient. Beautiful in a way that suggests discipline rather than vanity. Her hair is always laid. Her perfume lingers after she leaves the room. Her nails click softly against her laptop during meetings. Her lashes frame her eyes perfectly, even at 8 a.m. on a Monday morning.
Last year, when I got my first real corporate job and started making more money than I had ever made in my life, I wanted to become her immediately. And so I did what many young women do when they enter adulthood with disposable income and proximity to beautiful women: I started curating myself.
The transformation happened gradually at first. A lash appointment here. A fresh acrylic set there. Then suddenly, sometime around March 2025, maintenance became routine. My nails were always long and painted. My lashes were always full. Every few weeks, without fail, I sat in salons getting filled, fixed, glued, buffed, filed, and polished into ‘womanhood’. And if I am being honest, I loved looking “put together.” I loved how my hands looked holding a wine glass. I loved waking up and already appearing more awake because of my lashes.
But somewhere between March and December, the beauty practices stopped feeling like an optional, whimsy, beauty experience, and started feeling like a mandatory chore that was hurting my real features. That was the part that unsettled me. Whenever I considered skipping a refill appointment, I suddenly felt incomplete. I had become so accustomed to my face framed by extensions and my fingers topped with acrylic that my natural self started to feel underdressed. I did not like that feeling at all. Because nothing unsettles me more than realizing something has power over me.
So at the beginning of this year, 2026, I decided to stop. No lashes. No acrylic nails. Just a break. Not because beauty is a bad thing. Not because women who participate in these things are shallow. And certainly not because I suddenly became morally superior. I simply wanted to know whether I still recognized myself underneath all the maintenance. The answer surprised me.
I Realized How Much Time Beauty Maintenance Was Taking From Me
One of the first things I noticed after quitting lashes and acrylics was how much free time suddenly reappeared in my life. Last year, it felt like every free weekend was already booked in service of preparing for the next week. There was always an appointment to attend before work resumed on Monday. Nails before a wedding. Lashes before club nights. Hair done before a work event. Beauty maintenance had quietly become part-time labor.
The thing about high-maintenance beauty routines is that they are designed to require constant upkeep. You are always approaching your next appointment. Always scheduling the next refill before the current one even starts ageing.
Without those appointments, I suddenly had entire Saturdays back. I started sleeping more. Reading more. Spending slower mornings at home. I no longer rushed from one salon chair to another trying to maintain a version of femininity that required continuous investment. For the first time in a long time, my weekends belonged to me again.
My Natural Features Became Beautiful to Me Again
I always had a strange discomfort around lash glue. Even while lying there with my eyes taped shut, I used to wonder how safe it could possibly be to place industrial-strength adhesive that close to one of the body’s most sensitive organs every few weeks. Also every single time I removed my lashes, my natural lashes looked sparse and exhausted afterward. The acrylic nails were even worse. I hated what they did to my natural nails — that weak, bendy feeling after taking them off. And the final straw came when a nail technician damaged the nail bed on my second toe with whatever rubbish acrylic she used.
These experiences genuinely irritated me because I realized I had normalized discomfort in the name of looking feminine. So I stopped. And slowly, my natural nails and lashes recovered. What surprised me most was not just that they became healthier — it was that I began genuinely admiring them. I started loving how my lashes looked with just mascara. Especially my Zaron mascara, which honestly makes me feel prettier than a hybrid lash set ever did. I rediscovered how elegant my hands naturally are. My fingers are long and slender. My bare nails actually suit me.
For so long, I had been treating my natural features as unfinished drafts instead of complete things. Now they feel enough.
I Saved an Absurd Amount of Money
One thing nobody tells you about beauty maintenance is how financially sneaky it is. The expenses rarely feel dramatic in isolation because they come in installments. ₦20,000 here. ₦35,000 there. “It’s just self-care. I need it,” you tell yourself while transferring money to yet another salon account. Eventually, I sat down and calculated how much I was spending. At minimum, I was spending around ₦20,000 monthly on nails and roughly ₦35,000 on lashes. That is at least ₦660,000 a year. On nails and lashes. And honestly? That realization shocked me.
Because while beauty can absolutely be enjoyable and expressive, I also had to confront whether those recurring expenses aligned with my actual priorities. I began thinking about all the other things that money could support: savings, travel, investments, experiences, even simple peace of mind. The truth is that many women quietly absorb enormous maintenance costs simply to meet the aesthetic expectations attached to modern femininity. And while there is absolutely nothing wrong with participating in beauty culture, I think more women deserve space to ask themselves an uncomfortable question:
Am I doing this because I enjoy it, or because I no longer feel acceptable without it?
Those are not the same thing.
I Started Thinking About Beauty Waste Differently
Another unexpected thing I reflected on was waste.
Where do acrylic nails go after removal? What happens to disposable nail tools, lash trays, glue packaging, plastic tips, and beauty waste generated every day across thousands of salons? Beauty culture rarely encourages us to think about environmental impact because femininity is often sold through endless consumption. More products. More appointments. More upgrades. More disposability. And while one person quitting acrylics will not save the planet, stepping away from constant beauty consumption did make me more conscious of how normalized waste has become within modern self-care culture. It made me want to approach beauty more intentionally rather than compulsively.
The Biggest Thing I Gained Was Freedom
The greatest thing this break gave me was not healthier nails or extra money. It was freedom. I can now attend the most exclusive events without lashes and still feel beautiful. I can leave my house with bare nails and not feel unfinished. I no longer panic about appearing “less feminine” because I am not professionally decorated at all times. That psychological freedom is deeply underrated. Because somewhere along the way, many women quietly internalize the idea that beauty must always involve addition. More hair. More lashes. Longer nails. Fuller lips. Smoother skin. But there is something profoundly grounding about looking at yourself as you naturally are and genuinely believing that version is worthy too. Not prettier for a natural girl. Not beautiful despite lacking enhancements. Just beautiful. Full stop. And to be clear, this is not an anti-beauty manifesto. I still love glamour. I still love dressing up. I may absolutely get my nails or lashes done again someday. But now it will come from desire, not dependence. That distinction matters. Womanhood should not feel like a never-ending performance where our natural selves are perpetually waiting backstage while the enhanced version takes center stage. This break reminded me that I was complete before the acrylics. Before the lash glue. Before the appointments. Before the maintenance. And honestly? That realization has been the most beautiful thing of all.






