It surprised me to learn that the fact that we have two brows may be the remnants of our evolutionary ancestors. Full facial hair slowly
gave way to two bushy brows that evolved for a degree of protection from
shielding our eyes from rain, dirt and sweat irritation. Of course,
our eyebrows play a very important role in facial recognition and as a
means of communication.
Today, our tweezed, plucked, waxed, trimmed, pierced and painted brows are clearly associated with beauty. Even men are trimming away
fly away brow hairs for a neater appearance. My research enlightened me
to the fact that 18th century women believed that full and bushy
eyebrows were quite attractive. Women would go through great lengths to
enhance their existing brows by securing bushy hair attachments to their
wispy brows. Today the benchmark for fashionable brows seems to be a
thin high arched line, quiet different from the 18th century bushy
variety!
We can express our feelings with our facial expressions but it is our eyebrows that can relay specific moods or emotions. Eyebrow movement
can express fear, surprise, aggression, astonishment or even sadness to
name a few. Raised eyebrows can express an acceptance or un-acceptance
for social behavior, or may indicate confusion. Lowered eyebrows can
express annoyance or displeasure or even deception. It’s amazing the
level of non-verbal communication power held by a 2 inch strip of hair!
Another role for our brows is aiding in facial recognition amongst a wide diversity of faces. One can usually discriminate between male or
female by just looking at one’s brows! So what does all of this mean
to those of us who are “eyebrow deficient”? Personally, I think
eyebrows are over rated! I’ve lived without them for 9 years and I will
challenge anyone with brows to a non-verbal communication contest on
any given day. With a brush of a stroke, I can draw angry brows, sad
brows, condemning brows, happy brows - depends on my mood - or I can go
sans brows and remain anonymous. I have options - I can have thick
brows - I can have pencil thin brows. I don’t require any tweezing,
plucking or waxing. I’m brow maintenance free! The brow has sometimes
been referred to as the “face’s forgotten feature”. I’ve truly
forgotten what it feels like to have normal brows but it’s really okay!
Either way it is an interesting topic.
Susan M. Beausang
President, 4Women.com
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