Reading women's magazines can be depressing. Not only do the pages showcase impossibly beautiful (and thin) models, most of the featured clothes and makeup products are cost prohibitive for the majority of us. Sure, it'd be nice to be able to drop $200 on a neck cream or $1,200 on a cute dress for work, but given the state of the economy (and most of our less-than-robust checking account balances) such exorbitant splurges likely aren't in the cards.
Of course, fashion and lifestyle magazines are meant to be aspirational, to be glossy representations of what life would be like "if" -- (the "if" being "if" you had unlimited funds, no job to show up for, a 5'10" 120 lb. frame, George Clooney on your arm and, why not, a pied a terre on St. Barth's) and that's why we read them -- to escape from our real lives for a brief moment in time. (And, yes, to glean a makeup, hair and fashion tip or two.)
But then, if we can't plunk down a black Amex at Prada or drop a bundle at Sephora, what's a girl (with limited means) to do when we're craving a little glamour, when we have a hankering for a "pick me up" of the beauty persuasion?
Pick up a Mode Glide and Glow 3-in-1 Blush Highlighter Stick, $4, and you'll have an easily blendable, lightweight cheek stain whose natural minerals and mica impart a beautiful, just-kissed glow. Plus, you'll be doing your skin -- and the earth -- a favor. All Mode products use only organic ingredients and are produced in "non-wasteful" packaging. Inexpensive, natural and eco-friendly? Ca-ching.
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Get threaded
Sick of plucking your eyebrows and/or bleaching your mustache? Why not try threading? This ancient Arabic/Indian technique has become all the rage in America because, for one thing, unlike waxing, threading doesn't aggravate your skin or leave behind any telltale redness (so it's the perfect lunch-hour errand). Plus, at a typical salon, you can have your brows threaded for $7-$9 and your upper lip done for a mere $5.
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Switch up your hair color
For $9 you can go from mousy brown to fiery red in just 10 minutes using Clairol Nice 'n Easy Perfect 10 hair color. It's true! This revolutionary formula is less damaging than traditional ones and the color lasts longer and stays truer. "It puts salon color to shame," says Jason Backe, master colorist at Ted Gibson Salon and color director for Clairol. If an endorsement like that isn't enough of an enticement to try a new look, what is?
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Get a (partial) rubdown
With our hectic, chock-full schedules, who has the time (or money) for a full body massage? While escaping for a couple of hours into spa bliss may be unrealistic, a chair massage can be the next best thing -- especially if you're a sucker for having your tense muscles kneaded.
Whether you get it done at the mall, at a nail salon or even your local Whole Foods, a chair massage will typically find you seated in an ergonomically designed chair as the masseuse manipulates your neck, back and shoulder muscles (those that can be adversely affected by sitting at a desk all day) on top of your clothes for the going rate of a dollar a minute. Think a short rubdown won't make any difference? Think again. A study done by the Touch Research Institute in Miami revealed that regular 15-minute chair massages reduce stress, anxiety and depression! Oh, and they feel heavenly too. (And, if you saw that episode of "Modern Family" where Claire/Julie Bowen got hers, you know it's only too true.)
Reading women's magazines can be depressing. Not only do the pages showcase impossibly beautiful (and thin) models, most of the featured clothes and makeup products are cost prohibitive for the majority of us. Sure, it'd be nice to be able to drop $200 on a neck cream or $1,200 on a cute dress for work, but given the state of the economy (and most of our less-than-robust checking account balances) such exorbitant splurges likely aren't in the cards.
Of course, fashion and lifestyle magazines are meant to be aspirational, to be glossy representations of what life would be like "if" -- (the "if" being "if" you had unlimited funds, no job to show up for, a 5'10" 120 lb. frame, George Clooney on your arm and, why not, a pied a terre on St. Barth's) and that's why we read them -- to escape from our real lives for a brief moment in time. (And, yes, to glean a makeup, hair and fashion tip or two.)
But then, if we can't plunk down a black Amex at Prada or drop a bundle at Sephora, what's a girl (with limited means) to do when we're craving a little glamour, when we have a hankering for a "pick me up" of the beauty persuasion?