The compound whose
anticancer properties I was studying for my doctoral research was working very well in killing melanoma (skin
cancer) cells. So my next step was to confirm if this compound was specifically
and exclusively targeting cancerous melanoma cells or was indiscriminately
killing normal skin cells (melanocytes) as well. To be able to advocate my
compound as a potential drug to treat melanoma it would be imperative for me to
confirm the ability of my compound to distinguish between normal and cancer
cells.
I was culturing normal
skin cells for the first time and at multiple steps of the protocol I could not
help but notice how much more it took to maintain normal as opposed to the
diseased, puns intended.Unlike the cancer cells,
which had pretty basic nutrient requirements, the normal skin cells needed a bundle
of supplements including hormones
to stay alive. Then one summer afternoon when the cells had grown enough for me
to be able to use them for my experiment I put them in a tube to get them to
form a pellet. As I looked at the tubes containing the normal and cancer cells,
what I saw confused me for a split second but then drifted my mind to revisit a
prejudice I, and many like me have faced life long. One of the chief aberrations
that melanoma cells display is the near lack of the protective pigment melanin,
the concentration of which imparts color to the skin. Essentially greater the
concentration of this pigment the darker is the complexion of the person.
I, having cultured only melanin depleted melanoma cells was used to
getting a pale white pellet but the pellet from normal skin cells looked quite
far from it -it was dark and black. After a split second of doubt later I
realized that it wasn’t any dirt or mistake in my handling but the much
despised and misunderstood pigment in our part of the world- melanin! As much
as I could not help smiling at how my otherwise abstruse bench science suddenly
sprang into real life relevance, I also could not help feel frustrated at how
shallow the popular perception of beauty is in the Indian society. What was staring
at me on the face, was this evolutionarily useful pigment inhabiting a mere
.2mm thick layer of our skin that is used and abused as a benchmark of beauty,
especially in an Indian context.
As far into my past as I
could remember I have been made to feel and a lot many times told to my face
that I was too dark to be considered in the spectrum of beautiful. Sometimes
the comments were direct while at other times it was indirect through
suggestions on how I could “improve” my complexion. Coming home after a fun
time out in the sun would sometimes be received with concerned remarks from
aunts about how dark and dirty I looked. Having cousins with ten times less
melanin in their skin only made matters worse with comparisons galore. As much
as red, pink, purple, yellow and orange were my favorite colors, I learnt to
only admire them in nature and on light complexioned girls and never sport them
myself. My 4th grader heart would fill with sudden delight when a
relative would pinch my cheeks saying “ mukhta ki mishti” (such a sweet face),
but it would usually always be followed by “ kintu rongta ektu chaapa”. (but a
little dark). These memories were from a time when I was smart enough to
have a sense of self yet naive enough to believe that since the soles of my
hands and feet were also a part of my body, if I scrubbed and cleaned the rest
of my body well enough, someday the difference will blur and I will turn fair
and lovely!
Expectedly that day
never came, instead I learnt that I was born with a physical handicap of being
dark skinned and so I needed to compensate by excelling in other fields if I wanted
to carve a good public opinion for myself, preferably in academia since I was born
into the Bengali community. There were social and cultural signals galore on
the street hoardings, television, movies and social gatherings to fortify the
idea that dark was unbeautiful. Gori
in movie songs was a synonym used for beauty and Mahmoud the comedian
unabashedly sang about how despite his
dark complexion he had a golden heart! (Hum kale hain to kya hua dilwaale
hain). Bleaching agents to fairness creams, skin-lightening lotions to
whitening potions - the shelves were flooded with products promising the
quickest and most potent ways to achieve ultimate beauty - light complexion! Fibonacci
and his golden ratio had no relevance if not totally bogus. Growing up in such
an environment obviously did not work well for my confidence or self
esteem.
However things started
looking "brighter" once I moved to southern India for my undergraduate
education. I blended more and was picked on less. From thinking people were
making fun of me when and if they complimented me about my appearance, to not
reacting, to gracefully thanking them- I had to learn and unlearn a lot. It
wasn't easy neither was it pleasant but what is important is, it was completely
unnecessary. In fact evolutionarily an equatorial habitat and thereby greater
sun exposure triggers higher rate of melanin production in people living these
areas. Melanin is therefore nature’s way to adapt and protect from sun damage -
a natural sunscreen, a valuable survival gift. Unfortunately through generations
for some inexplicable reasons the lack of this pigment became the yardstick of
physical beauty to the extent of influencing even choice of life partner. As a
result me, and thousands like me for generations faced the brunt of obnoxious
and unfair color prejudice.
Later when I actually
moved to the "fair and lovely" part of the planet the story of beauty
took a shocking about turn. I discovered the blond white world craves for a
tan, a hint of color on their pale skin for protection against the damaging UV
radiation from the sun AND for beauty! Here the fairness creams are therefore replaced
by bronzers and tanners! As much as the brown world would readily peel their
skins off to get a light complexion, the white world would gladly roast
themselves on a tanning bed risking even the chance of getting skin
cancer! I consider myself lucky to be living in a place which is one
melting pots of world culture, where I get to interact with people from
different parts of the world on an everyday basis. Just a few days ago I was
conversing about beauty stereotypes with a group of friends each of who were
from a different part of the world and what surfaced surprised me. Here was a
group of beautiful women each of who wanted to look like someone else in the room!
The dusky one wanted to be white, the white craved a tan, the straight haired
one wished she had curls, the curly haired girl swore by her hair straightening
iron, the tallest wished she was a few inches short so she would come across
less intimidating while the shortest wished she was taller, the Asian would not
mind going under the knife for a double eyelid and a sharp nose while the freckled
craved a smooth Asian skin! Essentially no one was happy with what they had,
everyone craved for some feature of the other- each one was disappointed by the
mirror. I realized the problem was circular and vicious yet each of us had the
solution to it. It is called acceptance of self - unprejudiced by sociocultural
stereotypes of beauty, untarnished by the people's world, just absolute
acceptance of who we really are underneath that layer of skin. What's important
is to find beauty inside and to be able bring beauty to the lives of others.
The more I studied
Developmental Biology the more I realized how each of us are no less than a
miracle of nature. What can be more beautiful than the sheer chance of genetic
recombination between the maternal and paternal genomes to result in a unique
combination coding for each us and then the precise plan of cell division it takes
to give that code a physical form! Is it not utterly shallow and wrong to
dismiss all of that just by the amount of pigment present in one layer of the
skin? What is even more astounding is the presence of each of us beyond that
code, beyond the body - the indefinable but undeniable presence of our soul,
the essence of who we really are. If the human eye could see that soul,
probably the parameter of beauty would not be caged by the mere color of our
skin.
Do you ever wonder why when
we pray, even as we stand in front of an idol, we spontaneously close our eyes?
I believe the divinity we all pray to is formless shapeless and most definitely
colorless. Durga is much beyond the clay and hay of human construction and
therefore we invoke the spirit or energy of the goddess at the beginning of
ceremony by performing the 'pranproteestha pujo'. Would the good primal energy
she stands for be any different if an idol were to be colored dark? If we
understand this I cant see why we cannot extend the same wisdom when we judge
people as ugly or beautiful just based on the color of their skin. I'm an
eternal optimist and so despite the past I have faced and many like me continue
to face, I hope that one day we will learn to look beyond skin color, facial
contour and other physical features to find beauty in the sparkle in the eye,
the warmth of the smile, the empathy of the touch and the intention behind good
action. I'm sure it will surprise us to find how many more and how much more
beautiful people the world has than we think. That day we will see light- the
light of true beauty!
1 Comments:
This is beautifully written Aishwarya! And so true for us women from the subcontinent. I too hope and sincerely wish that one day we can look beyond skin color and "find beauty in the sparkle in the eye, the warmth of the smile, the empathy of the touch and the intention behind good action". I am going to bookmark this page to read it over and over and also share with others!
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