"My husband hasn't told me I'm beautiful in three years. And the real reason had nothing to do with what I thought."

Brigitte L., 62, a former nurse in Marseille, talks about the five years during which everyone around her kept telling her she looked tired and the click that changed everything. Testimony.

by the editorial staff of SantéAuFéminin.fr

"You look tired."

 

If only you knew how many times I've heard that phrase in the last five years.

 

At the tobacco shop. When I pick up my grandson from school. At my GP's office. At the hairdresser's. And my sister, every Sunday lunch, asking me if I'm sleeping well.

 

"Brigitte, you look tired."

 

My name is Brigitte. I'm 62 years old and I live in Marseille. I was an operating theatre nurse for thirty-six years before retiring two years ago.

 

And yes, I smoke. Since I was nineteen. A pack a day for a long time, ten cigarettes today. I've tried to quit five times. Each time I started again. It's neither a heroic battle nor a shame. It's my life.

 

I'm telling you this because it's part of the story.

The first few times, I laughed

At first, it was almost a backhanded compliment. "You look tired" meant "we're worried about you". I would laugh, reply "no, I'm perfectly fine", and we would move on.

 

Then it started to come up again. Every day. Several times a day.

 

I started to get annoyed. "Stop it, I'm sleeping well, I'm fine." My friends eventually stopped daring to say it to my face — but I saw their gaze drift over me at the brasserie table, that little crease at the corner of their eyes that meant "you look strange, but I'm not going to say it."

 

And then, at some point, it started to hurt.

 

Because it wasn't true. I wasn't any more tired than anyone else. I walked every day. I slept well. I had my grandchildren on Wednesdays, and I loved it.

 

But something in my face, especially in my eyes, gave that impression to everyone I met.

 

And I couldn't put my finger on it.

My husband had stopped talking

The worst part wasn't the "you look tired" comments from outside. It was the silence in the house.

 

My husband, Pierre, no longer told me I was beautiful.

 

I don't blame him. He was never the type of husband to compliment every five minutes. But before, before the last five years, he used to say things. "You look pretty this morning." "That dress looks good on you." Little things, said in passing.

 

And then it stopped. Without either of us noticing at the time.

 

He probably doesn't even realize it today.

 

Me, I know.

The picture that explained everything to me

It happened at a christening. My granddaughter Léa’s, who is now one year old.

 

In the group photo, I am holding Léa in my arms. I am smiling at the camera. It's a nice photo. Except that when I looked at it that evening, on my phone screen, I was shocked.

 

My eyes were dull.

 

As if someone behind my eyes had flipped a switch.

 

I leaned closer to the screen. And I understood.

 

My eyelashes.

 

My eyelashes had become almost invisible. The mascara I had applied that morning had done nothing. My eyelids were bare. My gaze was flat.

 

This is what people had been seeing for five years. This is why my sister asked me if I was sleeping well. This is why Pierre didn't say anything anymore.

 

My eyelashes were eating away at my face.

I stopped looking at myself in the mirror.

In the weeks that followed, I did something I never thought I would do: I started avoiding my reflection.

 

I put on my makeup without really looking at myself. I did my eyes blindly. I put on more mascara, thinking I was compensating. Three coats instead of one.

 

It was worse. The excess fell into fine lines. By 11 am, I already had black smudges under my eyes. I looked like I had been crying.

 

I hadn't cried.

 

The consultation where I wasn't lectured

 

What saved me was an appointment that had nothing to do with it.

 

I made an appointment with a dermatologist in Aix-en-Provence, Dr. Sandrine M., for a pigmented spot on my temple that needed monitoring.

 

While she was examining me with the lamp, she asked the question:

 

"Your eyelashes are quite thin. Is this recent?"

 

I'll be honest: I expected her to follow up with the smoking. "You know, at your age, smoking..." I had prepared a polite answer to get her to leave me alone.

 

She did not say it like that.

 

She looked at me and said:

 

"Brigitte, eyelashes change for all women after 60. But when you have a habit, smoking for you, stress for others, the environment for still others, the fiber thins faster. My job is not to make you stop smoking. It's to offer you what can really work for your eyelashes in the life you have."

 

I sat in that consultation as if it was the first time in five years that I had been spoken to like an adult.

What she explained to me (and what no one else had explained to me)

Dr. M. told me three things that changed my understanding of the problem.

 

One. An eyelash at 30 is a thick fiber that holds pigment. At 60, the same fiber has become thinner. If you've smoked, been exposed to the sun, or had years of stress, it's even thinner. On this thin fiber, mass-market mascaras no longer hold. It's not you, it's not your makeup. It's the fiber.

 

Two. "24h wear" waterproof formulas, the kind you find in pharmacies or supermarkets, are too aggressive for this thin fiber. They form a kind of plaster that cracks in the fine lines of the eyelid, crumbles, and ends up as dark circles around 11 am. The more you apply, the worse it gets.

 

Three. The eye contour area in women 60+ is drier and more teary at times (paradoxically, and even more so if you have a smoking habit). So a mascara that doesn't take this into account will run under your eyes.

 

"You apply more coats thinking you're compensating," she told me, "and that's what makes people ask if you're tired."

 

That was exactly what I was doing.

The mascara she recommended to me

Dr. M told me about a product category she's been recommending to her patients for a few months now: what she calls "care-colors."

 

The idea is simple: instead of just applying color to the lash, you apply a complex at the same time that visibly strengthens the fiber with each application.

 

The French brand she mentioned to me is called Serolys. A brand that formulates only for women over 50, not a "50+ line" from a cosmetic giant, but a brand entirely dedicated to them.

 

Their mascara is called Pro-Age. Its mechanism: Pro-Density™ Care-Color.

 

Three active ingredients work together:

  • Peptides, which form a "second sheath" around each lash
  • Biotin (vitamin B7), a main component of keratin
  • A trio of vegetable oils (castor, jojoba, argan) that nourish the fiber

Like a tinted lip balm that, in addition to coloring, treats the lip with the same gesture.

 

Except here, it's for the eyelashes.

 

I ordered the tube on my way home in the car.

 

The first morning

 

Tube opened. Brush is thinner than what I'm used to. Texture is liquid, almost light. Not the thick paste of volume mascaras.

 

I applied only one coat.

 

My lashes were defined. Not falsely thick — defined. Present. As if they were there again.

 

In the evening, I remove my makeup. No dark circles under my eyes. No little smudges that ran. The mascara comes off cleanly with warm water.

 

It was this absence that convinced me on the first day.

 

The absence of fallen black. The absence of panic before the selfie. The absence of the old routine.

 

Three weeks

 

After three weeks, I saw a difference in the density of my lashes.

 

It wasn't spectacular. It was subtle. As if someone had added a tiny bit of volume at the root.

 

I didn't see it every morning. But at certain times — in the bright sun in the car, above the bathroom mirror in the evening, it struck me.

 

The sentence that disappeared

 

And then, six weeks after starting.

 

Sunday lunch at my sister's house in Aubagne.

 

She serves me coffee, as she does every Sunday. She looks at me. She hesitates. She says:

 

"Brigitte... have you done something?"

 

Not "you look tired."

 

"You have something different."

 

I smiled. I didn't answer. I wanted to keep silent so the sentence would remain.

 

And then Pierre

 

Three days later. A Tuesday morning, in the kitchen. Pierre hands me my coffee, as he has every morning for thirty-five years.

 

He looks at me. He smiles. He says:

 

"You're glowing this morning."

 

He hadn't told me that in three years.

 

Three years.

 

I didn't say anything either. I kissed him. I left for work — well, I left for my daughter's house, I don't work anymore.

 

But in the car, I cried. Silent tears. Not sad tears. The other kind.

 

What other women say

 

Before testifying here, I read the reviews on the Serolys website. Three touched me, because they tell similar stories.

 

"64 years old, I smoke about ten cigarettes a day as I always have. With this mascara, I've rediscovered my eyes. And no one lectured me. That's rare."Martine C., Lyon

 

"Ex-smoker for four years. My lashes hadn't come back on their own as I'd hoped. This product did the work that my willpower hadn't."Annick R., Nantes

 

"My daughter asked me what I had changed. It's the first time in ten years that she's noticed something about me. Usually, it's the other way around."Christine F., Tours

Why Serolys speaks to women like me

I ended up calling the brand, out of curiosity.

 

The founder told me something that resonated with me. She said that sixty-year-old women who smoke or have smoked, or who have had somewhat difficult lives, are systematically ignored by mainstream cosmetics. Either they are lectured (anti-smoking ads). Or they are invisible (cosmetic brands feature 35-year-old women on their covers).

 

Serolys made a different choice: to treat these women as normal customers, who deserve a product designed for them. No sermon. No cessation program. No judgment.

 

A product. That works.

 

That's all. And that's rare.

Discover Serolys Pro-Age mascara — €29 instead of €49

The warranty

Another detail that won me over.

 

The Serolys guarantee isn't "satisfied within 30 days." It's 365 days empty bottle.

 

You use the mascara until it's empty. If after a full year you're not convinced, you send back the empty tube. You get a full refund.

 

For someone who spent thirty-six years in the medical field, I can tell you: this level of guarantee doesn't exist. They trust their product.

 

The Price

 

€29 per tube at launch (instead of €49).

 

A tube lasts approximately three months. That's less than thirty cents a day.

 

With the one-year guarantee, you have nothing to lose.

 

To conclude

 

I've been using Pro-Age for almost three months.

 

I'm not telling you I have 25-year-old eyelashes. That's false, and no one should promise you that at 60.

 

But here's what I can tell you with certainty:

 

No one has told me I look tired for seven weeks.

 

My husband looks at me differently in the morning.

 

My 4-year-old granddaughter told me last week, "Grandma, your eyes are sparkling". That's worth everything else.

 

I still smoke. I haven't quit. Nor do I intend to pretend.

 

But my sparkle is back. And with it, everything else.

 

How to get Pro-Age

 

Serolys doesn't sell in pharmacies or perfumeries. Only on their website, direct.

 

That's probably why it's €29 instead of €49. No intermediaries.

Discover Serolys Pro-Age Mascara — €29 instead of €49

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