I hadn't worn mascara for 3 years. My mother's photo at 62 made me start again.

I had stopped wearing mascara for 3 years. The photo of my mother at 62 made me start again.

I had stopped wearing mascara for 3 years. The photo of my mother at 62 made me start again.

My name is Isabelle. I am 63 years old. I live in Toulouse, near the Capitole.

 

My mother, Yvonne, passed away almost 3 years ago. At the time, I was about to turn 60.

 

This double shift—losing my mother, turning 60—affected me more deeply than I realized at the time. For 6 months after her funeral, I gradually stopped wearing makeup in the morning. Not by conscious decision. By a kind of gradual fading out.

 

First lipstick. Then blush. And finally, mascara—which was my last gesture, the one I had kept the longest.

 

On my 60th birthday, I put down my tube. And I didn't pick it up again for 3 years.

 

I had convinced myself that it was my age. "Oh well. That's how it is."

 

For 3 years, I didn't think about it anymore. I had gotten used to the vacant reflection the mirror showed me in the morning. I had gotten used to not looking for my face anymore. I had just faded out, gently, without realizing it.

 

And then there was that Saturday last November.

The Saturday I found a photo of my mother

My brother and I had finally decided to sort through our mother's last belongings. We had kept two large cardboard boxes in her attic in Cahors. They had been there for three years. Three years that we hadn't had the courage to open them.

 

That Saturday, I went up to Cahors. We put the two boxes on the kitchen table. We opened the first one in silence.

 

Old administrative papers. Yellowed postcards. Knick-knacks we didn't know where to put. The basic memories, not too painful.

 

And then, in the second box, beneath a carton of greeting cards, I found an envelope of photos.

 

I don't know who had put them there. My mother, probably. There were photos of her, young. At 30. At 40. At 50. I looked at them, smiling—she had been a beautiful woman, with a beautiful smile.

And then I came across a photo where I didn't know her age.

 

I turned the photo over. On the back, written in my mother's precise pencil handwriting: "Yvonne — 62 years old — All Saints' Day."

I looked at the front of the photo. And I froze.

What I saw in this photo

In the photo, my mother was 62.

 

I am 63 today.

 

She was in front of the family home. She was wearing a beige cardigan. Her hair was grey, pulled back.

 

She wasn't smiling. Nor was she pouting. She just had a face without intention. A face that says: "I'm here because I was asked to be here."

 

No makeup. None. No mascara, no blush, no lipstick. A vacant stare, as if she wasn't really in the photo.

 

And that's what hit me like a slap in the face,

 

This woman in the photo, it was me.

 

Not a little bit. Not just in terms of features. Exactly the same expression. The same vacant stare. The same way of being there without truly being present.

 

At 62, my mother had already given up. She had resigned herself. She had faded away — for the remaining 12 years of her life, she remained like that: present, kind, but without seeking to exist in anyone's eyes.

 

And I was doing exactly the same thing.

What I swore to myself at his funeral

My brother, who had noticed I’d frozen, came up behind me and looked at the photo over my shoulder.

 

He said softly, "She looks like you."

 

I replied, "No. It's the other way around."

 

And then it hit me.

 

At my mother's funeral, three years earlier, I had made a silent promise in the church, looking at her coffin. A promise I hadn't told anyone — not my husband, not my children, not even myself out loud.

 

I had sworn to myself: "I won't become like her. I won't give up. I will continue to be myself until the very end."

And now, three years later, standing before this photo in a kitchen in Cahors, I had to admit something very simple.

 

I had already started to become her.

 

Not in gestures. Not in the way of speaking. But in the extinguished gaze. In the blank face. In that way of being present without really being there.

 

The mascara I stopped wearing at 60 was my last act of resistance before fading away. And I had given up.

 

I went back to Toulouse that night with my mother's photo in my bag. I placed it on my dressing table, in front of the mirror.

 

And the next morning, I looked for mascara.

Why nothing had ever suited me

Before going any further, I need to tell you why I stopped at 60.

 

It wasn't a choice. It was an accumulation of disappointments.

 

My eyelashes had become so fine that every mascara I bought clumped. The brands I had used for 30 years—L'Oréal, Lancôme, Bourjois—no longer worked. By noon, I had clumps. By 4 PM, I had smudges under my eyes. And when I removed my makeup, I pulled out my lashes.

 

I had tried waterproof: even worse.

 

So the day after the Cahors photo, I knew I couldn't go back to the brands that had disappointed me. I needed something else. Something designed for my eyelashes as they are today—not for the ones I had at 30.

 

It was my daughter—she's 35 and works in cosmetics in Paris—who sent me a link the next day.

 

A French brand I didn't know. Serolys.

 

On their homepage, in big letters, it said:

 

"Your eyelashes are 60. Your mascara should be too."

 

I reread it twice. And then, for the first time in 30 years, I understood that they were talking to me. Not to the 30-year-old woman I had been. But to the 63-year-old woman I am today.

What's new with this mascara

My daughter explained to me — and my pharmacist Sophie confirmed when I went to see her the next day — that Serolys is specifically calibrated for the eyelashes of women over 55:

 

An "Anatomy 60+" brush with shorter, more precise bristles, designed to grip fine and sparse lashes (not slide over them like standard brushes designed for 100-150 dense lashes).

 

● A water-based, pH-neutral formula — not waterproof. Removal with warm water without rubbing.

 

● 4 calibrated shades for mature skin (Cocoa Brown, Velvet Black, Plum, Anthracite).

 

● A 365-day empty bottle guarantee — unique in the French mascara market.

Sophie looked at me and simply said:

 

"Madam Isabelle, this is serious. It's calibrated. And the 365-day guarantee means they are sure of their product. Go ahead, try it. You have nothing to lose."

 

I ordered it on my way out of the pharmacy.

Three weeks later

I took the Brown-Cocoa.

 

First application: no clumps. No smudging. My eyelashes — the 30 or 40 that are left — appeared, one by one, defined, separated, present.

 

I looked at myself in the mirror. And for the first time in 3 years, I didn't look away.

First week: mascara became a morning habit. 30 seconds.

 

Second week: I started to also put on a little blush. Then lipstick. Not right away, not all at once. But little by little, the gestures I had abandoned came back.

 

Third week, downtown, passing a shop window, I had an epiphany.

 

I saw myself in the reflection of the window. Without expecting it. Like seeing a stranger in a crowd.

 

And I recognized myself.

 

I had forgotten that it was possible.

Symmetry

That night, when I got home, I did something I hadn't done in 3 years.

 

I took out my phone. I took a picture of myself, in front of the entrance mirror. Not a fashion selfie.

 

Just a picture. To check if what I had seen in the shop window was true.

 

I looked at the picture. Then I took the picture of my mother at 62, which had been on my dressing table since Cahors.

I put them side by side.

 

In my mother's picture: that absent gaze, that expressionless face.

 

In my picture: a gaze. A present face. A woman who was there.

 

It wasn't a cosmetic miracle. It wasn't a "rejuvenating" effect — I'm 63 and look 63. But I had found something. A presence. A design. An intention in my gaze.

 

I had refused to become my mother.

 

It was three weeks of mascara.

 

But above all, I think, it was three years of waiting for something to make me want to look for my face in the morning again.

Comparaison concrète : water-based vs waterproof

Mascaras waterproof (L'Oréal, Lancôme, Maybelline...) Serolys Pro-Âge water-based
Composition ❌ Cires + pigments hydrophobes ✅ Pigments water-soluble en base aqueuse
Comportement face aux larmes lipidiques ❌ Se solubilisent dans la couche grasse, migrent vers les ridules ✅ Reste là où on le dépose
pH ❌ Variable, parfois acide ou alcalin ✅ Calibré sur la sensibilité oculaire post-ménopause
Démaquillage ❌ Démaquillant biphasé + frottement ✅ Eau tiède au coton, sans frotter
Cils au démaquillage ❌ Arrachés régulièrement ✅ Préservés
Tolérance yeux sensibles ❌ Variable (souvent picotement) ✅ Testée sous contrôle ophtalmologique
Garantie ❌ Aucune ✅ 365 jours, flacon vide accepté
Prix ❌ 15-35€ selon la marque ✅ 29€ au lieu de 49€

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

The guarantee that reverses the risk

365 days to try. Empty bottle or not. No conditions.

 

You buy. You use the mascara completely. If within 12 months you are not satisfied — for any reason — you return the empty tube, and you will be refunded.

 

No L'Oréal, no Lancôme, no Maybelline offers that in France. Not a single one.

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

In summary, what's new with this mascara

Before giving you the link, here's a brief summary of what concretely changes with Serolys Pro-Age mascara — to spare you the hesitations I had:

 

✅ The only French formula calibrated and tested specifically for the eyelashes of women aged 55 to 75 — not a generic formula marginally adapted.

 

✅ An "Anatomy 60+" brush with shorter, more precise bristles, designed for thin and sparse eyelashes — it grips instead of gliding, separates instead of clumping.

 

✅ A water-based, pH-neutral formula, without aggressive solvents — that doesn't migrate into fine lines, doesn't sting dry eyes post-menopause, and can be removed with warm water without rubbing (you keep your eyelashes instead of pulling them out).

 

✅ 4 shades designed for mature skin — not aggressive intense black, but softened pigments (Cocoa Brown, Velvet Black, Plum, Anthracite) that restore contrast with softness.

 

✅ Visual effect from the first application, and visibly strengthened eyelashes over 2 to 4 weeks of regular use (peptides + biotin).

 

✅ 365-day empty bottle guarantee — unique in the French mascara market. If you are not satisfied, you return the empty tube, and you get a refund. No conditions.

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

How to order

The Serolys Pro-Âge mascara is currently available for €29 instead of €49 on their official website. Free delivery for orders over €30 (so practically, from two tubes or one tube + a skincare cream from their range).

 

At €29 for a tube that lasts about 60 days, that's less than 50 cents a day. For what it did for me, that's negligible.

 

👉 [See the Serolys Pro-Âge mascara — €29 instead of €49, 365-day empty bottle guarantee]

 

What I would honestly add:

 

It's a DTC brand (direct-to-consumer, not in pharmacies). You won't find it in stores.

 

Delivery time is 2 to 4 days in mainland France.

 

And yes — they honor their guarantee. I checked with other customers.

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

One last word

I am 63 years old.

 

For 3 years, I had unwittingly faded away. I thought it was just age. It was something else: I had started to become my own mother, who herself had given up at 60, and had spent the last 12 years of her life as a gentle shadow in her beige cardigan.

 

I kept this photo of my mother at 62 on my dressing table. Not to scare myself. To remind myself.

 

My mother left without choosing to end up like that. She just let go because no one reached out to her, at a time when she could have started over.

 

I had that chance — the chance to find a photo. The chance to have a daughter in cosmetics. The chance to have an attentive pharmacist. The chance to come across a brand that finally talked about my eyelashes.

 

If you recognize yourself in what I'm saying — if you too have gradually stopped, if you too have faded away without deciding to — you don't have to end up like that.

 

You have 365 days to check that it's not too late.

 

— Isabelle M., 63, Toulouse

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

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: I also gradually stopped, I don't know where to start again.

 

A: The easiest way is to start with what you kept last. For many women, it's mascara — it's the cosmetic gesture that changes the look the most for the least effort. Then, blush or lipstick naturally follow in the weeks after. No need to start everything all at once.

 

Q: I have very sensitive eyes. Can I use it?

 

A: The water-based, pH-neutral formula is ophthalmologically tested. Suitable for sensitive eyes, contact lens wearers, and women with a history of blepharitis or dry eyes.

 

Q: Do I need a special make-up remover?

 

A: No. Lukewarm water on a cotton pad, without rubbing. The formula rinses off naturally. You keep your lashes.

 

Q: How long before I see a result?

 

A: The visual effect is immediate from the first application. The fortifying effect of the active ingredients (peptides + biotin) is seen gradually over 2 to 4 weeks of regular use — visibly strengthened lash appearance.

 

Q: Which shade should I choose?

 

A: Cocoa-Brown for brown hair, Velvet-Black for fair skin/light eyes, Plum for grey/silver eyes, Anthracite for brunettes. If in doubt, their advisor will respond quickly by email.

 

Q: What if I'm not convinced?

 

A: 365-day empty bottle guarantee. You use it all, send the empty tube back to the brand, and you get a refund. No conditions. You risk nothing.

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

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