Gen Z clean girls are choosing trendy skincare routines over sex: My boyfriend gets so annoyed

Sometimes, being a “clean girl” means foregoing doing the dirty.Gen Z skincare fanatics are finding that participating in the “morning shed” — a social media trend that involves slathering on multiple products, putting in hair rollers and popping in mouth guards to maximize true beauty sleep — isn’t exactly conducive to a late-night snuggle.But sacrificing a bit of romance in the pursuit of hotness is worth it, enthusiasts say — living by the mantra that going to bed uglier means they’ll wake up hotter.“My boyfriend gets so annoyed with me,” a 24-year-old named Daisy, who called her routine “non-negotiable,” told Dazed.After all, there’s nothing sexy about chin straps, mouth tape — or face masks made from snail mucin.“As soon as we’re done having sex I have to run to the bathroom and spend a minimum of 20 minutes double cleansing my face and applying my serums and moisturizer.By the time I’m done, my boyfriend is asleep and there is no more opportunity for cuddling,” she said, adding that her process often sparks an “argument” the next morning.“There’s no moment of falling asleep together straight away in a romantic way,” the die-hard admitted.Perhaps, then, it’s no surprise that Gen Z is spearheading a sex recession — with even celebrities touting the joys of celibacy.But beauty critic Jessica DeFino told Dazed that she finds it “reductive” to assume morning shedders aren’t having sex “just because they’re covered in layers of face masks,” arguing that “everyday sex exists outside of the bounds of looking ‘sexy.'”“Sex exists outside of the ‘go to bed and turn the lights off and f–k’ clichés of Hollywood,” said DeFino, adding that, for some, “becoming beautiful is seen as more important than having sex and falling in love” because beauty is seen as the gateway to attraction.Even still, some Zoomers might even pass on spending the night with a fling for the sake of their skincare,...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles