Among my many social ineptitudes, one of them is my terrible memory for faces.
It's
a nightmare when I go to my boyfriend's family functions. I'm
surrounded by his cousins, most of whom I've met multiple times, and yet
I could still swear they're all perfect strangers to me. I survive
these kinds of events by putting on my friendliest smile, greeting
everyone with enthusiastic hellos and hugs, and basically treating each
person like I know exactly who they are and am extremely happy to see
them. Mostly I get away with this artifice by dodging meaningful
conversation and never calling anyone by their name.
When
not at social gatherings, I try to make up for my awkwardness by
getting better at facial recognition. I didn't start it on purpose, but
somehow I've fallen into the habit of practicing my skills through the
diligent study of gossip rags.
The
lifestyles of the rich and famous aren't really my thing, but somehow I
have gotten on the email lists of many, many women's publications,
which seem to love nothing more than that very subject. So I read them.
Even a media-clueless nerd like myself can't always resist a headline
like "Wow, Meghan Markle Has Gorgeous Handwriting," or "Miley Cyrus Wore
a Super Revealing Outfit on 'SNL' Last Night and Twitter Is Losing It,"
or "Kate Middleton's lessons on being photogenic!" At worst, I can
always use the intel for my highly lucrative fashion blog!
So nowadays, when I'm reading a roundup of the best awards-night dresses, I'm not just taking in all the glitter and lace and fashionable eye candy, I'm also scrutinizing every celebrity's face to see if I can match it with a name. I've made it into a game, and I'm not very good at it.
The
hardest faces to recognize are the ones that belong to famous families.
Try telling apart all the many Kardashians, or remembering which Hadid
is Gigi and which one is Bella. The trickiest challenge yet? Figuring
out which of the Olsen twins you're looking at! I've been doing this for
years, and I still can't remember (though I think it's Ashley who has
the rounder eyes).
1 comments:
Once again, I must issue and apology for passing on to you both physical and personal traits. I have always been terrible at putting names to faces of people I supposedly know. There is the time I passed my friend Tom Freer in the hall at MCO and calling him by the wrong name. And at the time I had known him for over 25 years. Bones structure (nasal area for both you and Eric and spinal shape for Eric only. I think) and facial recognition ability. What else is there with which I have cursed my children?
In some ways the curses have come back to me. I rewrote the above sentence several times to avoid my grammar-aware daughter having to read a sentence that ended with a preposition. Arggh!
Dad