
Author: Kenya Miles
Title: “This Glow Is Not for Sale: Beauty As Memory, Armor, and Soft Power”
Section: Lifestyle / Style & Beauty
Let me tell you something about Harlem beauty.
It’s not built in labs. It’s not shaped in boardrooms.
It’s passed down. Poured in. Wrapped tight. Pressed out. Beaten, blended, braided, blessed.
The beauty we carry in Harlem isn’t about trends — it’s about testimony.
It’s what we inherited. It’s how we resist. It’s how we grieve and flex and show up anyway.
So no — I’m not here to tell you what products to buy.
I’m here to remind you that beauty is a power source.
And in Harlem, we’ve always known how to charge it.
My First Mirror Was My Grandmother’s Hand
She used to say, “Don’t leave the house looking like nobody loves you.”
And she didn’t mean contour — she meant care.
She meant don’t forget your earrings.
Don’t forget your Vaseline.
Don’t forget that how you show up tells the world how you feel about yourself.
She taught me that beauty was not vanity — it was value.
And in Harlem, where systems try to strip us daily, getting dressed is declaration.
It’s language. It’s protest. It’s praise.
The Industry Will Never Catch Up to Us
Let them keep trying. They’re still discovering headwraps like they’re new.
They’re still “launching” foundations in shades we’ve been blending in our bathrooms since ’96.
Harlem beauty has never needed permission.
We make magic out of drugstore aisles.

We stack gold like armor.
We line our lips like borders: this is where I begin.
We paint our faces like murals: this is what I survived.
So no — I don’t care about the latest trend.
I care about the girl who looks in the mirror and finally sees herself again.
Skin as Sacred Ground
Let me tell you how I pray:
- I wash my face with warm water and honey.
- I speak kind things over my body while I moisturize.
- I burn incense and pick my outfit like I’m picking my armor.
- I line my eyes like I’m preparing for battle — and joy is the weapon.
Beauty isn’t something I do for others.
It’s something I do to return to myself.
And in Harlem, that’s tradition.
Our glow is spiritual. Our edges are political. Our waist beads are whispers from ancestors who want us to remember how fine we are when we’re free.
For the Girls, Thems, and Queens Who Are Still Hiding
I see you. Behind the oversized hoodie. Behind the “I don’t do all that” energy.
You’re not low. You’re just waiting for safety. You’re just waiting for a reason to come back to yourself.
So here’s your beauty reminder for today:
You don’t need to earn the glow.
You are the glow.
Even when you’re tired.
Even when you’re grieving.
Even when you feel invisible.
Your shine isn’t seasonal — it’s ancestral.
I hope this article reminds you:
Style is not performance. Beauty is not a filter.
And your reflection is holy — whether you dress it up or not.
Now go grab your gold hoops. The big ones.
Harlem’s watching.
— Kenya Miles
