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From Nivea to £400 Skincare: A Glowing Tribute to My £2 Childhood Moisturiser (and a Bit of a Rant)

Raise your hand if your earliest memory of skincare is a giant, suspiciously bottomless tub of Nivea cream sitting on your gran’s table like it paid rent.

You know the one, big blue tin, smelt like a hug, cured dry skin, heartbreak, probably tax debt. Everyone used it. Granny slapped it on her face, elbows, knees, ankles, and probably the wallpaper. It worked on everything. Acne? Nivea. Eczema? Nivea. A bad breakup? Nivea and tea. Life was simple. One cream ruled them all, and it cost, like, £2.50 on a bad day.

Then something tragic happened, we grew up.

Suddenly, we’re spending £100 on a “lightweight peptide-infused hyaluronic pre-serum booster” that claims to reverse aging, heal emotional wounds, and probably do your taxes. Your skincare shelf turns into a Boots branch. Ten products before bed. Seven in the morning. Each with its own mood, personality, and therapist. And what does it all amount to? £400 a month and still the occasional chin spot called Gerald.

And here’s the twist, I have psoriasis on my thumb. Yes, just the thumb. Glamorous. Had it since I was 10, and it flares up the moment I even think about cheese or sleep badly. So I’ve tried everything. Ointments. Creams. Witchcraft (only joking). Dermatologists who charge £80 to look vaguely concerned and recommend oat baths.

And guess what’s actually helped? Absolutely nothing. Except, maybe… that old tub of Nivea my gran kept next to her glasses.

The other day, during a dramatic psoriasis flare-up (my thumb looked like it was auditioning for a horror film), I had a full existential moment. When did I abandon Nivea? What happened to that humble £2 miracle? Somewhere between 18 and 20, I got drunk on freedom and thought, “You know what this sensitive skin needs? A twelve-step skincare routine and some glittery foundation from YouTube.”

Cue regret. I tried it all, expensive creams, budget disasters, DIY avocado face masks (don’t ask). And now? I can’t even use makeup. Can’t touch my face without my thumb screaming, “How DARE you.”

Irony? I used to fight my mum about not letting me wear makeup as a teen. Thought she was ruining my life. Now? I want to build her a statue. Turns out she was protecting me from a future of flaming thumb psoriasis and wasted Sephora points.

These days I keep it basic. No makeup. No ten-step routines. Just vibes, water, and a cautious relationship with Nivea (the upgraded sensitive skin version, obviously). If only someone had told me at 18 that “dewy glow” is just marketing speak for “you’ll break out tomorrow.”

So, real talk: What’s something you did in your teen years that you deeply regret now?

Come on. Let’s bond over our questionable choices and teenage delusions.

Loads of luv,

Hannah 💙

P.S. I usually write on Mondays and Fridays, but I skipped yesterday because I was out doing very important things (aka living my truth and avoiding responsibilities).

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11 responses to “From Nivea to £400 Skincare: A Glowing Tribute to My £2 Childhood Moisturiser (and a Bit of a Rant)”

  1. Good morning my luv! You know what I’m hearing is that you have transitioned from the false advertisement and marketing heists in the women’s department of skin care towards a more basic version of lotion and face scrub, which is what I have been and gotta say it is quite funny given that I use one single product on my face and never really breakout less i eat too much fried foods. And the funniest bit is that you ask me how my face is always so clean even though i touch it or you touch it and nothing occurs, but as soon as i touch your face three breakout spots the next morning. I love you darling, and keep going for the simplicity. Let your body do the work and all will be well! Take care puppy dawg!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Hey didn’t I tell you that men skin is 7 times thicker than women (I read it somewhere, don’t ask me where).
      Luv yew x

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  2. Good morning my luv!
    You know what I’m hearing is that you have transitioned from the false advertisement and marketing heists in the women’s department of skin care towards a more basic version of lotion and face scrub, which is what I have been and gotta say it is quite funny given that I use one single product on my face and never really breakout less i eat too much fried foods. And the funniest bit is that you ask me how my face is always so clean even though i touch it or you touch it and nothing occurs, but as soon as i touch your face three breakout spots the next morning. I love you darling, and keep going for the simplicity. Let your body do the work and all will be well!
    Take care puppy dawg!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. There was Nivea too in my childhood, and it does smell like hugs.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Oh yes, my mum swore on the Nivea cream! Your post is incredibly relatable 🤭
    In my teenage years, I started experimenting with make up, without any skincare. Which is just the worst idea. Dark, patchy foundation. Blue eyeshadow. Cringe alert!
    Then in my 20s, I started reading about the Korean 10 step skincare routine. Insanely expensive!
    Now, in my mid 30s, I threw all of it out and use … not Nivea, because it is a bit too thick and sticky for my taste, but something equally inexpensive.
    I won’t say I am glowing, but I didn’t have a break out in ages. So make up isn’t something I have bough in years either!

    Ps. I do swear by the Nivea hair milk shampoo and conditioner.

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    1. our mums really knew what was up, and the blue eyeshadow? Babe, I think we all had our “Smurf glam” thankfully, no photographic evidence survives 😂😂

      Ps; now I need to try the Nivea hair milk shampoo and conditioner

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  5. Wait ~ it’ll do my TAXES?? How much extra do I have to pay for that feature? Is it good with deductables?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes you got it 😂😂😂

      Liked by 1 person

  6. You brought back a good memory of my Grandmother and I remember that smell of Nivea so well, long after she is gone. I would say that as a teenager I made so many questionable decisions. Maybe the worst was not understanding and appreciating that my grandmother was aging and needed more careful consideration. She was the only person in my life who gave me “unconditional love”. I returned it in “my way”, but I could have done better. Only now, as I age, do I understand what I missed seeing back then…maybe that is the natural way of things.

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    1. I’m sure your grandmother felt your love in her own way too, even if we’re not always perfect in how we show it, love still speaks through the little things.

      Aging really does shift our lens, doesn’t it?
      Thanks for your lovely comment 🤍

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