Asian Americans Are Living in an Ugly Alternate Reality. The Beauty Industry Can Help

Peach And Lily founder Alicia Yoon opens up about ways to fight Asian hate—and why it's so crucial brands take a stance.

Racist attacks against the Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) community have increased at an alarming rate since March 2020. During the past few months, with the release of horrific videos of violent crimes against Asians, coverage of the terrible shootings in Atlanta, and through the focused efforts of Asian advocates and organizations, the gravity of this increase has finally started to penetrate the national consciousness.

As a pregnant Korean American woman living in fear in New York City, I think it is vital to clarify that this growing coverage and awareness of anti-Asian racism and violence is barely scratching the surface of the AAPI experience. When I talk to non-Asians, anti-Asian racism is very rarely at the top of their minds, or on their minds at all. When I talk to Asian friends and family or engage with other Asians on social media, this topic is often the only one on our agenda.

Why is there such a disconnect? Asian Americans are living in an alternate reality right now. For us, racist attacks are not an awful phenomenon rising occasionally to the surface – like the 65-year-old Filipino woman stomped on the sidewalk a block from my old apartment or the 61-year-old Chinese man stomped in East Harlem and now fighting for his life in the hospital. They are an everyday occurrence and a source of constant fear and anxiety. Almost every Asian American I know can share either a personal account, or one from a close friend or family member, of a racist attack in the last 12 months. 

Most can share multiple experiences. We are utilizing resources like Stop AAPI Hate and AsianFeed and following accounts like @NextShark and @CeFaan to track this country-wide epidemic of daily violence and figure out how to protect and support each other and ourselves. As vaccines become more available and many non-Asians look forward to a return to normal, many in the AAPI community – especially women, children, and the elderly–are too afraid to step outside.

I believe the beauty industry has an important role to play in stopping Asian hate. Beauty brands and retailers need to get involved.

First, it's simply the right thing to do. Racism and hate are attacks against our shared humanity.
Individuals and organizations have a responsibility to stand up against these destructive forces.
Second, there are significant business imperatives. As a Korean beauty insider, I am very familiar with Asian beauty innovations, modalities and ingredients, and I see many global beauty brands profit from elements of Asian beauty culture —often without appropriate attribution. Many non-Asian beauty brands also develop their formulas with labs and contract manufacturers in Asia. More often than you might think, products Made in France or the US feature innovations from Asia.

Additionally, beauty brands generate significant sales in Asia and benefit from a sizeable Asian consumer base in the US. Brands profit from Asian beauty culture, Asian innovation, and Asian customers—they can’t stay silent during an acute moment of crisis for Asians. I am not alone in feeling this way. Many friends, family, and colleagues in the AAPI community have shared that they are paying close attention to whether their favorite brands stand up for them or not. Brands have a choice to make at this moment, and this choice matters deeply to their Asian consumers.

Third, beauty is an inherently emotional category, and beauty brands have the potential to connect with their communities in a powerful way. The beauty industry, for better or worse, helps to form ideals of what is considered beautiful. As consumers, our relationship to beauty can be deeply psychological, emotional, and personal. Even though I’m a total ingredient junkie, an esthetician, and passionate about skincare education and innovation, I have a fundamentally emotional response to my favorite beauty brands and retailers. They aren’t just products on a shelf to me—often they remind me of certain celebratory moments in my life, or challenges I faced along the way. I don’t have this same experience when I contemplate my cell phone or my microwave.

I struggled for years with severe eczema, with frequent flare-ups of painful, itchy, weeping rashes. As a teenager, there were many days I didn’t want to show my face in public. I know what it feels like to feel less than beautiful, and I have deep empathy for the customers and clients I meet today, looking to achieve their own optimal skin health and personal beauty ideals. I remember vividly those beauty brands which played a role in my own skin transformation. I loved brands that showed empathy and compassion in their language around eczema, at a time when I was desperate for support and reassurance. And I remember much less fondly those brands which used condescending, clinical language about eczema, or made it seem like it was my fault for not trying hard enough or that I would never be able to get my painful rashes under control.

Many participants in the beauty industry may not realize that they have this unique potential to connect emotionally with their communities. At this moment of crisis for the AAPI community, the beauty industry can harness this power and use it for good. Racism is in large part a function of dehumanization, of stripping away the richness and complexity of a person or a people and labeling them as “other” and “less-than.” Asians have faced racism and violence since the 1800s, when they first started to immigrate to the US in large numbers. The current crisis of violence against the AAPI community is the latest consequence of a long and ugly history of dehumanization. The beauty industry has the power to give Asian brands, Asian influencers, Asian artists, and Asian models more opportunities to represent the diversity, the achievements, and the unique stories within the AAPI community. 

To spotlight the incredible beauty innovations coming out of Asia, the history and evolution of Asian ingredients and beauty practices, and the vitality and technological sophistication present in places like Seoul, Taiwan, and other Asian beauty meccas. To push back against the dangerous tide of dehumanization and hate.

As the founder and CEO of a rapidly growing skincare brand, I understand that competing priorities and everyday business challenges can be all consuming. However, at Peach & Lily, we have found ways to explicitly and visibly address anti-Asian hate and uplift our AAPI community. I urge beauty brands and retailers to recognize their AAPI community members, staff, and partners, empathize with their current pain and fear, and invest time, money, and energy to raise awareness about this crisis and help stop the violence now. Sharing about the severity of the crisis and linking to resources like Stop AAPI Hate and @NextShark, publicizing bystander intervention trainings available quickly and easily online, and encouraging donations to the Stop Asian Hate master fund, are all great steps to take.

I also ask my peers in the beauty industry to join me in using their creativity, empathy and reach to inspire an emotional response to anti-Asian hate. Together, we can strike directly against the dehumanizing roots of racism by giving Asians more space to tell their own diverse stories. Members of the AAPI community will remember the beauty brands and retailers who choose to stand with them in this moment.

Alicia Yoon is an esthetician and founder of Peach and Lily skincare. Follow her on Instagram @aliciayoon212. 

This story originally appeared on: Glamour - Author:Alicia Yoon

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