My door creaks, and  in steps Mom. “Marie, what’s the matter?” She sees my scriptures and my  watery eyes. “What are you doing, honey? What’s wrong?”
It splutters out  of me all at once. “Boys will only love you if you’re beautiful. It’s  always the first thing. They aren’t attracted unless you’ve got beauty.  They don’t get attracted, you don’t get married. You don’t get married,  no exaltation. I took a survey. You and Grandma and Rebekah, Rachel,  and Esther. And I’m never getting married! I’m never going to be able to  live with Father in Heaven! Look, look at this verse. “I beheld a  virgin, and she was exceedingly fair and white. … A virgin, most  beautiful and fair above all other virgins … bearing a child in her  arms” (1 Ne. 11:13, 15, 20).
Mom touches my arm  gently and lifts my scriptures from my hands, “Bearing a child,” she  slowly repeats and looks at me with soft eyes. “Marie, may I read you  another scripture about that child?”
She doesn’t wait for a response. “He hath no form nor comeliness; and when we shall see him, there is no beauty that we should desire him.
“He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: … he was despised, and we esteemed him not.
“Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows” (Isa. 53:2–4).
She pauses while I lower my chin into my chest.
“Maybe … maybe  you’re right, Marie. Maybe men only love and desire that which they  think is beautiful. After all, they didn’t love our Savior. They  despised Him. They crucified Him.”
I shake my head slowly. “But He was the most beautiful of all.”
Mom doesn’t respond. Her eyes are expectant. She wants me to say more.
“They just …” I pause. “They just couldn’t tell.”
“Why not?”
“Well, they didn’t recognize it. They couldn’t tell that it was beauty.  He was beautiful because …” I blow a frustrated gust of air through  pursed lips. “I can’t explain it. He was beautiful in the way you just  can’t see.”
Mom nods in agreement and reads, “‘Therefore, what manner of men ought ye to be? Verily I say unto you, even as I am’ (3 Ne. 27:27). Marie, you don’t have to look like Grandma or Esther or Rachel or Rebekah. For all we know, their kind of beauty was as invisible as our Savior’s. The only beauty  you have to cultivate is His. If you can be beautiful like He was  beautiful, you won’t have to worry about winning an Isaac or Jacob. Men  who saw no beauty in our Savior may also not see your beauty. But men of Christ,  acquainted with His grief, will come to love you and say, ‘She is the  most beautiful of all.’ There may be pain caused by those who don’t know  you, but you will draw closer to the Savior as you emulate Him. And  until your Isaac or your Jacob comes, you will know that Christ has  borne your grief and carried your sorrows. And He will comfort you.”
She places my  scriptures back in my lap, squeezes my hand, and drops me a tissue for  my sniffling nose. Then she slips out of my bedroom and closes the door.  After a minute, I wipe tears and mascara and Glitter n’Glo off my  eyelids. In my heart I feel a beauty that I know must be His.
To read the entire talk follow the link below
 Beauty Tips by Sheralee Bills

 
 
 
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