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Don't kill me, please. I have good reasons.
I'm extremely fair-skinned - I can, and have, gotten a sunburn through tinted auto glass (and considering that something like 80% of UVA and nearly 100% of UVB is blocked by glass alone, that's saying something). I can wear sunscreen from the neck down (and do!! I practically bathe in the stuff!), but I can't tolerate it on my face and especially near my eyes. I'm sensitive to 3 of the 4 chemicals that are in US sunblocks, and the one to which I'm not sensitive (and by sensitive I mean pimples like boils, painful chafey-burny areas, and just general EEK!) is titanium dioxide.
There are several commercial sunblocks that use TiO2, but all of them also use one of the other 3 evils. However... cosmetics use TiO2 without the other chemicals, and still have a block rating of 45 or so. So that's my choice. I also use a lip protector from whole foods that has a sunblock in the base, and comes in tints - the rose one is about the same as my natural lip color, so that's the one I tend to get (I really don't like the scent/flavor of the untinted ones - the tinted ones have I think mint in the base while the untinted smells like cod liver oil). The only frivolous makeup I wear is mascara, and being a red-head with invisible eye lashes, I look like I've been burned if I don't wear it.
Most people don't even realize I wear it, and I would never expect anyone to wear or not - I think makeup falls into personal adornment the way piercings, tattoos and other body modifications do. I don't care what anyone wears in their ears, on their faces, etc.
And I do think men have an equivalent - shaving. Full beards in the workplace are not acceptable in a lot of environments; daily shaving is fairly unpleasant from what I've gathered from the men I've shared residences with. Shaving takes about the same amount of time, causes many of the same types of skin disorders, is inherently unnatural and really serves little purpose in most work environments (save food handling, certain manufacturing, and fire-fighting.)
As for clothes: I wear pants, long skirts, cotton tights, and low heeled shoes exclusively. I don't mind skirts, especially in the winter when they're warmer than pants (the physics of airpockets, I guess). I haven't worn a shoe with a heel higher than 2 inches since my wedding day, (4 years ago) or lower than a half-inch, save for my athletic shoes, due to various incongruities in my feet and legs. I dress for comfort, not fashion, mostly. But I have also always worked in the West, where business casual is normal, even in a Senator's office or at a bank. So I may just be lucky.
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