Social media has long been a place for makeup enthusiasts and beauty gurus to discuss trends, but thatโs not why TikTok users are currently talking about mascara. Young people are using โmascaraโ as a code word for talking about sex, relationships and assault.
Posts tagged with #mascaratrend generally feature young women using the term โmascaraโ and associated metaphors to refer to romantic or sexual partners. For example:
I found the best mascara ever but it changed and made my lashes completely fall apart and now I donโt know if Iโll ever trust any other mascara.
Some posts make more direct references to sex, using โ(mascara) wandโ as a code word for penis:
I love mascara but anything involving the wand terrifies me.
At the time of writing, the hashtag #mascaratrend has generated more than 122.7 million views on TikTok and a wave of social commentary. In part, it is a response to TikTokโs moderation policies โ users have criticised its strict moderation of content about sex. Talking about โmascaraโ allows them to side-step moderation. In this way, the trend reflects longer histories of sex codes designed to get around censors.
This article is part of Quarter Life, a series about issues affecting those of us in our twenties and thirties. From the challenges of beginning a career and taking care of our mental health, to the excitement of starting a family, adopting a pet or just making friends as an adult. The articles in this series explore the questions and bring answers as we navigate this turbulent period of life.
You may be interested in:
It might be scary but making phone calls can be good for young peopleโs wellbeing
Young people are drinking less โ hereโs an alternative to try on your next night out
Media standards have often constrained how explicitly sex can be discussed and presented in public. Under Hollywoodโs โHays Codeโ, films produced between 1930 and 1967 could not show โexcessive and lustful kissing, lustful embraces, [and] suggestive postures and gesturesโ.
Instead, filmmakers used visual cues and metaphors to reference sexual activity. Famous examples include a crashing wave in From Here To Eternity, and a lighthouse in Casablanca plus lots of post-coital cigarettes.
More recently, contestants on reality romance show Love Island have used a colourful set of codes to describe the extent of their sexual activity.
These codes are doing more than simply avoiding censors. Put in historical perspective, the mascara trend is the latest in a long line of secretive ways young people have found to talk about sex.
The language โ whether technical or sentimental โ that adults use to discuss sex often doesnโt fit the conversations young people want to have. For example, they may not have words to describe acts such mutual masturbation โ so code has been their only language for discussing their experiences.
In postwar Britain, young people ranked sexual activities and referred to these by numbers. This is similar to the American โbaseโ system of sex activity, in which โfirst baseโ referred to kissing with tongues, building up to โfourth base/home runโ which described penetrative sex.
Mainstream language is especially limited when it comes to talking about womenโs bodies and female sexual experience. While young people today are more likely to know the anatomical terms for their genitalia than their predecessors, the language of vulvas, vaginas and penetrative sex can feel awkward and out of place in teenagersโ interactions with one another.
While codes enable young people to make reference to these body parts, it is possible that reliance on euphemisms exacerbates the taboo.
This question of whether codes are helpful or harmful has also been raised in relation to discussions of sexual assault. The mascara trend has prompted many young people to share stories of sexual assault.
For many survivors, it appears that being able to speak in code enables them to disclose experiences that they wouldnโt otherwise.
But this dynamic is complicated. Some sexual trauma professionals have celebrated this trend for how it has encouraged some people to seek support in the wake of assault.
But others have raised concerns that the โbanterโ aspect of the trend, the vagueness of the code, and the disembodied way in which it presents sexual activity and assault trivialises the issue.
Codes are, by their nature, exclusionary to those who arenโt in on the joke. This can lead to confusion and negativity, especially on social media. Actress Julia Fox became an example of this when she had to apologise for leaving an insensitive comment on a โmascaraโ video about sexual assault.
But codesโ ability to separate those โin the knowโ from those who arenโt is crucial to how they function. Particularly for young people, codes allow them to distinguish their sexual cultures from those of adults and authorities.
In recent years, the use of terms such as โv-cardโ to refer to virginity and initial systems (such as โp in vโ to refer to penis in vagina sex) are one example. The initial system reflects a more diverse sexual culture, and can be used to talk about LGBTQ+ sexual activity in a more inclusive way.
At a time when discussions about sexual culture are fraught, the mascara trend has also allowed young people to make sex funny. While the trend has a serious side, many of the posts are tongue-in-cheek. There is kudos to be gained by finding ways to play with the code, for example by extending the โmakeup as sexโ metaphor.
In addition to side-stepping censors and talking about aspects of sex that are otherwise hidden, codes like the mascara trend give young people new ways of talking about and imagining sex. It allows them to define sex and sexuality in their own terms.
Hannah Charnock does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.