Each year, around this time, we look back at the year’s most read Styles articles and ask: 1. What just happened? 2. What does it all mean? 3. What can we learn from these stories to live a better life in the new year?
Answers below.
1. Just … Be Jonathan Van Ness
The “Queer Eye” grooming expert and memoirist embodies many of the tenets of better personhood: He overcame a difficult past (sexual abuse, drug addiction and an H.I.V. diagnosis) to become the gorgeous and inspiring person we know today. “I want people to realize you’re never too broken to be fixed,” he said.
And perhaps the most useful lesson in this profile: “Namaste” is a gracious yet effective way to end an unwanted conversation.
The article: Jonathan Van Ness of ‘Queer Eye’ Comes Out by Alex Hawgood
2. Don’t, Like, Cheat
4. Think Before You Cancel
Sometimes canceling is warranted. And sometimes it’s just bullying, as some of these teenagers’ stories show. As one kid put it, “We all do cringey things and make dumb mistakes and whatever. But social media’s existence has brought that into a place where people can take something you did back then and make it who you are now.”
The article: Tales From the Teenage Cancel Culture by Sanam Yar and Jonah Engel Bromwich
5. Live Your Life Like a Rom-Com
As this Modern Love essay showed, sometimes a practical decision (not to get married at 18) can lead to a very romantic story (planning to meet at the New York Public Library at 4 p.m. on the first Sunday in April five years later — and then doing it) and a happily ever after (they’ve been married for 35 years).
The article: Let’s Meet Again in Five Years by Karen B. Kaplan
6. Protect Thy Acid Mantle
Yeah, we had no idea what that was, either. It’s “the protective film of natural oils, amino acids and sweat that covers your skin. Damage it with too much scrubbing or neutralize it with alkaline washes and you’re on your way to barrier problems: inflammation, allergies, breakouts.” In summary: You’re probably using too many products on your face, so … stop.
The article: All of Those Products Are Making Your Skin Worse by Courtney Rubin
7. Sleep Until At Least 6 A.M.
Because they’re not going away anytime soon, writes our fashion director and chief fashion critic: “For Gen Y, they tend to be lifestyle signifiers that have more to do with health and activity than, say, everyday work wear; for Gen Z-ers, who largely reject uniformity and traditional labels, they are simply a basic, the equivalent of jeans. They are something you put on without thought.”
The article: It’s Possible Leggings Are the Future. Deal With It. by Vanessa Friedman
9. Use Your Office Bathroom as It Was Intended
Pooping is a privilege — if you’re doing it normally, it means your body is working as it should, and isn’t that nice? So, to quote the Mamas and the Papas in a song that had nothing to do with bathroom behavior: “Go where you wanna go.” Your colleagues don’t actually care.
The article: Women Poop. Sometimes At Work. Get Over It. by Jessica Bennett and Amanda McCall
10. Learn Your Personality Type
You may be planning a Drynuary, which makes you among the sober curious, “a new generation of kinda-sorta temporary temperance crusaders” who are taking a more mindful approach to their drinking, but don’t feel that their relationship to alcohol requires a 12-step program. As a result, some of these folks feel so good that they attend things like early morning raves. But, don’t worry: You don’t have to.
The article: The New Sobriety by Alex Williams
12. Do Nothing for 20 Minutes
Another thing to file under Things That Other People Swear By is Transcendental Meditation. For one, Katy Perry has said of T.M., “I will feel neuro pathways open, a halo of lights. And I’m so much sharper. I just fire up!” Our wellness columnist took a course, didn’t quite feel a halo of lights, but found that the routine took hold and helped give her perspective throughout the day.
The article: A 20-Minute Exercise You Can Do Anywhere by Marisa Meltzer
13. Or Do Absolutely Nothing for Even Longer
These San Francisco dudes are depriving themselves of many things, including conversation and eye contact, in order to experience more feelings later. According to James Sinka, a practitioner of dopamine fasting, “Your brain and your biology have become adapted to high levels of stimulus so our project is to reset those receptors so you’re satiated again.” In other words, a life without exclamation points — at least for a few quiet days.
The article: How to Feel Nothing Now, in Order to Feel More Later by Nellie Bowles