Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
You're listening to Amma Mia podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Mamma Mia acknowledges the traditional owners of land and waters
that this podcast is recorded on.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
Makeup is My Therapy. I'm in love, I'm obsessed, and
I don't even feel jailty body.
Speaker 4 (00:28):
Hello and welcome to you Beauty, the daily podcast for
your Face. I'm Kelly McCarran and welcome to the formula
where each week we chat to celebs, experts, and the
biggest names in beauty to steal their secrets and share
them with you.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Today's guest is someone you probably already know and.
Speaker 4 (00:47):
Love because your feed surely has been graced with her
chaotic presence. She's completely unfiltered and she has built a
massive community online by sharing the highs, lows, and very
real moments of motherhood. It's the incredible Indie Clinton, content creator,
mum of three and now the face of Booth, the
(01:09):
brand new Aussie haircare range that's hit to tackle thinning
hair and hair loss with patented science, back to tech
that actually works. Indy will chat about this more in
the episode, but she has struggled with thin hair her
whole life, and then postpartum things only got worse as
many people that have had a baby will know. But
after trialing Booth behind the scenes for months, she's seen
(01:32):
a transformation that not only changed her hair but gave
her back her confidence in such a big way. Ubiz,
You're absolutely gonna love this chat with Indy. I've been
lucky enough to interview so many people over the years,
and Indy is someone who was just as funny, warm
and kind as she comes across online. But I do
(01:53):
need to apologize as my voice. I mean, you can
hear it, but oh, it's gonna get worse. Longtime listeners
will know that my voice is quite partial to taking
a vacation occasionally, which you know must be nice. I
do sound awful, but I promise I'm fine. Last my
voice will be getting more and more questionable as the
episode goes on. Please forgive me and just try to
(02:16):
focus on my beautiful guest and the warm hug that
this conversation is.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Indy, welcome to the formula.
Speaker 3 (02:24):
You are such beautiful skill.
Speaker 2 (02:27):
But how okay, before we get into anything else, Indy,
let's talk about you social media and making headlines, because
you've recently been making a few, but unfortunately not all
nice ones, which I think it's because I know your sister,
so I probably feel like a little bit more protective
(02:47):
than the average person. And I've never been involved, Like
I just don't involve myself in online stuff because I'm
always kind of like I can't be bothered arguing with
strangers online.
Speaker 5 (02:57):
To me, that just seems like why would I.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
But there has never been a time where I have
not felt like just getting online and going.
Speaker 5 (03:04):
Leave India alone.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
Britney spears mean from all that literally just like leave
her alone.
Speaker 3 (03:13):
That is very sweet. Thank you.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
So you took a break from socials and then you
came back and you shared like that you're quite nervous
to return. What was that experience really like and how
did it affect your confidence? And what would you like
to say to anyone that had something to say about
your appearance or things that it's okay to comment on
what someone looks like, unless it's to say, sligh, you
look hot, which is always always okay.
Speaker 3 (03:37):
I mean, I find it's crazy to me that we're
in twenty twenty five and people are still commenting on
what you do to your own body, Like I just
everybody wants progression in society. Yep, there's women mothers that
are still trying to bring other mothers down. Like, to me,
that's just crazy. Also crazy because I have no time
to literally wipe my bum and peace. How do people
(03:58):
have time to comment these nasty things.
Speaker 5 (04:01):
And not like really I'm just seriously free time, I know, but.
Speaker 3 (04:05):
Genuinely, like are they doing it when they're folding clothes?
Like do they? I don't understand how that. I know,
I genuinely don't understand how. Firstly, secondly how they can
lay next to their spouse or partner and children are
It's like, what are you doing? They? Oh, I don't know,
just scrolling and they're like on these pages and like,
I don't know how they sleep at night. Anyway.
Speaker 2 (04:24):
I was talking to someone about that yesterday actually, because
she was talking about like being public and having all
of these people say awful things online, and I sent
her a message and I was like, imagine if you
found out that your friend, you know, I, had like
an anonymous account that they drolled people off, And she
was like, I've never thought about like that.
Speaker 5 (04:40):
You'd be so embarrassed for them.
Speaker 3 (04:42):
I know, seriously, it's so sad, and it's I think
for me because I took time off, and then I
came back online and because I was so open, I
you know, I was getting my RHINOPLASTI done because I
had an accident in twenty twenty.
Speaker 5 (04:53):
And also you don't need to have an excuse.
Speaker 3 (04:55):
Yes exactly, I don't need to have an excuse.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
I just didn't let my nose. I got it done.
Speaker 3 (04:59):
I love that. But like even if you don't have
an excuse, or you do and you want to change something,
a woman, anybody should be able to do that right
without the online scrutiny, but clearly not in twenty twenty five.
So I was very open about what I was doing,
why I was doing it here you go. Clearly people
loved me being open. And then when the surgery happened,
and I kind of took some time off because I mean,
(05:20):
if I can't recover in peace, like fucking hell, that's
like tiring. If I'm constantly having to post and I
can't even recover, I just kind of wanted that time
just to like relax. I guess really not that relaxing
because I really didn't anticipate what was ahead of me.
So then when I came back online and I got
my cast removed. It was obviously a shock to everyone,
including myself. I saw all these things on social media
(05:42):
about perfect noses when they get their casts removed, and
so I had to kind of deal with that internally,
like people must think I'm delusional because I don't speak
on it. Really, I haven't been speaking on it, but
I'm like, I'm thinking it right, if I speak on it,
she gives you more Ammo, everything you're saying, I feel
the same, but I'm just not saying it. So I've
just kind of had to live this whole thing multiple times,
(06:03):
going online for the last three months, reading all these comments,
how botched you look.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
I just like to say on the record that Indye
sitting in front of me, and there's not one botched
thing about that girl.
Speaker 5 (06:11):
She's beautiful.
Speaker 3 (06:13):
So the thing is, I'm like, I understand, it's a
change from what you're used to. I understand, and.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
It's not really it's like a slightly different nose, Like
why is anyone paying that much attention to someone's face.
Speaker 5 (06:22):
It's weird.
Speaker 3 (06:23):
I know it is crazy, but from their perspective, I
see both sides. They've grown up with me, and for
me it's hard because I was a mom at age
twenty two. You know, my identity change from such a
young age, from in my twenties when most girls are
going out your part, Yeah, a lot earlier. And that's fine.
It was my choice and I love it and I
wouldn't change it for the world. And I always wanted
(06:45):
kids young, but I've had to change and my identity
and kind of find a new identity multiple times. I've
had three kids, and every time you have a child,
something changes, so little things.
Speaker 5 (06:56):
Like friends don't regulate, problems, yeah, your whole.
Speaker 3 (06:58):
Lims don't regulate, and the way you view yourself. And
for me, I loved pregnancy, but changing so much was
very hard on me mentally. And there was little things
I always wanted to do, like change my teeth, and
I never had a chance because I was pregnant for
five years. So then I start doing these things for
myself and people are like, oh my god, she's unrecognizable.
I used to like her and don't like her.
Speaker 2 (07:19):
I'm my guys, like, how many of us are recognizable
from who we are when we're eighteen or twenty. Literally,
I don't want to be I know, I'm way hotter
than I was when I was twenty.
Speaker 3 (07:28):
I agree. I'm like, I'm way hotter now, I'm more confident,
and I'm paying time in too myself. It's the inside,
and I'm like, there's so many things that people wouldn't
really know about them. I'm like, the first time I
got lip filler was so I could smile with my
mouth shut because I hated my teeth so much. You know,
I would never show my teeth when I smiled, so
I changed my teeth and then people didn't like that.
And then after I breastped three kids, I changed my boobs.
(07:50):
I'm just like, oh my god, you can't win. But
for me, I'm changing in real time so exactly, people
are just going to have a view on everything because
I'm allowing them.
Speaker 2 (07:59):
It's also because as a mother, you shouldn't be changing
these things, which is ridiculous because now that I'm thinking
about it, I would have gotten my boobs done at
the same age that you would have gotten yours done,
and no one ever had it. A few people had
something to say, but no one had anything to say
because I was just young and down in my twenties.
I wasn't a mom, so I was allowed to. But
then it all of a sudden shifts as soon as
(08:20):
you're a mom, because it's seen as even worse.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
I know, it's so weird.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Why just because your mom doesn't mean you don't want
to do things totally.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
People have this perception on mothers that they can't, you know,
focus on themselves. And you know, obviously your kids are
your main priority. But as soon as you start focusing
on yourself and like leveling up or whatever they want
to call it, you know, glowing up, going to the gym,
focusing on your fitness, feeling good again, people like, I
don't like you. People love to see me struggling. And
that's the craziest thing about social media.
Speaker 5 (08:49):
Awful.
Speaker 3 (08:49):
But I think it's this world we've created because people
loved me when I was like sleep deprived, depressed, milk
leaking from on the internet literally and I didn't care
that I was. I knew that was a stage and
I'm in another stage now. But people are like, oh,
she's unrelatable. Why because I've just spent the last five years.
I'm still fucking sleep deprived, I'm still exhausted, I still
have con the patient. So I'm actually internally still the same,
(09:12):
but on the outside just.
Speaker 5 (09:13):
A little bit shinier.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
You've been teasing your hair transformation on social media for
months now. How does it feel to finally be able
to be like, this is what I've been doing because
there was a big difference, wasn't there?
Speaker 3 (09:32):
Yeah, there was a huge difference. So I first started
using Booth months and months ago. We know, I had
a lot of calls with the team, and we kind
of came to this agreement that I would not be
the face of the brand unless there was results because
I've built this platform and this incredible community of relatability
and trust, and I've always been transparent with brands, like
(09:53):
I will not work with brands, even to the point
where I'll sign off on a contract and then they'll
send me the brief and I'll be like, so are
you happy for me to do this in my own style?
And then you know they don't want that. I'm like, okay,
well we're going to have to forfeit this brand. And
that's tens and thousands of dollars that I'll just forfeit
because I'm so genuine on brand integrity with my followers,
(10:14):
I don't want them wasting money.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
On Also, it doesn't like there's no point long term
for you exactly, wanto something that doesn't actually work. Plus
I think it would be really hard to hide, like
if something like right thick enough.
Speaker 3 (10:26):
And then totally and then and even now like everybody's
starting to try the products, like check back in ninety
days and like how embarrassing because anyway, we'll get to
this in a second. But basically I met up with
the team and I agreed, you know, if the results work,
I'm happy to be the ambassador. So I trial this
for months and months. I documented it. I did a
video diary, weekly check ins.
Speaker 5 (10:46):
How did you remember to do that?
Speaker 3 (10:48):
Oh? I had them on my back to way. I
was like, oh my god. And at the start, when
they first approached me, I was a little bit skeptical
because I am very what's the opposite of clean girl?
Not dirty? But you know what I mean, like type B.
I feel like a bit messy, a bit messy, but
like I don't try to be that's just me. I
just get like, I.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
Don't know, oh yeah, like curated aesthetic, like yeah, bloody TV,
totally vitamins.
Speaker 3 (11:12):
I know, so like I don't even take vitamins. I
don't even know how to curl my hair like I've
worked with a brand previously, right, it was like a
curling one thing and I did not know how to
do it. They gave me three weeks to practice how
to use it, and I was practicing every second day,
and then when I filmed the video and send it
to them, they still won't have the results. And I
was like, guy, I swear I did everything right. I
(11:33):
don't know how to do anything with my hair, as
well as doing eye lineup, but that's a different story.
So when they came to me and it was a
hair product, I was like, Oh, this is going to
be icky because I really hate anything to do with
my hair, and like, unless it's sea salt spray, I'm
not sold. So I started using it and documenting my progress,
and then at the start I was like, maybe this
is blasi, but like this is going to be a
long three months. Two weeks in and they got to
(11:56):
talk about four weeks and you can see all like
your hairs my hair before right postpartum. I always had
thin hair growing up. It was always a insecurity in
mind because I've got broad shoulders.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
Manifest though, because I was reading that in the notes
and I was like, but how do you know did
someone once say to you you don't have very many
hairs on your head?
Speaker 3 (12:14):
No? No, I'll tell you how I knew another insecurity
that I might get fixed in the future. Shaved down
my shoulders. I'm kidding broad shoulders too, Okay, so this
is how I knew. Right, So I've grown up surfing.
Speaker 2 (12:27):
Swimmers shoulders, shoulders, right, swimmers shoulders.
Speaker 3 (12:31):
Yes, I know, it's such like a backhound of compliment.
I'm like, I would love to be built like a swimmer,
but like, you bring me down about my shoulders because
this is how cook society is, right. You can't even
be happy with how you were born based on your
fucking bone structure.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
So basically Daily Mail is going to love that one
Indie wants to shave her shoulders down.
Speaker 3 (12:51):
Which is so funny because I joke about it all
the time at home. How I knew I had thin
hair was I've always had broad shoulders from surfing growing up,
and so me growing my hair, it made me think
having really long hair covered my shoulders. So like during
my teenage years, I would have really long hair because
I I thought I had this long hair that would
(13:11):
be thick and cover my shoulders. And then somebody once
took a photo of me from behind. I was like
having a shower after a surf, and I saw my
hair and it kind of just like went into this
string and I like zoomed in. I was like, oh,
what is that string on me? And it was my
hair that was all of it, So it kind of went,
you know, into your scalp and then this string, and
I was like, that is so embarrassing. And obviously doing
photo shoots and things and getting my hair done, people like, oh, wow,
(13:34):
you've got quite very fine hair, like you've got a
lot of pieces, but it's very thin and fine. I'm like, yeah,
there's another back kind of compliments so so much.
Speaker 5 (13:42):
I had no idea.
Speaker 3 (13:45):
Literally, so that's how I knew I've had thin hair, right,
So it was like the perfect alignment with BOOF when
they reached out after the product started working and I
started seeing results, I was like, oh wow, this is legit.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
I don't know many people that don't have postpartum hair
loss or just thinning, Like you can't choose.
Speaker 3 (14:01):
Where those sprouts come from, right, So I would have
sprouts here and then it would be just so awkward length.
You can't do anything like I've got photos and this
sprout to just sprouting and you can't even like comb
them down because they just I just sing. So I
remember going through a bit of a phase when I
would have to gel my hair and put it back
in a slick back bun because that's the only way
I could get the hairs all slick back. But now
(14:23):
I've been using booth. I ain't got no sprones I
got this is fresh out of the shower. I've done that.
I actually forgot to put my booth in. But you
can put it in dry all wet. But this is
no straight. Well I don't even own a straight now,
but this is like yeah for you.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
So you first worked with Rage, who's from TVA Skincare.
Speaker 5 (14:40):
She's also behind both.
Speaker 3 (14:43):
Well we say booth like your hair went boof.
Speaker 5 (14:45):
Yeah, yeah sounds good.
Speaker 3 (14:47):
But like I never I'm such a people please, I
don't like correct say whatever you want.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
So you first worked with her though about eighteen months
ago when you accident unreleased.
Speaker 3 (14:57):
No, it was an accident.
Speaker 5 (14:59):
This is this is marketing.
Speaker 3 (15:01):
This is what people say all the time. Because I've
been seeing all these comments all across social media about
the lack of transparency and blah blah bah booth and
all of that. This was an accident, but the marketing,
that's what everybody thinks. So they sent me the product
and I get so many right, which is so funny
because a.
Speaker 5 (15:20):
Test to me accidentally posting about something before.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
Really exactly so you know how well now the brand's
all right, these pieces of paper for me, and then
you see it in red capital embargo or confidentiality. But
like I guess, when I received packages, I'm always bloody
Russian pulling them out. Well, yeah, all my kids do
(15:44):
so a lot of the time. My packages are opened.
When I get home, Ben's already taken all the things
out to the rubbish and I just have the product.
So I get back from Taylor Swift. I was so
drunk at Taylor Swift that night or the night before,
the drunkest I'd ever been. I think it was like
I had was breastfeeding band, but it was the first
time I'd stopped breastfeeding. I was out for the night.
I was so excited. I was with my mum friends
(16:05):
Taylor Swift, Sleigh. Like I remember, I was swaying at
this concert, so I get back full from my makeup
as you do, right, and I have this product. Of course,
I didn't have any makeup wipes, and I'm like, oh,
jelly cleanser post my morning vlogs all the time, so
it wasn't anything different. I'm just using this and I
was just kind of like, oh, yeah, this jelly cleanser
because every product I ever use, people are always like
(16:27):
what are you using? Saves me scrolling through the comments.
I'm pretty sure it went viral. Well, I don't want
to claim that. I don't want to claim it, but
like it went viral because I had seen the videos
and then they were very smart in their marketing how
they are so yeah, right, she's a little genius genius
at marketing, which.
Speaker 2 (16:45):
Is why it's a compliment to her. But then I guess, yeah,
it's got repercussions for you.
Speaker 3 (16:49):
That exactly I thought it was like. And then now
I see that play on to now with booth because
people like, no, it's a lie, like that was. I'm like,
how do you know this?
Speaker 5 (17:00):
And you're also like how can I be more clear?
Speaker 3 (17:02):
Literally, and like why are you spreading this without facts?
Like shut up?
Speaker 5 (17:06):
It's in No one needs facts.
Speaker 3 (17:08):
Literally, so yeah, yeah, she is a marketing genius. And
even the way they marketed the product after that, and
they use like my comments and made videos, it was
very smart.
Speaker 5 (17:17):
Very smart.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
Once you got you realize that the product worked, I'm
sure that you were like, yes, sign me up, because yeah,
you're a marketing genius.
Speaker 5 (17:23):
I love the product to let us do this.
Speaker 3 (17:25):
Yes one percent. And they're so amazing, those girls in
the office. Oh my gosh, it's so amazing, the whole team.
I was saying to them, it's so cool for me
because Rachel and I are the same age. She's twenty seven,
I'm twenty seven. Our lives couldn't be more different. But
it's so nice and inspiring for me to go into
an office with other women, you know, around my age
(17:46):
and like my life. I'm like, I feel like I'm
just like drowning with children around me always just like
a kindy drop off or the doctors getting antibiotics dealing
with impetigo. And then I go in there and there's
these boss ass bitches like creating.
Speaker 5 (17:59):
Product, having fun, and.
Speaker 3 (18:02):
Women supporting women. And I think after this whole trolling
internet thing went on these last few months, it was
very apparent to me. I'm like, wow, that's just a
small minority on the internet.
Speaker 2 (18:12):
For someone trying your range for the first time. What
product do you think that they should start with? And
white like, what's your favorite?
Speaker 3 (18:18):
My favorite would probably be the Tonic. That's the one
I use consecutively for five I mean it's probably going
on six months so recently.
Speaker 5 (18:26):
I'm your husband's here, Oh.
Speaker 3 (18:28):
Yeah, yeah, he started using it too. He does.
Speaker 5 (18:30):
They don't like to admit that they start thinning.
Speaker 3 (18:31):
No, I know. He's been telling me for years that
it's just his hairlight. And then after coming to with
Rach and the team and then meeting with the scientists,
he was like, no, that's called a receding hairline. I
was like, oh, he told me he was born like this,
Like that's so funny.
Speaker 2 (18:45):
And you pull photos when he was twenty Gero's hairline.
Speaker 3 (18:49):
I'm like, oh my god, you were in denial and
you fooled me. So we're both in denial. So anyway,
he started using it, but I've been using it for
I'm still using it because I guess it's just part
of a routine, Like I have no other routine other
than like my kids sleep, routine, but like then using
this tonic. The Tonic is the number one product.
Speaker 5 (19:06):
It's affordable as well. Everything in the range is, which
is so good.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
It's super affordable and it's super easy. Like I have
a phobia of greasy hair. Yes, so random?
Speaker 2 (19:16):
Right, No, no, no, because especially when you're a mum, you
don't want to wake up and be like, oh my god,
I've got to wash my hair again.
Speaker 3 (19:21):
I know, And I think my phobia started because I've
always had thin hair. When my hair was greasy, it
would look even thinner. So what's that two strands left?
You know what I mean. So I've always had a
phobia of greasy hair. So when they agreed, came to me, oh,
it's just the worst. So when they came to me,
I was very skeptical about whether it was going to
make my hair oily because you have to put in
your hair twice a day, and I was like, well,
(19:41):
I've had to put in twice a day, is it oily?
Because I can't I can't get used to these slickmack
buns and I'll get a receding hairline and I'm just
not about it. So it's not oily, it's kind of
like the consistency of water. But I also use that
in conjunction with the shampoo conditioner. But obviously you're not
washing your hair every single day, so it has the
same ingredients in it. But you know some people only
(20:02):
wash their hair once a week, some people only really
wash their hair. Well, for me, I guess I'm twice
a week. But you know you're putting the serum in
every day twice a day, so that would be my
number one. But then I also loved the shampoo condition
I still use it. I've just run out of the
travel pack because they also do these little small ones
but are really cute.
Speaker 6 (20:27):
I mean, what is your self carero To give us
the dirty detail, Let's get into your routine apart from hair,
if you've even got one, I imagine that you don't
have that much time.
Speaker 2 (20:40):
You're probably not at home doing his ten step skincare routine.
But if you are doing any skincare or applying makeup
every day, what are you doing?
Speaker 3 (20:50):
Okay, so I don't have an everyday routine?
Speaker 5 (20:54):
Is it just whatever pr package is open, you go.
Speaker 3 (20:57):
That'll do what. I'm gonna wack that on, literally, But
it's not even that I don't even wash. I actually
took photos this morning of some of the products I
use because I actually have no idea, like I don't
use them every day, but I didn't want to sound
like an idiot coming on Lime Mac another brand, but
like truly don't know them. I'll actually read you this
product that I use every day, Beauty of Johansson Johnson.
(21:18):
I think it was a blurry picture. Yeah, but it's
like this koreing in and my best friend bought me
all this Korean skincare and I use that.
Speaker 5 (21:25):
Yeah, but is that like a crane like a moisturizer.
Speaker 3 (21:28):
I don't know what that is.
Speaker 5 (21:29):
Do you use it as a moisturizer?
Speaker 3 (21:31):
Yeah, but not at nighttime? Like okay, So basically I
let me just running through. So yesterday, for example, I
didn't wash my face or anything, and I just put
some concealer on, fluffed up my brows, put some blush
on and some stick ontour. That's the one. And that's
kind of like my go to every day type and makeup.
Not every day actually, but if I want to look presentable.
(21:52):
But then I didn't actually wash it off last night
now I think of it. So I fell asleep like that,
and then I knew I had this podcast today. Oh
that's right. I fell asleep because I was gonna work
out in the morning. I was like, I'll have a
shower in the morning and I'll wash my face. Disgusting,
I know, but this is my skincare routine. And then
I didn't work out, but I knew I was coming
on this podcast. I was like, I better have a
shower and wash my face and wash off yesterday's makeup.
(22:16):
So I just use kind of like an exfoliator. I
don't use like a face wash. I just use exfoliator.
Probably not good, fuse skin barrier.
Speaker 5 (22:22):
I mean, your skin's not cranky, so it's fine.
Speaker 3 (22:24):
Yeah, okay, Well, so I just exfoliate my face and
then put some moisturizer on and some under I cream.
I carry under I cream everywhere with me, and then
Bob your uncle and did your makeup when I was driving. Yeah,
But then like if I want to take my makeup off,
I'll just use like the jelly cleanser and some wipes,
and then I'll just put the exfoliator on top, you
know what I mean, Like I'll then I'll use the
(22:44):
exfoliator again. Yep, double exfoliate and then just some Joe
Handsome whatever it is, whatever that is that But if
I'm feeling really good and really into my routine, I'll
even use like a linege lip mask and I'll put
some under my eye at nighttime to hold lock in
the moisture. Yeah, Bob's your uncle. I kind of just
use what sent me.
Speaker 5 (23:04):
That's not like you don't need to you're not into it.
I think it, well, I am into it.
Speaker 3 (23:08):
I just need somebody to trying to be like this
is life changing, this is incredible.
Speaker 5 (23:13):
Which your friend did with the Josson.
Speaker 3 (23:15):
Do you know what my tip is like, less is more? Yeah,
and I don't try and do less is more. I
just have lack of time, so less is really more
for me. Yeah. But then sometimes I'm like, I just
want somebody to tell me, like, what is the number
one facial everyone is getting?
Speaker 2 (23:28):
But it doesn't exist because still for every people, like
the perfect facial for you would be very different to
me because we have different skins.
Speaker 5 (23:34):
True, hit, you've made one of the greatest discoveries of
all time or miss never again never?
Speaker 2 (23:43):
What is one skincare, hair care or ingredient or something
that you see online that just makes you go, oh,
for goodness sake, like makes you roll your eyes a
little bit that you see people talk about.
Speaker 3 (23:55):
I love the idea of beauty and like getting into
beauty and I love being on beauty talk, but sometimes
it overwhelms me because I'm like, how are we remembering
to do this?
Speaker 5 (24:06):
The twenty one step skin?
Speaker 3 (24:07):
How do you have time? Do you think that many products? Really?
Speaker 1 (24:10):
Like?
Speaker 3 (24:11):
I don't know? And then all I think about is like,
how do you travel into state with these products? If
you don't check in? Do you know what I mean? Like?
How do you carry on with over one hundred meals?
That's the first thing that actually comes to my mind.
You know, I've never been able to get around lip oil.
That annoys me because I'm like ill. But maybe it's
my phobia of grease because I'm like ill, I want
oil on your lips, yes, like I hate oily fingers.
Speaker 5 (24:29):
I just don't like really hair.
Speaker 3 (24:31):
Yeah, I don't know. I just can't get around lip oil.
Speaker 2 (24:33):
What's something that you see a lot of people doing
that you absolutely love?
Speaker 3 (24:36):
Okay, so I'm probably late to the trend, but I
love fake freckles now oh cute? Yes, I did it
in the car, and I was just stabbing. But then
sometimes when I'm not concentrating, which is most times, dab
them like yes, say, it looked like I had pigmentation
instead of freckles because I dad them and then I
did too many, so they all kind of joined together,
(24:57):
and then it kind of just looked like I had
all this like hyperpigmentation across my nose.
Speaker 5 (25:01):
Which isn't.
Speaker 1 (25:02):
The vibe was.
Speaker 3 (25:04):
Totally.
Speaker 2 (25:05):
We are so appreciative of you giving us your time.
We know how busy, so thank you.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
Thank you, thank you for having me well.
Speaker 4 (25:13):
We can't thank India enough for sharing her time with
us and her journey and for being so open about
so many different things.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
If you loved this episode, be sure to check us.
Speaker 4 (25:23):
Out on Instagram at You Beauty Podcast, have a scroll
through our YouTube channel, and subscribe to our beauty newsletter.
Speaker 1 (25:30):
You'll find all the links in the show notes.
Speaker 4 (25:32):
This episode of You Beauty was produced by Molly Harwood
and Sophie Campbell. Mom and Mia Studios are styled with
furniture from venton Inventin. Visit Ventininventin dot com dot au.
Thanks for listening, and don't forget to tune in tomorrow.
I promise that your host's boys won't be on vocation.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
Bye.