For 14 Months I Wouldn't Let Anyone Photograph Me. Not Even My Own Daughter. I Was 39.

April 16, 2026 · By Jess K.

 

My daughter turned eight last October. She asked for exactly one thing for her birthday. A "mommy and me" photo, framed, for her nightstand.

 

I said no.

 

I said it casually, like it was nothing. "Let's take one next month, when I've had a haircut." Then next month came and I said, "Let's wait till after the holidays." Then January came and I said, "Let me lose five pounds first."

 

She stopped asking around February.

She was eight years old, and she had noticed that her mother didn't want to be in pictures with her.

 

That was the moment I realized something had gone very wrong, not with my face, but with what I'd let my face do to me.

The Mismatch That Broke Me

I'm 39. I'm a paralegal. I have one kid, one husband, one small life I love very much. I wasn't supposed to be the kind of woman who got weird about how she looked.

 

But somewhere between 36 and 38, something happened to my under eyes that I could not unsee.

 

It started as shadows, the kind that showed up at 5 PM and were gone by morning. 

 

Then the shadows started staying past breakfast. Then past lunch. Then all day. A faint crepey texture appeared at the outer corners like tissue paper that had been folded and unfolded too many times.

 

My concealer, which had been my best friend since I was 24, started turning on me. It would settle into the lines by 2 PM, crack by 4, and by 6 I looked worse than if I'd gone bare.

 

The worst part was the mismatch. I felt fine. I felt like myself. But the face in the mirror kept telling everyone around me a different story.

 

My sister asked if I was sleeping okay. My boss asked, in the kindest possible way, if "everything was alright at home." A woman at my gym, a stranger patted my arm after class and said, "Oh honey, it gets better."

 

I went home that day and sat on the edge of my bathtub and didn't get up for almost an hour.

What I Tried (And Why None Of It Worked)

I did what every woman does. I threw money at the problem.

 

I started with patches. The gold ones. The pink ones. The collagen ones everybody was posting about on TikTok. 

 

They felt cold and lovely for ten minutes and then did exactly nothing.

I bought a caffeine eye serum that promised to "de-puff instantly." It stung. It smelled like burnt coffee. It gave me nothing.

 

I tried a $68 eye cream from a department store. A $34 one from the drugstore. A "viral" Korean one a coworker swore by. Three different Vitamin C serums. A "cooling ceramic wand" I still have in a drawer somewhere.

 

I drank 96 ounces of water a day for a month. I cut wine entirely. I bought silk pillowcases. I slept on two pillows to "drain the lymphatic fluid." I did cold plunges on my face in the morning. I did face yoga from a YouTube channel with 2 million subscribers.

 

Nothing moved the needle. Not even a little.

So I did what I swore I'd never do.

I booked a consultation at a medspa 20 minutes from my office. A nice one. Clean, expensive, good reviews.

 

The nurse practitioner examined me under a magnifying lamp and spoke with the confidence of someone who had said this exact sentence 4,000 times: "You're a great candidate. A little Botox for the crow's feet, and tear trough filler underneath to fill the hollows. You'd look like yourself again in about a week."

 

She slid a printed quote across the desk.

$1,400. Touch ups every four months. Possible bruising for 7–14 days. Possible lumps that would need to be "massaged out." Possible migration. Possible, she said this lightly, like she was mentioning the weather, the "overfilled" look if I ever decided to stop.

 

I thanked her, took the quote, walked to my car, sat down in the driver's seat, and cried so hard my mascara stained the steering wheel.

 

I wasn't ready. I wasn't ready for needles in my face. I wasn't ready to start something I couldn't stop. I wasn't ready to become a woman who had to book maintenance appointments to keep looking like herself.

 

But I also didn't know what else there was.

14 Months Of Hiding
 

That was the beginning of a very dark 14 months.

 

I stopped sitting at the front of the conference room at work so nobody would look at my face during meetings. I started declining video calls when I could, keeping my camera off when I couldn't. When a junior associate at my firm got engaged and posted a selfie with me at the celebration lunch, I zoomed in on myself and spent the rest of the afternoon spiraling.

 

I untagged myself from Facebook photos. I deleted an entire Instagram story arc from my friend's bachelorette weekend because I looked "haggard" in a group shot. I started positioning myself in the back of every photo, tilting my chin a specific way I'd practiced in the bathroom mirror.

 

At a family dinner in June, my mother in law asked me to "smile for a picture with Grandma" and I physically stepped behind my husband.

 

I was the woman hiding behind other people in photos at my own in laws' house.

My husband noticed. He didn't say anything for a long time, he's that kind of husband, but one night in bed he put his book down and said, quietly, "You know you're still beautiful, right?"

 

I didn't answer. I pretended I was already asleep.

 

The thing that broke me was my daughter's birthday. The photo she'd asked for. The one I kept postponing until she stopped asking.

 

I realized I wasn't just hiding from cameras. I was starting to hide from her.

The Woman At The Wedding Who Changed Everything

This is what she ordered that night

In late November my husband's coworker got married. I almost didn't go. I'd been workshopping a story about a migraine for most of the week. But he asked me, in that voice, to please just come.

 

I went. I sat at a table of strangers. And across from me was a woman, maybe 45, maybe 50, I genuinely couldn't tell, whose skin looked awake in a way I hadn't seen on a real human face in a long time.

 

Not frozen. Not filler cheeked. Not airbrushed. Just rested.

I asked her, halfway through dinner and two glasses of champagne braver than I normally am, what she did.

 

She laughed. "Honestly? I almost got Botox two years ago. I sat in the parking lot and couldn't make myself walk in."

 

I almost dropped my fork.

She told me something that night that rearranged how I thought about the whole problem:

 

The skin under our eyes isn't aging the same way as the rest of our face. It's about ten times thinner. It has almost no oil glands, very little collagen reserve, and it moves constantly, we blink around 15,000 times a day. 

 

It's the first place on the face where fatigue, stress, and time physically show up.

And here's what most women get wrong, she said: we treat it like a hydration problem. We slather on moisturizers and hope. But the actual issue is that the skin is losing structure and cellular energy faster than moisturizer can replace.

 

"You can't hydrate your way out of something that needs to be rebuilt from underneath," she said. "That's why nothing was working."

 

I must have looked like someone handed me a winning lottery ticket, because she leaned in and said, "Do you want me to tell you what I use?"

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Why Moisturizer Alone Wasn't Going To Fix This

She said she'd spent six months looking for something that did three specific things at the same time.

 

First, it had to smooth the texture, which meant retinol. Retinol is the only ingredient with decades of serious clinical research behind it for softening fine lines. But most retinol products are far too aggressive for the under eye area. She'd needed one gentle enough that it wouldn't turn the skin into a peeling, stinging mess.

 

Second, it had to rebuild structure, which meant peptides. Not one, not two. A full complex of them, working together to signal the skin to firm itself back up from the inside. Peptides don't work overnight. But consistently, over weeks, they're the quiet workhorse.

 

Third, and this was the part I'd never heard anyone mention before, it had to energize the cells themselves. She talked about NAD+, a coenzyme that every cell in the body uses to repair and renew. Our NAD+ levels drop sharply after our 30s. When skin runs low on NAD+, it stops repairing efficiently. 

 

That, she said, is the reason tired looking skin stays tired looking, no matter how much cream you put on top.

 

Retinol smooths. Peptides rebuild. NAD+ wakes the cells up.

Put all three together in a formula gentle enough for the thinnest skin on the face, she said, and you stop treating the symptom, and start treating the reason it looked tired in the first place.

 

I wrote it down on the back of a wedding program.

"By week two, a coworker asked if I'd changed my foundation. I hadn't. My under eyes just looked brighter. Four weeks in and the fine lines are visibly softer. Reordering."

Verified Buyer

Verified Buyer Jessica R. / Age 41

"I haven't worn concealer in probably 10 years. Two months in and I genuinely don't need it anymore for daily stuff. That's wild to me."

Verified Buyer

Verified Buyer Tara E. / Age 38

"I'm 51 and my husband keeps asking what I changed. Ten weeks in, morning and night. My under eyes are smoother, the crepey texture I hated is basically gone, and my makeup finally sits the way it used to."

Verified Buyer

Verified Buyer Nicole B. / Age 51

The Product I Finally Tried

The name she gave me was the No.9 NAD+ Retinol Volumetox Eye Cream.

 

She said her esthetician had been recommending it for about a year, and it had quietly made the rounds in the industry because it combined all three of those ingredients I'd never seen paired before, plus niacinamide and ceramides to keep the skin barrier calm, and adenosine, which has real published clinical data for smoothing the area around the eyes.

 

She told me the other thing that made it different was the applicator. A pen style tube with a cool metal rollerball tip, instead of a jar you dipped your finger into. That mattered more than I realized, the under-eye is too delicate for finger pressure, and the cooling tip doubled as a morning de-puff tool.

 

I got home that night and read reviews until 1:30 AM.

 

Over 2,000 of them. Women in their 30s, 40s, 50s. Women who had tried exactly what I had tried. Women who had sat in medspa parking lots and not gone in. Women who had lost their confidence on video calls. Women who had stopped being in photos with their kids.

The reviews were specific in a way that felt impossible to fake:

 

"By week two, a coworker asked if I'd changed my foundation. I hadn't."

 

"I haven't worn concealer in two months. I didn't think I'd ever type that sentence."

 

"I'm 51. My husband keeps asking what I did."

 

"First product in years to make a visible difference without needles."

 

One woman wrote that her teenage daughter scrolled through her recent selfies and said, 

 

"Mom, you look like you're in your 30s in these." 

 

I read that review three times. I thought about my own daughter and the photo she'd stopped asking for.

 

I ordered the two bottle bundle the same night. Not because I was confident it would work. Because I couldn't stand another month of the life I was living.

Week By Week: What Actually Happened 

It arrived four days later in a slim purple box.

 

The pen applicator was smaller than I expected, about the length of a highlighter. You twisted the bottom, a pale pearl of cream appeared on the rollerball, and you swept it in three gentle passes under each eye. Cool to the touch. Light. Absorbed in about thirty seconds. No sting. No burn. Just a faint fresh tingle that faded before I finished brushing my teeth.

 

Night one. I went to bed certain I'd just spent money on another jar of nothing.

Morning three. My under-eyes looked… plumper. Not dramatically. Just like the skin had finally had a drink of water.

 

Week one. I was on a video call and forgot to turn my camera off. Halfway through the meeting, I realized I hadn't been monitoring the little square of my own face. I hadn't felt the need to.

 

Week two. My concealer blended. Actually blended into skin that had something to blend into. By 4 PM it was still sitting where I'd put it that morning.

 

Week four. My husband who, I swear to God, notices nothing, looked at me while I was making coffee and said, "Something is different. What did you do?"

 

He couldn't tell me what it was. He just knew.

 

What Changed By Week 10 

I'm writing this at week ten.

 

The shadows under my eyes are lighter. Not erased , I still have some genetic pigmentation, and anyone who promises to erase that is lying, but lighter enough that I can leave the house on a Saturday morning without concealer and not feel like I'm in costume without armor.

 

The crepey texture at the outer corners is softer. By 5 PM, my face still looks like my face.

The morning puffiness that used to take ten minutes of cold spoons to resolve? Thirty seconds with the rollerball tip. Gone.

 

But the thing I wasn't prepared for the thing no review had told me, is what it did to the inside of my head.

 

I stopped flinching in elevators. I stopped monitoring the little square in video calls. I stopped practicing the chin tilt in the bathroom mirror.

 

Three weeks ago, at my nephew's christening, my mother in law asked me to get in a photo with the whole family. I did. No hiding behind my husband. I looked at the photo afterward and I actually recognized the woman in it.

 

Last Saturday, my daughter asked, for the first time in almost a year if we could take a picture together. She wanted to put it on her nightstand. I said yes.

 

I framed it and put it on hers. I kept a copy for mine.

 

She's eight. She doesn't know what was going on with her mother for the past fourteen months. She doesn't need to know.

 

She just needed her mother to come back.

 

Take the photo. Get yours here

Where I Got Mine

Here's what I want to say, if you're reading this and seeing yourself in any of it:

 

You're not vain for feeling this way. You're not shallow for avoiding cameras. You're not weak for crying in a medspa parking lot. Under-eye aging is real, it moves faster than the rest of the face, and no amount of concealer, sleep, or willpower is going to fix something that needs to be treated at the structural level.

 

But you also don't have to start with needles. You don't have to commit to something you can't undo. There's a middle option, a quiet, daily, at home one, and for me, it was the No.9 NAD+ Retinol Volumetox Eye Cream.

 

I can't promise it'll work the same for you. Skin is personal. Genetics are personal. What I can tell you is that, for the first time in a long time, my face matches how I actually feel inside. That alone was worth the price of the bundle ten times over.

 

If you want to try it, there's currently a bundle promotion, the two bottle option is what I started with, and it comes out to about half the price per bottle. There's a larger 12 week routine bundle too, for anyone who wants to commit to the full timeline (which is when the reviews I read said the deeper changes really settle in).

 

There's a 30 day satisfaction guarantee, so if it doesn't work for your skin, you're not stuck.

I'll link where I got mine below. Wherever you end up buying it, or even if you just read this and take nothing else from it, please stop hiding in photos.

 

Your people want to see your face. Even the version of it you don't love yet.

— Jess

Your people want to see your face. Get yours here

Frequently asked questions:

1. I've never used retinol before. Will this make my under-eyes peel or sting?
No. The formula is specifically designed for the under-eye area with buffering ingredients (niacinamide, ceramides) that keep the barrier calm. If you're completely new to retinol, start by applying every other night for the first week, then move to nightly. Most first-time users experience no peeling or stinging.

2. How fast will I actually see results?
Most people notice hydration and brightness within the first week. Reduced puffiness and smoother concealer wear typically show up around week 2. The deeper changes fine lines softening and firmness settle in between weeks 4 and 8. The full 12-week timeline is when most reviewers describe the biggest transformation.

3. Does this actually help with dark circles, or just moisturize the area?
It helps brighten the appearance of dark circles through niacinamide and NAD+, which support skin cell renewal. However, if your dark circles are caused by genetic pigmentation or vascular shadows, it will lighten the appearance but not fully erase them. No topical product can change genetic pigmentation.

4. Can I wear it under concealer and makeup?
Yes. The formula absorbs in about 30 seconds and leaves a smooth base. Most users report their concealer and foundation actually blend better and last longer with consistent use, because the skin has more moisture and more "bounce" for product to sit on.

5. Is it safe for sensitive skin?
The formula was developed to be gentle around the eye area, with ceramides and niacinamide to support the skin barrier. If you have extremely reactive skin or active eczema/rosacea around the eyes, we recommend patch testing first on your inner arm for 2–3 days before applying to the under-eye area.

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No.9 NAD+ Retinol Volumetox Eye Cream

$44.72

No.9 NAD+ Retinol Volumetox Eye Cream

$44.72