Beauty & Skincare Guides

Don’t tell your biohacking coach, but the best self-care is actually free

Don’t tell your biohacking coach, but the best self-care is actually free


Every night before bed, Ambika Agnihotri a practice in technique or a side hustle for money. It isn’t even a portrait of someone real. The form, expression and aura that the woman will take is unknown to Magotra. “I just throw it out of myself onto paper,” the 54-year-old states.

This nightly ritual began 28 years ago when the design academician was confined to bed rest for the entirety of her first pregnancy. At the time, she would sketch the imagined features of her unborn child. A few years later, navigating family, work and her sense of self, she started doodling the face of a woman. It was both an expression of her angst and a manifestation of all that she wanted to embody. “With exaggerated lips, bold eyes and impossible hair, my women are unruly, unconventional, ahead of their time. In a world that still tucks women into corners, they come out strong and, through them, I do too,” she explains.

Magotra’s aimless creative routine—something she has practised every day for over 20 years—is the reminder we need that there is ‘self ’ in self-care. Irreducibly complex and context-bound, the self cannot be expected to conform to a factory-line model of healing with bath bombs, snail masks, sensory deprivation tanks and catch-all products that flood every wellness list online. There is a version of care, like Magotra’s, that isn’t algorithm-approved or trend-driven. It’s handmade and fiercely personal.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *