
Alexei_Kirillov
i must rest here a moment
- Mar 9, 2024
- 1,285
If you ever try to tell someone that your low self-worth is based on your physical appearance, you will almost certainly get responses along the lines of:
Of course, there are some grains of truth in there, like the fact that there genuinely are ugly people who have happy, fulfilled lives surrounded by people who love them. But that doesn't negate in any way the fact that physical appearance matters; it just means that in their case, some combination of lucky circumstances (ex. being born with extreme traits such as high-intelligence, being in the right place at the right time, etc.) made up for their lack of beauty. It might also be true that confidence makes you appear more attractive, but this is relative: if you're starting from a low point, gaining a few points still won't get you to where someone naturally beautiful with low-confidence would be.
And it's absurd to think that a human being, part of a species that is so deeply social to the point where 99.99% of them cannot survive with nothing but their own devices, shouldn't take into consideration the opinion of their peers. There's a limit to that, of course, but for almost the entirety of our history, our peers valuing us highly was literally the difference between life and death -- and, especially for women, beauty is the main (though not the only) value-giver.
Even if the consequences are not so extreme in the modern-day, being ugly will still deeply affect your life, impacting the jobs you do or don't get, the people who do or do not attach themselves to you, the doors that are or aren't open to you, even the way you view the world, because pretty people are generally treated better -- people will automatically assume that a pretty person has other good qualities, whereas an ugly person has to work doubly hard to prove it. Many, especially in the dating world, aren't willing to wait long enough to see the proof. Beauty gets your foot in the door, and allows you to leverage your other qualities.
Bit of a ramble. But anyway, what I'm wondering from you guys is why people have such a hard time accepting this? Is it because I'm genuinely wrong on this count? is it because the reality would be too painful for them? Is it because they don't want to accept that they, too, value people based on their appearance, even if subconsciously?
@Forever Sleep
- It's inner beauty that matters, not outer beauty!
- That's just your perception/cognitive distortion, you're beautiful!
- I know x person who isn't conventionally attractive and they have a loving partner and family, or, my x isn't conventionally attractive and I love them anyway!
- Self-worth doesn't come from others' perception of you, but from your own appraisal of your positive attributes (ie. self-love)
- It's confidence and the way you present yourself to the world that makes you attractive, not your appearance
Of course, there are some grains of truth in there, like the fact that there genuinely are ugly people who have happy, fulfilled lives surrounded by people who love them. But that doesn't negate in any way the fact that physical appearance matters; it just means that in their case, some combination of lucky circumstances (ex. being born with extreme traits such as high-intelligence, being in the right place at the right time, etc.) made up for their lack of beauty. It might also be true that confidence makes you appear more attractive, but this is relative: if you're starting from a low point, gaining a few points still won't get you to where someone naturally beautiful with low-confidence would be.
And it's absurd to think that a human being, part of a species that is so deeply social to the point where 99.99% of them cannot survive with nothing but their own devices, shouldn't take into consideration the opinion of their peers. There's a limit to that, of course, but for almost the entirety of our history, our peers valuing us highly was literally the difference between life and death -- and, especially for women, beauty is the main (though not the only) value-giver.
Even if the consequences are not so extreme in the modern-day, being ugly will still deeply affect your life, impacting the jobs you do or don't get, the people who do or do not attach themselves to you, the doors that are or aren't open to you, even the way you view the world, because pretty people are generally treated better -- people will automatically assume that a pretty person has other good qualities, whereas an ugly person has to work doubly hard to prove it. Many, especially in the dating world, aren't willing to wait long enough to see the proof. Beauty gets your foot in the door, and allows you to leverage your other qualities.
Bit of a ramble. But anyway, what I'm wondering from you guys is why people have such a hard time accepting this? Is it because I'm genuinely wrong on this count? is it because the reality would be too painful for them? Is it because they don't want to accept that they, too, value people based on their appearance, even if subconsciously?
@Forever Sleep