Sunday, 26 June 2016

Not Just a Pretty Face


After my last post, I heard back from a pretty friend that she felt in some ways the post reinforced stereotypes and prejudices of pretty girls. A lot of people think that pretty girls live in this bubble of privilege and good fortune, untouched by the harsher realities less privileged mortals have to face.

But the truth is pretty girls have their own set of problems and burdens that they have to face.

Pretty girls are told at a young age that their looks are the most important aspect of their identity: It's the first and only thing everybody notices and comments on. People rarely notice or care about their intelligence or their talents or their sense of humour. Leave that to the people who you have to think harder about to compliment.

People often 'use' pretty girls: They can never be sure if people want to be with them for THEM, or for the added value they bring with their looks. It's hard to get rid off the nagging thought- 'Would you still want to be my friend if I didn't look like this?'


Guys often see pretty girls more as an accessory: They want to be the guy with the pretty girl on their arm, it helps with their image (consciously or subconsciously).The guy is looking for someone to fill this cut out of the perfect girlfriend/ trophy wife- an achievement, a possession. Often guys who think like that use expensive gifts to win this pretty girl, because they think that makes them worthy of her interest. They see it as a fair exchange- my money (or service) for your looks. I've seen guys get offended and angry when a girl doesn't respond in the way he thinks he deserves- "After all I've done for you!" You can't buy people!

Other girls can be standoffish with pretty girls: Just by virtue of being pretty, they are seen as a threat, as dangerous- especially when there are guys around. They have to prove that they mean no harm, that they are not proud or egotistic. The introverts who are pretty have the hardest time because their quietness is seen as pride.

It's hard for pretty girls to know when to trust people: Similar to someone who is wealthy, or rich or powerful, when you get used to people using you, it's hard to know when people are not. So when a guy comes a-courting, it's hard not to look at him with a little skepticism and suspicion, because they have been so many who came for the wrong reasons, and without an authentic interest based on seeing her as a real human being, not a goddess or a movie star, or a means to an end.

Pretty girls are likely to struggle with self worth and identity: The prettiness can often feel like a mask that obscures the real person. 'Do you see ME?' she wants to ask, but she often feels that people can't or won't. And then the lie that the Liar whispers, "Maybe the real you isn't worth knowing. Maybe once a guy gets used to the prettiness, and meets the real you, the love will fade." And if that lie is accepted, the temptation can be to keep the prettiness at any cost- make up, plastic surgery, beauty products, beauty salons. And to use the prettiness as a means to get what she wants.


So the next time you meet a pretty girl, try to see past the prettiness, to see a normal human being with insecurities and strengths, and all sorts of weird habits and quirks, and skills and talents, and a desire to be loved and treated as a human being first, and a pretty girl second. Don't treat her with deference, suspicion, adulation, or judgment. She is a PERSON, a daughter of God, an immortal soul, and that is what makes her valuable. And pretty girls, don't believe anyone who tells you differently.

5 comments:

  1. A lot of pretty girls use their looks to get ahead and manipulate social situations in their favour. And what you say is true around the world. unfortunately we live in an age and a world where your looks often decide how much you re worth, more than who you are or what you are.

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    1. In some ways I think it's hard to have that kind of temptation- to know that you can manipulate situations so easily, and to choose not to. Too easily people give in to that temptation.

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  2. A lot of pretty girls use their looks to get ahead and manipulate social situations in their favour. And what you say is true around the world. unfortunately we live in an age and a world where your looks often decide how much you re worth, more than who you are or what you are.

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  3. I have known many pretty girls who have proved their worth and used their intelligence and talents to prove to the world that they are not just a pretty face..

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  4. The more I think I of it, the more I realize that 'pretty' is a relative term. It often is a synonym for beauty which is traditionally romanticized as that which lies in the eyes of the beholder.

    It is intriguing that we find that pretty girls 'use' their good looks. Is it not the same way an intelligent person uses his intelligence or a logical person applies common sense? That doesn't seem to be such an issue! How do we know for sure that it is only 'looks' and not one's confidence, values or manners that get them merit?

    The decision maker is eventually the beholder. You - the beholder decided that she got a promotion because of her good looks. Her boss - the beholder decided that it was her dedication and commitment to her job.

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