As We Think - Greatest Thoughts : Beauty or our unflattering self-image
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It’s how we feel inside. Our self-assessments are in the end
solely based on our relative degrees of self-love and self-contempt.
There are people of ideal proportions and exceptional beauty
who cannot bear what they see in the mirror and others who can contemplate a
less than svelte stomach or a no longer so supple kind of skin with
indifference and defiant good humour. And at a tragic extreme, there are
heart-breakingly fine-looking people who starve themselves to ill-health and
eventually die out of a certainty, immune to every logical argument, of their
own unsightliness.
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We are surrounded by industries that seek to help us to
improve how we look: dieticians who are on hand to reduce our waistlines,
aerobic teachers who offer to tone us, beauticians who will equip us with
foundation and mascara.
No matter how well-meaning
their efforts, they fail completely to grasp the sources of a healthy regard
for one’s own appearance.
The issue is not whether we look extraordinary today, but
whether or not we were once upon a time, when we were small and defenceless
before the judgements of those who cared for us, sufficiently loved for our
essence. This will decide whether our appearance can later on be a subject of
negligible concern to us or not. The truly blessed among us are not those with
perfect symmetry; they are those whose past affords them the luxury not to give
too much of a damn whatever the mirror happens to say.
The way to help
someone feel beautiful is not to compliment them on their looks, it is to take
an interest in and delight in their psychological essence.
We know that the more comfortable we feel around someone, the
less effort we will make about how we appear and conversely, the more anxious
we are about the judgement of others, the more our reflection has the power to
horrify us.
The issue is never
that of our appearance, it is about our sense of our vulnerability to
humiliation.
When we meet people who are perpetually sick with worry that
they are not attractive enough, we should not rush in with physical
compliments; this is only to foster and unwittingly reward an aggravating
criterion of judgement. We should learn to spot the wound in their early
relationships that have made it so hard for them to trust that they could
matter to others in their basic state and that therefore perpetually evokes in
them an unflattering self-image.
They are not ‘ugly’ per se, they were – when it mattered –
left painfully unloved and ignored to an extent that they are liable never to
have recognised or mourned adequately; their arrival in the world did not
delight a few people as it should have done, and they therefore need compassion,
sympathy and emotional validation far more than they will ever require the
tools of outward beautification.
Feeling ugly stems from a deficit of love, never of beauty.
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