Out on the water enjoying a gorgeous sunset in Hong Kong. There’s something really cool about watching the sun setting while surrounded by water.
Posts Tagged ‘beauty’
Hong Kong sunset
A fabulous sunset
It’s just spectacular! I love the sub-shape cloud.
Captivating hummingbirds
Quirky, but beloved
There are a lot of people out there who are considered attractive because of their… uniqueness. But quite frankly (and perhaps a bit harshly), they often just look strange. Somehow the strangeness is then interpreted as beauty.
Take supermodels, for example. They’re probably the best cross-section to look at. These are people who look unusual, uncommon, and admired for that. But on the streets if you saw them outside of a photo shoot, they may just look odd. Once you put on the heavy make-up and strange garb, then put them in a foreign world, the oddity of their surroundings blends with the oddity of their awkwardly large forehead, tiny pointed nose, or a number of other abnormal features. It’s the same reasoning in Memoirs of a Geisha, where the girl with gray eyes turns heads wherever she goes. That’s also why people with blue eyes and brown hair make people notice them. They are out of the ordinary.
Today I noticed Anderson Cooper, whose full head of white hair contrasts his otherwise youthful appearance. That, in a way, makes him attractive. It’s different, it’s unusual, and it’s eye-catching. My mom always said that Tyra Banks’ forehead is both what makes her attractive to people, yet also the very thing that makes her unattractive. And to me, the same goes for Angelina Jolie and her lips. They are so big they look swollen and there’s that crack along the middle that reminds me of when I get chapped lips. To me, there’s nothing attractive about them, but to the rest of world… that seems to be a whole other story. The same goes for so-called “hotties” like Brad Pitt and Matt Damon – I don’t see why people like them so much. Bulging muscles and facial hair are not my thing.
Really it just comes down to being set apart from the crowd. That’s what gets you attention. And to justify that attention, I think that people need to come up with a reason to explain their sometimes intense fascination. So what do they come up with? “Of course I’m only this interested because that person must be attractive.” Of course. -___-
Fake beauty
In the office today, Mizu (our HR) exclaimed that his nail looked and felt like plastic. Earlier this week, Marylin had bought one of those nail buffers and insisted on testing and demonstrating it on him. So now he is stuck with a squeaky clean thumbnail that he may actually make even shinier when he tries to rub the smoothness away. It’s kind of funny to see the methods he’s been trying to tone it down, from scraping it against thing to rubbing it along the wall or uneven surfaces. I guess none have worked that well if he’s still so consious of it.
When he made that comment, I found myself saying something along the lines of, “You’ll find that much of beauty is being fake.” In retrospect, that really rings true to me and was put even more into perspective when I happened upon a TED video about glamour. Essentially the entire beauty industry and anything else considered glamorous is a front. It’s not about what’s natural, but what can be hidden, changed, or at least made to appear so. Sometimes it’s to enhance a certain feature and other times it’s to conceal it, but no matter what the approach, the end goal is to produce something that does not just happen to be so.
Now that’s not all bad, since having better moisturized skin probably hasn’t ever hurt anyone and a little bit of smoothing over of details can boost self-confidence, but sometimes the philosophy can get distorted. It’s dangerous to talk about this change of appearance artificially, especially for those who are particularly insecure about their looks. The beauty doctrine preaches things like using makeup to change your appearance rather than having a healthy lifestyle and to the zealots out there, this can be a very unhealthy suggestion. I find it fascinating that people are always striving for this look (myself included to a small extent) of having better skin or longer lashes or rosier cheeks.
Similarly, the idea of being glamorous is aiming for an ideal that is just out of reach. Glamour often encompasses beauty, wealth, and other superficial ways of looking at what is valued in life. It’s about transcending earthly qualities and having that magical glow. So honestly, who can achieve that? But in the desperate pursuit of it, people will drive themselves crazy trying. Most importantly though, it’s about being at the right place at the right time and sometimes even seeing things from the right angle too. Glamour doesn’t just happen. It is meticulously prepared for and carefully recorded in just the right way, otherwise it’s all ruined.
And so, in that simple sentence, I suddenly was able to put into more concrete ideas this distaste I’ve always had for high fashion, glamour, and beauty. For me, all of that is so fake, so artificial, and so unrealistic that what is natural is thrown to the side. Have you ever seen a glamorous shot without makeup, technology, or extremely calculated lighting? Glamour is made and in its most touted form, is probably never present in real life. That’s what really bothers me. Does everyone who would like to be more glamorous now need to clamor to get expensive cars or jewelry, put on tons of makeup and fancy clothes, and practice their perfect pout and stare? It sure seems that way and that is just disgustingly FAKE.