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In Whose Image Are You Made?

 
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Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the fairest of them all?

Remember the Evil Queen from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs? And how shocked was she to hear Snow White’s name instead of hers as the answer to the question above? She immediately sent Snow White away to be killed and when that didn’t work, The Evil Queen took matters into her own hands. This classic Disney movie made me think how in “real life” most people do not experience this same shock when the depiction of beauty isn’t them. In fact, most of us truly do not expect it to be.

Think about it for a second, if you will. If I was to say the word “beautiful” what image would pop into your head? Would it be your face? Or someone else’s? Now let’s get more specific. What do you picture when I say “beautiful woman”? What about “beautiful man”? People Magazine named Julia Roberts, Zoë Saldana, Scarlett Johansson, and many others on their World’s Most Beautiful 2010 list. Channing Tatum, Bradley Cooper, and don’t forget the ex-football player turned Old Spice guy, Isaiah Mustafa, represented some of the men on the list. Did you see any of these faces flash across your mind?

So now I'm wondering where this practice came from. Why isn’t someone’s first association with beauty with him or herself? Numerous things can influence an individual’s perspective, but one very important factor is what he or she is fed. Your mind, your emotions; they all function based on what you have been feeding them.

Let’s look at a few examples. A girl tells a boy that for a male to be attractive, he should have rock-hard abs and broad shoulders. He has just been fed a standard of attractiveness. A man points at a size 4 model on the television and tells his wife she needs to look like her. The woman has just been fed a standard of body image. We are constantly fed with ideas, images, and standards of what is acceptable, what is beautiful, and what is ideal. If it isn’t by someone close to us it’s the TV. Or if the media is actually reporting news that day, we can be sure to get it from movies, websites, magazines and even certain books.

It is inevitable that we will be fed from these various sources; this is simply the world we live in. We have the choice to decide how, if at all, we will use the information we are given. We can eat until our minds are full, or chose not to partake in the different “meals” altogether. My advice is to take the latter.
The standard of beauty we are fed is a false one. No one has the perfect nose; a lot of people pay for it. There is no ideal length of hair or “just right” tone of skin. Most of the images we see were made that way. Hollywood makes sure to Photoshop, retouch, add makeup, and adjust lighting in order to produce the image it wants you to see. It is pointless to pursue the “set” images it feeds you because, in reality, they do not exist.

Everyone has an image with which they associate themselves. In certain religions, people feel they’re made in the image of their divine being. For example, Christians believe they are made in the image of Christ. What about you? You can continue to chase after a pseudo idea of what is attractive, or the next time you look into the mirror you can allow yourself to see beauty in the image that reflects back at you. Again, my advice is to chose the latter.

Shala Marks is a summer intern with EmpowHER. She has a passion for writing and a love for social and women’s issues.

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We value and respect our HERWriters' experiences, but everyone is different. Many of our writers are speaking from personal experience, and what's worked for them may not work for you. Their articles are not a substitute for medical advice, although we hope you can gain knowledge from their insight.

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