Beauty Essay: The Definition Of Beauty

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The Definition of Beauty Our definition of beauty is becoming such a narrow and limited concept, it is causing women to objectify themselves. Whether it 's having cosmetic surgery or binging on food, these women are participating in highly unhealthy behaviors in order to fit through the tiny doorway of beauty that society has built. This behavior is a severe problem because as a consequence, many women are going to extremes, often to their own detriment. Certainly, these choices that women are making are not solely based on how they see themselves, but more on how they want others to see them. Every day, women are bombarded with billboards, magazines, and other types of advertising that present the “perfect woman,” which few can actually …show more content…

The idea of “self improvement” gets so exaggerated, it causes women to believe that they always have to do more, or go a step further to be beautiful. Thus, women are ruin their own self esteem and body image. The unattainable image of women that society allows to be true is causing women to go to these unhealthy degrees. For example the famous Barbie doll, with her “tiny waist and big bosom” (Cloud 79). Girls are basically told from the beginning that in order to be “successful like Barbie” you need to have a small waist, a big chest, skinny legs, and little, perfect “heel-fitted feet.” Images like this allow for women to participate in harmful acts, such as plastic surgery, anorexia, and bulimia, in order to become what they “should be.” Women are so concerned with having that perfect figure, they are no longer able to see themselves for who they truly are, which in some cases isn 't as bad as they make it to be. Women become so engulfed in the idea of becoming beautiful that they soon believe that nothing on its own can be beautiful. Beauty is now something that needs to be bought or attained, and is no longer a natural attribute. Surgeries and “life style change” diets are now the only solutions to being considered beautiful. …show more content…

In order to be beautiful, women have to be a “certain way” or else they are nothing in society 's narrow views. “Perhaps the most striking outcome of self-objectification is the difficulty women have in imagining identities and sexualities truly our own” (Heldman 67). As sad as it is, women are told that they have to fit a standard in order to be considered beautiful. Therefore, as long as there is such a limited definition of beauty, women will attempt to fit into that definition, objectifying and altering themselves until there is nothing left to

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