- MBTI
- None
This isn't a backhanded attempt to fish for complements. I do not care for that.
It's a thread about recognizing what constitutes as "good looks" generally, not meeting those standards and consequently, feeling envious of those who do.
I've been turned down based solely on my looks. I've been judged for physical deformities and such, and blatantly given the "pity look" when I tell them my acne doesn't go away, despite my best attempts and their best advice. This leads me to believe that physical attractiveness is not, in fact, entirely subjective and possibly has an objective component to it. After all, aren't some people deemed attractive by a larger number of people and some people deemed attractive by a few selected individuals?
For example, how many people who consider this person attractive?
Compared to this:
(both randomly googled)
One would generally be seen as more sexually attractive than the other.
I wonder why this happens; why certain people are more attractive than others, or why certain physical features are deemed more attractive than others. I'm also curious to see how many people can relate to this sentiment of envy and why isn't this considered natural e.g. usually the response to admitting to not being attractive is almost hostile in asserting that beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Well, that's fine, so then explain why one person is more widely seen as attractive than another person, and how this isn't evidence of an objective criteria?
Thoughts and opinions.
PS. Not an emotional advice thread.
I would have to say that for the most part, physical attraction is subjective because I can't really tell who is and who isn't physical attractive naturally- by studying magazines and whatnot I think I have cultivated an opinion of who could be in magazines and therefore who *might* be attractive but in general I have no real clue.
One thing I DO know is that, when a person looks quite different from the norm they are 'unattractive' and in some sense 'scary'. I don't hold this view, personally, but it's hard to adjust oneself to being around someone who is a burn survivor and has a completely different facial structure than the majority, or someone with a cleft lip. After I get used to it I'm find but I would imagine that if I, someone who isn't affected by sexual attraction to others, is intimidated by people whom look different than I would say it likely plays a part in a sexual attraction for others.