- Joined
- May 12, 2013
- Messages
- 4,169
- Reaction score
- 433
make up is for weak people, smear nordic warpaint and blood on your faces like true warriors sheeple smh
It's a poor woman's plastic operation
not really... i mean ppl don't work out for lack of self confidence but 9/10 they weren't satisfied with the capabilities of their body prior to their training regiment.
It's a colloquialism for grooming. If you comb your hair before going out is it because you are insecure about your physical appearance? Make-up may hide some skin blemishes and wrinkles, but that's it - not enough to placate any deep emotional self-esteem issues. It is a form of grooming and hygiene that is cultural for a lot of women; it is not a mask.
Isn't that self confidence then you see something wrong with yourself and want to fix it
Isn't that self confidence then you see something wrong with yourself and want to fix it
Make-up is a form of self-care and hygiene for many women, so I would say it was a reasonable comparison. Not every human needs exercise anyway; many people have not exercised and continued to exist.
Many will tell you it's art. That is the biggest lie that there can be. This isn't Kabuki theater or theatrical performance in general. Or, maybe it is in the context of hood-winking people.
A self-created criteria, so, it isn't a fit comparison to begin with. Makeup actually causes a lot of skin issues as well. Let's not go there.
People absolutely need some kind of physical activity for a good living. A person can "exist" whilst in the acute state of Alzheimer's as well. That would be merely "existing." And that's just one example of how people can be simply there, without actually living.
Your concept of living is based on self-created criteria.
These sentences are contradictory, or at least because of the way you worded the bold. And it has plenty to do with low self esteem, whether or not that's the reason you do it, lots of women use it to hide behind it more so than they do to just look a little better.
Pretty much this.
Repeating after me like a parrot isn't helping your flimsy argument when "living" and "existing" are two totally different things. Calling makeup "hygine" is also such a foolish notion. Perhaps, you should use your words carefully. That "colloquialism's" use on the previous page was absolutely ridiculous.
You're right, hygiene (not "hygine;" this forum has a spellchecker- use it.) probably was not the best word to use. The response was hastily written in between clients, and I meant to say that make-up is a form self-care and grooming, which is correlated more with positive self-esteem than negative self-esteem. And no, "fixing" oneself up is not absolutely ridiculous; it is a local saying where I live akin to "getting ready." It would be asinine to think that getting ready for work or a social event would be indicative of low self-esteem.
That said my argument regarding living is not flimsy; I used the word exist because he said "every human needs" exercise. Need implies without it you will cease to exist - assuming exercise is essential like water, food, and oxygen. Exercise is a form of self-care similar to grooming and life is not dependent on it. To define exercise as an essential need is inane. You said, "people absolutely need some kind of physical activity for a good living,"--and like your phrase that I turned back to you, that is just your schema. You never defined what "good living" is, which limited my response. Were you implying that it makes you more moral? Or that it gives more meaning/purpose? Maybe you just believe it is healthier. Either way that is your opinion, and physical activity may be "good living" for you, but not every one is you. You're implying that someone like Steven Hawking isn't living good; maybe he is or isn't, but that's not your call-it's his. I support my clients who engage in physical exercise, but for those who are endomorphic or even ectomorphic, that absolutely hate it, I am not going to force my values onto them.
The concept of living is subjective and the concept of existing is objective. Someone with dementia is definitely existing (like you said), but your assuming they aren't living (I'm guessing now your saying living means enjoying life or experiencing life?) based on your worldview. Studies find that that is not true either. There is some great research on how those with dementia can have a total affect change when introduced to certain stimuli (i.e., music from their childhood, old family pictures, or even the presence of particular people). Even in extreme cases where the person is in a vegetative state we cannot determine their level of happiness/contentment.
OT: So I have found no studies that link (or even correlate) make up to low self-esteem. If you find one please send it to me so I can begin addressing all my clients who wear make-up for poor self-image. For most it is just a gender-specific (but not always) cultural form of grooming like showering, brushing teeth, using deodorant, and combing hair. It boils down to personal preference. A lack of grooming can be an indication of depression, but only if that person is ignoring their typical grooming regimen.
You must be registered for see links
You must be registered for see links
You must be registered for see links
You must be registered for see links
You must be registered for see links
Makeup itself is the greatest promoter of low self-esteem.
Why is this being read into so deeply, there's no formula... We wear makeup because we can? It doesn't have to be about insecurity or making us "more beautiful." Everyone has their reasons. For starters, it's fun as hell. But if it is used to boost self-confidence, aight. If it's used to cover up blemishes, aight. Why should it matter, why should it concern anyone else? Wearing makeup doesn't equate to beauty, neither does not wearing makeup. The dudes who say "makeup is deceiving!!!1" are the Nice Guys™ who freak tf out when they see a bare face and say, "take her swimming on the first date." And I don't think this has come up, but nothing irks me more than when men say that women wear makeup to impress them because 1. who are you? 2. we do not. You wear makeup? Great! You don't wear makeup? Great! POINT IS, why can't we mind our own business and let others do as they please?
According to the articles you sent me marketing is the greatest promoter of low self-esteem.
The primary point of the journal articles was on how marketing affects desire to buy cosmetic products and cultural expectations of beauty impact a woman's self-esteem. One study even states: "The study found no correlation between self-esteem and an individual’s particular cosmetic usage, habits, and beliefs." The main evidence to support your point were referenced journals within the research section regarding adolescents. I won't argue that with adolescents; most teenagers of any gender are very self-conscious. It's a part of their developmental stage as they form identity, differentiate, and become more self-aware. Like I said earlier, make-up may hide some skin blemishes and wrinkles, but that's it - not enough to placate any deep emotional self-esteem issues. There may be statistic outliers with significant scarring from burns or severe acne that do use it to boost their confidence, but if you want to know what the average woman thinks, just read what most the women on this forum are saying.
So, that's all you cherry-picked from the entire post? Regardless, women on this forum? How many are there? To assume that I should value the opinions of a handful number of people over survey's isn't how this should proceed. Furthermore, treating teenagers as some kind of redundant variables that need to be discarded is going off a tangent, if anything. Where is your proof that such factors are dropped in adulthood when the issue of "self-esteem" and "boosting" it are involved?