'How do I respond when friends criticize their own weight and looks?'
The next installment of Ask Ugly, my monthly beauty advice column for the Guardian, is here! Hi Ugly, How do I respond to my friends when they criticize their bodies, faces, skin? One friend frequently complains about her weight. It would feel preachy to tell her that sheâs supporting the beauty industrial complex and reinforcing a status quo that keeps women fixated on their physical appearance. But saying, âYouâre beautiful!â feels shallow. Another friend told me she needs to get more Botox soon because she hates the lines in her forehead. I told her (honestly) that I donât see any lines, but she blew me off, saying it was the wrong lighting and I was being too generous. How do I navigate these conversations? - Conversationally Confused The only thing contemporary beauty culture hates more than an ugly woman? A judgy woman â particularly if she has an opinion about other womenâs beauty behaviors. These days, any criticism of cosmetics must conclude with the disclaimer: âNo judgment, though!â I personally think we would all benefit from harsher judgment of the oppressive standards sustaining the $427bn diet industry and $700bn beauty industry, but I also think youâre right. When a friend tells you she is worried about her weight, âyouâre an agent of the patriarchyâ isnât a helpful response. âYouâre beautiful!â isnât great, either â it reinforces the idea that individual beauty is the solution to the insecurity that beauty culture breeds in us all. Yes, your looks do determine your worth, you might as well say. But you look good, so itâs not your problem! It has been a minute since Iâve had to navigate a situation like this myself. (When youâre a curmudgeonly industry critic, your community knows exactly where you stand on the subject of skin-plumping salmon sperm injections â works like a charm!) So I reached out to some colleagues to get their takes. âThese moments can feel like the perfect opening to challenge beauty standards,â says the beauty reporter . âBut in reality, theyâre rarely the right time for that kind of conversation and can go very wrong.â Instead, she says, âlisten without judgment, and without overcompensating with compliments.â Exchanges like these are signs to strike up more beauty-related discourse. âThe key is to make conversations more frequent, so they donât feel like an attack,â Mohamed says. Rather than pegging these chats to their (or your) perceived aesthetic shortcomings, âbe more intentional about having [general] conversations around the beauty industry, the pressure we internalize and the standards we work so hard to meet and maintain.â Invite a friend over to watch The Substance or American Psycho and break down the beauty themes over a bottle of wine after. Drop a critical book or podcast episode in the group chat. (âUnshrinking by blew my mind! Anyone want to read and discuss?â) Share this Tressie McMillan Cottom video about the âeveryday eugenicsâ of GLP-1s to your Instagram story and see who responds. Another option: connect and commiserate. âI donât try to dissuade them from their perspective ⊠because I will never be more persuasive than the critical voice that lives in their head,â beauty journalist shares. âBut I tell them how I respond to my own occasional dissatisfaction with my appearance, which, for the most part, involves turning outward.â How have you dealt with your dissatisfaction? Share it with the class! It can be as simple as, I know what you mean. I was so fixated on my crowâs feet on a Zoom call once that I had to disable the mirror video function and meditate for 20 minutes after work. It actually helped! Cheaper than a red light mask, anyway. , writer of the body liberation newsletter Burnt Toast, recommends adopting a âhate the game, not the playerâ mentality. âI try to lean into responses like: âWouldnât it be cool if we didnât have to devote so much time and money to all of this?ââ Itâs also fine to not engage. âIf the friend talks about these things in ways that you find triggering, I think itâs very valid to say: âSorry, I love you but Iâm just not the friend for Botox talk,ââ Sole-Smith says. âSet that boundary.â If your discussion partner seems down for debate, âtry to move the conversation toward the politics behind it,â suggests Moshtari Hilal, author of Ugliness. (Another great read to drop in the group chat.) âInstead of reassuring friends that theyâre beautiful, I ask why it matters so much to them,â she says. ââWould you love or respect me less if my appearance changed? Do you deserve to be treated better for having youthful skin or a symmetrical face?â No, these arenât easy questions. Yes, they could lead to some tough talks. Most modern beauty standards have roots in white supremacy, colonialism, capitalism, sexism and other destructive forces. But, as Hilal puts it, donât you âexpect a certain depth and integrity in [your] friendships?â The rest of my answer includes: how âappearance talkâ affects mental and even physical health the benefits (and limits) of âconsciousness-raisingâ if and when to take a step back from beauty-obsessed friends and more! Click through to the Guardian to read the full article (and if you decide to share it with friends or on social media or whatever, please share it via the Guardian link).
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