The Harm Of Toxic Beauty Standards
Dove’s research determined that appearance hate and discrimination are a $500 billion dollar health crisis in the United States. Of course, we can expect this figure to be much higher worldwide. Additionally, the brand has a mission to help 250 million teens and young adults to build self-confidence and love the way they look. Appearance hate is defined as the discriminatory and unjust treatment of people based solely on their physical appearance. Skin color, weight, and hair texture are the qualifying appearance hate factors and why people face discrimination. The universal beauty standard is someone tall and skinny with delicate facial features, straight hair, preferably blonde, and white skin. For instance, the masses have determined that Barbie and Ken are the beauty standard of what beautiful people are. Any beauty and features that don’t comply with the above standards fall in the “ugly” category. The thing is, Barbie and Ken are dolls with unrealistic proportions and features that no human being can match. We tend to be multicultural of various skin shades, sizes, facial features, and hair textures. On the other hand, body dissatisfaction is defined by a persistent negative attitude toward our physical appearance. In other words, we can’t accept our bodies because we don’t look like the beauty standard.
The Real Cost of Beauty Study Participants
What’s Toxic Beauty and The Dangers
The famous saying that “beauty is in the eye of the beholder,” making beauty subjective, is no longer valid. Why? because every year, the beauty standards become more narrow and strict. For instance, the popularity of social media has added fuel to the existing problem because it’s universal, and we can help compare each other. As a result, beauty is one of the most popular topics in social media; beauty accounts and beauty influencers are the highest followed. Additionally, as human beings, we all want to fit in and be included, and we tend to follow famous popular people because they are beautiful. Bullying and beauty standards go hand in hand; we tend to bully people who are not beautiful and do not fit the standards. The emotional and physical harm of toxic beauty are astronomical and have created a pandemic of depression among young people. For example, people die or are severely burned from skin-bleach poisoning every day due to the pressure of enjoying the privileges of lighter skin. White skin is the beauty standard and is worth the risk.
How Can We Change Beauty Standards
The lack of representation and diversity in mainstream media, films, magazine covers, influencers, and brand ambassadors is the root of the problem. As long as we refuse to give exposure to real people with various skin tones, hair textures, and body sizes, toxic beauty standards will remain in place. It’s not enough to have representation in a couple of films, tv shows, or magazine covers when we already have preconceived beauty standards. Deep down, we know that the only reason different-looking people are featured is that the media and corporations need to meet a quota or face backlash from the public. With cancel culture, diversity has become more visible, not because beauty standards have widened, but because everyone is running scared of being canceled. Dove is doing a great job with this study; other brands need to follow because our youth and future consumers are in trouble. We need to break the barriers to stop raising insecure and self-loathing children. We must stop normalizing plastic surgery and celebrate our beautifully unique features.