Beauty
What Beauty Really Means?
I personally believe that beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder.
It is not universal, nor fixed — it is shaped by culture, society, and perspective.
For example, in India, tall, fair-skinned girls are often considered “beautiful” according to common societal standards.
But in a country like Leblouh, where the tradition celebrates fat and obese women, they are seen as the epitome of beauty.
Travel to Western countries, and sometimes the same fair-skinned girl is told she looks “pale like a ghost.”
Beauty is never one-size-fits-all.
It shifts depending on where you are, who is judging, and what society admires at that moment.
This makes me realize: trying to fit into someone else’s standard of beauty is pointless.
The real beauty is recognizing your own worth, embracing your natural self, and understanding that someone, somewhere, will always see you as stunning — exactly the way you are.
So maybe the ultimate truth about beauty is this:
It doesn’t live in mirrors, magazines, or social media — it lives in perception, perspective, and self-acceptance.
Shrejal G. K
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