Beauty shapes and standards [Druid study]

Beauty shapes and standards [Druid study] We are all beautiful according to the shapes we have of face or body. One must always remember that standards of beauty come and go and do not make us better, but worse. Unanimity is stupid. We must not believe that all the processes we do to match celebrities or people in focus, bring us peace or comfort. It is necessary that we love each other. We can all be sexy or beautiful even if the world says otherwise. Believe in yourself, love yourself and live better with the imperfections that we all have. It is impossible to talk about beauty without turning our eyes to the history of philosophy and art. Aesthetics is the discipline of philosophy that studies art and beauty. The origin of the name goes back to the Greek aesthesis, which means perception. We see the world with our senses, we create representations of what we perceive in ideas, concepts and artistic images. Thus, each era, influenced by these ideas and representations, will have its, shall we say, patterns of what is beautiful. Our practice as plastic surgeons is greatly influenced by classic standards of beauty, which go back to the Greco-Roman tradition, immortalized in works from that period and the Renaissance. Thus, many of the measures we use as guides for some procedures and surgeries reveal the ideas of symmetry and proportion, inherited from classism. What is Beauty Standard? Today's theme is that which affects millions of women and men in the world and brings enormous problems to our mental and physical health which is the standard of beauty. Since the world is a world, there seem to be standards of beauty and physical stereotypes that are more or less imposed on people. And this is mainly about women, and in different cultures! However, in this post I highlight Western culture. Primitive Beauty Standard We can speak of physical patterns being projected mainly on women since antiquity. We can start, for example, with the Willendorf venus, discovered in Austria in 1908 and made by our ancestors in the caves. It is a 26,000 year old piece that represents the standard of beauty valued at that time. The 11 cm sculpture was used in fertility rituals. Thus, it is understood that women with fat and rounded bodies represented fertility and a greater chance of having children. In Ancient Greece, women were considered anti-men. Whereas male forms should be muscular with perfect bodies. Women, on the other hand, were curvaceous and would be considered "chubby" by current standards. And the skin should be as clear as marble. The Middle Ages seem to have been a time without many records of beauty standards or stereotypes, probably because modesty and asexual sanctity were more valued. In the period between the mid-19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, which in Europe was considered to be the Victorian and Art Noveau periods, the era of over-restriction of female bodies could be considered. The silhouettes had a rigid hourglass shape. Voluptuous meats should be contained at all costs. Thus forming a very thin waist and wide hips with the use of many corsets and other internal structures. Gay men are more concerned with beauty than most men, with the exception of metrosexuals. Being well with yourself, with your body and appearance, has been an increasing concern and the aesthetic procedures carried out in clinics and doctors' offices can help. Dr. Gabriel Magalhães, a biomedical specialist in advanced aesthetics, reveals that there is a great demand from the gay public for procedures performed in his office. "Until recently, cosmetic procedures were a taboo among men, but now with the increasingly frequent exposure of men without a shirt, defined muscles and with less hair, a new standard of male beauty has consolidated," says the expert. I think that great beauty is alive and it is in all these perceptions and expressions and, like life, it contains perfection and imperfection, harmony and even chaos, in some moments. What about our personal quest for beauty? I think that it may involve some change in our appearance, as long as it is within a larger context of self-care and self-acceptance. From Brasil to the world, Paulo Cesar Ebbano Moreira [merlin druid] sources: https://vejameumundo.com/o-que-e-padrao-de-beleza/ https://www.somostodosum.com.br/artigos/corpo-e-mente/o-formato-do-seu-corpo-revela-sua-personalidade-02637.html https://observatoriog.bol.uol.com.br/noticias/beleza/especialista-revela-quais-os-procedimentos-esteticos-mais-procificados-por-gays https://posturadehomem.com/beleza-masculina/ https://www.gemellicirurgiaplastica.com.br/post/o+que+e+beleza/20

Comentários

Postagens mais visitadas deste blog

homoaffectiveness and relationships

Types of love [Druid study]

Homosexualité et astrologie [étude druidique]