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Beauty is a Beast

Monday Aug 3, 2009 – By Janelle Harris

74639303I bare my soul in the articles that I write. OK, well maybe not my soul, but I certainly expose more of myself than I would if I was, you know, an average woman with a healthy dose of discretion and common sense. I spill on all my scattered thoughts, tell all my business and use my experiences for your reading entertainment. It’s all for you, Clutchettes. So this article here? This one is no different. If I can help just one person—someone hand me a tissue, please, I’m choking up here—by letting them know that like the great MJ, they are not alone in having crazy random thoughts, then my editorial ramblings have not been typed in vain.

Today class, I’d like to share about my womanly insecurities. Even though I am quite grown with a kid and a car note and a cable bill and a 401(k) to certify that I am in fact an adult, I have these pre-teeny moments of envying other women that take me back, mentally, to the time when I was a pimply-faced 12-year-old cutting out pictures from my mom’s Essence because I wished I looked like the models on the pages. Though I haven’t thrown it back that far (and someone please get Jesus on the mainline if I do regress that much), this I will admit: I have body envy. I look at other women, not—to the chagrin of every stereotypical male fantasy—in a sexual way, and compare myself to them. It’s something I always thought I would grow out of but it can’t get much growner than this. And yet, the condition still lingers.

Case in point: While watching MTV, I secretly had a bout of resentment for not being built like the video girls, balking at God for not ordering me up a tall, stately physique with a Coke bottle shape. On screen, a fancy foreign car with limo tint and a spotless wax job pulls up, center stage. Three buxom brick houses emerge from its back seat, glistening with body oil that accentuates their flawlessness from crown to heel—no love handles, no stretch marks, no rippling cellulite, no evidence of gravity’s betrayal on their breasts, which sit so high they threaten to topple over the tops of their designer string bikinis. I sigh, stretching my mind back to days of old when my own body looked like a chiseled work of art and quickly ingest a gulp of hard reality: wait a minute, my body has never looked like that. Ah well, a sista can romanticize about the glory days that never were. I dust Doritoes crumbs off of my chest and flip the channel, chastising myself for inhaling a bag of snacks that have taken me 35,000 calories farther from even C-list video girl stackedness.

But TV is smoke and mirrors, right? Body parts are taped up, glued down, cosmetically spruced and aesthetically primped into physical superiority. It’s their job to look like walking perfection, I console myself. So not to be deterred from applying my hang-ups to everyday life, I size myself up next to everyday women as well. Case in point: After agreeing to meet a friend downtown for a happy hour-esque poetry event, I walk right into what has to be the largest collective of the most outwardly stunning women in the District of Columbia. If every other lady in there wasn’t qualified to be the lead in the next Ludacris video, then I must be sane (and I think I’ve proven by now, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that I am not). I scan the room, bubbling with teenage-like awkwardness at the abounding gorgeousness and pick out parts I’d love to claim as my own: this one’s waistline, this one’s bust line, this one’s apple bottom. Leave it to said friend, who herself is an hourglass-shaped knockout, to come up with a place ripe for the America’s Next Top Model picking. I take one for the average girl team and enjoy the evening, intermittently wondering if a local plastic surgeon would be willing to barter with a very unwealthy freelance writer in exchange for a full body reconstruction.

By now, I’m sure my secret is out: my self-esteem isn’t the highest. But I also think I’ve fallen victim to the same unrealistic influences that we warn young girls not to fall prey to. Much like the figures of rail-thin models became the main concept of beauty for misled little white girls, who to this day make up the bulk of eating disorder sufferers, women in our community have been pressed to possess the prototypical, quintessential sista girl shape—thick thighs, full hips, voluptuous breasts and a big ol’ bubble booty, all idealistically packaged with a tiny, inconspicuous waist. While white girls strive to ascertain and keep a waif-like physique, we’ve learned that though the Black version of feminine beauty is far more lenient where having more meat on the bones is concerned, there’s still a standard image to meet up to and contend with. Too thin and you get passed over more times than bad potato salad at a family cookout. Too thick and you’re an unwilling but nonetheless card-carrying inductee into the big girl club.

And who imposes these brutish regulations, these impossible criteria, these imposing benchmarks? That subspecies of human who generally wreck havoc and cause drama in otherwise peaceable female lives. (Stand by for male-bashing moment.) Men themselves can look like five miles of bad road winding all the way down to hell. They can have bulging guts, bad skin, corrupt teeth, receding hairlines, ashy e’rything, flabby rumps and the muscle tone of an embryo. They can be unkempt and generally undereducated, uncouth, unpresentable and undesirable. They can be as homely as the day is long, as naturally unattractive as the underside of a dog’s behind but the gooniest of them all still place demand on Black women to be as perfect as they are not. One look at a hip-hop video, where an entourage of droopy, goofy dudes ogle in the presence of breathtaking albeit misguided ladies, highlights the imbalanced expectations that our community places on the lopsided battle of the sexy—um, sexes. If we are held up to the form of, say, Melyssa Ford or Bria Myles, then it’s only fair to expect each and every man who parts his lips with a critical suggestion to at least have the decency to be built like Nelly or Terrell Owens. After all, fair is fair.

As for me, I am a work in progress, and not just on the physical side. I’m so over comparing myself to other sistas and coming up consistently short. How can it be helpful to my psyche and spirit to continually fail my own test of measuring up to women who, if I’d sit down and talk with, would probably tell me that they too share the same insecurities and perceived shortcomings that I have about myself? Though I playfully (well, kind of playfully) place the blame on our menfolk for pushing these impossible images onto us, it’s really up to me and my tribe of sista girls to balance out the beauty of Black women—starting with our own minds and fanning out into the brown-girl massive. It won’t happen overnight. I’m still two scissor cuts away from creating a throwback inspiration collage like I did back in the day. But maybe, just maybe, if I get myself together, I can throw my pic in amongst the ladies that I think are super duper fly.

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9 Comments – Add Yours

  1. Royal K. Royal K. says:

    Jessica Rabbit is not my idea of natural beauty or perfection to he11 with that and I don’t even think twice about..its kinda sad some women are getting butt implants, all kinds of surgeries, some kind of injections I hear in ATL etc to look like some deformed cartoon character smh…God’s design is best esp when taken care of thru health and fitness.
    Real recognizes real and fake recognizes fake in regards to men and everything, you attract what you are, so therefore that negates men into cartoonish women off the rip!

  2. Sasha Sasha says:

    I think that women can be misguided in their thinking. Look at people who get cancer everyday or diseases that are terminal. Spend time with them and you will see different types of beauty.

    Also I don’t watch music videos for these reasons. They can inspire a certain style or to get in shape, but they can leave a woman feeling like she doesn’t measure up.Not to mention, IT’S NOT REAL

    Create what YOU think you is beauty. I think people like Beyonce are beautiful BUT, they are not my ideal beauty. Meaning, no amount of hair weave and makeup and surgeries will make me look like her. So, for physical admiration, I admire women who’s beauty I can relate to.

  3. Alaina Alaina says:

    Ms. Janelle!

    You are a crazy amazing writer, and truly gave me more than just words but also something mentally stimulating to hang on too. I could visualize everything you wrote, and I appreciate your talent to the upmost! Thank you for sharing yourself for this piece as well as all the other gems you’ve written! Beauty is in fact a beast, but your honesty is refreshing and has a beauty all its own! Super kudos to you!

  4. Nikia Nikia says:

    I absolutely luv the writing of this article. great job. I giggled out loud at this ————>Men themselves can look like five miles of bad road winding all the way down to hell.

    If that aint the truth….I think women in general have insecurities and some of the most toned and fit ladies probably have some too….this may even be true for ALL people….there will always be something you want to change and for those who have the money to do so, they end up finding new things to change….

  5. haymanot haymanot says:

    I loved this piece. Beautifully written. I can definitely relate to everything mentioned–I’ve had those less than stellar days.

    Write on, sista.

  6. Michelle M. Michelle M. says:

    All women have insecurities. We need to work on accepting ourselves in order for people to accept us as beautiful.

    This article reinforces the emergence of a new, (maybe not so new) body image disorder among black girls and women. We are in-between accepting standards of European aesthetics and a new “video girl” prototype. I hope this issue is addressed more in major African-American publications. This issue not going away for us black women. In fact it may get worse for our youngest black girls!

    Great article J. Harris and well written. By the way….We need to hold men to the same physical standards!! LOL!

  7. Lexi Lexi says:

    I can totally relate, especially when walking into a room full of people and instantly scanning and comparing myself to other women. Great article – and no, you’re not alone in this…

  8. Alisha Alisha says:

    You’re definitely not alone in this. For the longest, I wanted to be one of those “thick” girls. It’s not me and unrealistic for me to strive to be that. I’m finally learning to be comfortable in my own skin. And you’re right. Men can look however and we still take them. Their standards are out of this world.

  9. LaKeyshaF LaKeyshaF says:

    I really enjoyed this article! I believe it rings true for most women in some way. I am going through this same battle as we speak. I’ve had the best/worst of both worlds. I had the kind of coke bottle bady that men AND women completmented nonstop. I wasn’t vain…it was just a part of me that i accepted and didnt think twice about. Then…I had a baby. I gained 40 lbs with her and due to a bout of post-partum combined with the inability to breast-feed (which helps burn MAJOR calories after childbirth) I kept most of the weight. No longer could i go in the store and pick out anything and assume it would look good on me. My shapely romp was swallowed up and lost in the love handles around my waist. And after 8 months post pragnancy I still could not see my toes. Having a young sexy husband did not help the insecurities…

    Though I’ve lost about 30 lbs. i am still in transition and sometimes get caught up in how I used to look. It takes a lot of willpower to not get depresseed when I pass a mirror and the image does not match how i feel inside. I’m working on me so I definately feel you Girl!!! Great article!

    ps
    sorry for the long personal story

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