Peace Hyde |
What seems to have been started by certain individuals who obviously had low self esteem has gain attraction to the extent, that we are increasingly using it as a measure of beauty and sexiness—-predominantly in the world of Entertainment.
Some of the early global entertainers such as actresses, musicians and TV personalities took to enhancing their looks by going the knife route, giving surgical enhancements of backsides, boobs, lips, noses and other parts of the body a new public outlook.
With time, big boobs, pointed noses, big hips and backsides which took over the Entertainment scenes as a result of several entertainers going under the knife became acceptable. After all, people have the right to do whatever they want to their bodies—and this includes packing bags of silicon into their chests.
At the current international front, popular black entertainers like Lil Kim, Nicki Minaj, Kim Kardashian, Coco Austin and others seem to have succeeded in moving the big boobies and backside appearance from just being acceptable to making it the real definition of beauty and sexiness.
It is therefore not shocking that TV personalities-Joselyn Dumas, Toolz from Nigerian and the new chick on the block-Peace Hyde are becoming household names, with a lot of attention springing from their large hips, backsides and boobies.
Whenever we come across photos of the above entertainers, we jump to admire the various homogenous body parts, attributing words like sexy and beauty to them—when few years ago, we would not have considered such things as the defining factors of sexiness or beauty.
Today, it looks like, the bigger a woman’s chest, backside, hips and in some instances lips, the more we consider her as sexy or beautiful, a clear deviation from the traditional notion of beauty and sexy.
The changing definition of beauty and sexiness as I stated above seems to have been started or championed by the various global celebrities who took shot at enlarging certain parts of their bodies—and today, we’ve all forgotten what we independently would have considered as beautiful and sexy.
Few years ago, slim women with moderate backsides and chests were admired, used as epitome of sexiness and beauty. The contemporary change in definition is slowly leaving the many women who fit the normal box of appearance less desirable and I foresee many of these women falling into a pit of low self esteem—just like the few women who once had large body parts.
As a woman, you are not very sexy or beautiful anymore unless you have huge backsides, chests and boobs and those with these things have developed an astronomical self esteem to the extent that they are always on a flaunting extravaganza.
My worry remains; when do we say this is too big and should therefore not be considered healthy or sexy? Until we set a clear and reasonable limit to go with our new definition of sexiness and beauty, we should embrace ourselves for those women who are not naturally endowed to come up with some huge unhealthy body assets through dubious means.
Anyway, have you bought into the new definition of
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