Terrortheplug
@somewhererotting
- Joined
- May 12, 2024
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Not written with gpt
the more attractive you become, the more isolated you feel.
Here’s why beauty = loneliness:
1. People project unrealistic expectations onto you
When you’re good-looking, people stop seeing you as a normal human.
They expect confidence, flawless behavior, high status, perfect social skills.
If you don’t match their fantasy, they get disappointed or judge you harder than everyone else.
You’re not allowed to be shy, awkward, insecure, or imperfect.
2. People assume you already “have options”
You get rejected without even being rejected because people assume:
So they never approach, never initiate, never open up.
You become “admired from a distance,” not actually connected.
3. You get treated like competition, not companionship
Guys see you as a threat.
Girls see you as someone who could steal attention away.
A lot of people resent beauty instead of appreciating it.
It creates social distance automatically.
4. People don’t treat you genuinely
The attention you DO get is often:
People show interest in the image, not the person.
You start doubting every interaction:
“Do they actually like me or just the way I look?”
That’s loneliness on a deeper level.
5. You can’t open up without people calling it “ego”
If you admit you feel lonely, people laugh or think you’re bragging.
If you show insecurity, they think you’re fishing for compliments.
Beautiful people don’t get emotional space from others.
They’re expected to be grateful 24/7.
6. You get blamed for other people’s insecurities
Your existence makes some people uncomfortable.
They treat you cold, hostile, distant, or passive-aggressive for no reason.
You didn’t do anything.
You just looked a certain way.
7. Beauty is rare — and rare things stand alone
Being high-ranking in looks is like being high-ranking in anything:
the higher you go, the fewer people relate to you.
Humans connect through similarity.
Being “the outlier” — even in a positive way — creates separation.
8. The more beautiful you become, the less you can trust others
You start questioning:
And that makes you withdraw even more.
Conclusion
Beauty doesn’t guarantee connection.
If anything, it makes genuine connection harder.
When people love your appearance more than your personality, you end up surrounded yet alone.
This is why so many attractive people feel isolated:
you become seen by everyone, but known by no one.
If you want, I can also write replies, comments, or a shorter/edgier version more in the typical Looksmax tone.
the more attractive you become, the more isolated you feel.
Here’s why beauty = loneliness:
1. People project unrealistic expectations onto you
When you’re good-looking, people stop seeing you as a normal human.
They expect confidence, flawless behavior, high status, perfect social skills.
If you don’t match their fantasy, they get disappointed or judge you harder than everyone else.
You’re not allowed to be shy, awkward, insecure, or imperfect.
2. People assume you already “have options”
You get rejected without even being rejected because people assume:
- you’re already talking to 10 people
- you wouldn’t be interested in them
- you’re “out of their league”
So they never approach, never initiate, never open up.
You become “admired from a distance,” not actually connected.
3. You get treated like competition, not companionship
Guys see you as a threat.
Girls see you as someone who could steal attention away.
A lot of people resent beauty instead of appreciating it.
It creates social distance automatically.
4. People don’t treat you genuinely
The attention you DO get is often:
- shallow
- lust-driven
- transactional
- status-chasing
People show interest in the image, not the person.
You start doubting every interaction:
“Do they actually like me or just the way I look?”
That’s loneliness on a deeper level.
5. You can’t open up without people calling it “ego”
If you admit you feel lonely, people laugh or think you’re bragging.
If you show insecurity, they think you’re fishing for compliments.
Beautiful people don’t get emotional space from others.
They’re expected to be grateful 24/7.
6. You get blamed for other people’s insecurities
Your existence makes some people uncomfortable.
They treat you cold, hostile, distant, or passive-aggressive for no reason.
You didn’t do anything.
You just looked a certain way.
7. Beauty is rare — and rare things stand alone
Being high-ranking in looks is like being high-ranking in anything:
the higher you go, the fewer people relate to you.
Humans connect through similarity.
Being “the outlier” — even in a positive way — creates separation.
8. The more beautiful you become, the less you can trust others
You start questioning:
- who actually cares?
- who’s pretending?
- who’s jealous?
- who wants something?
And that makes you withdraw even more.
Conclusion
Beauty doesn’t guarantee connection.
If anything, it makes genuine connection harder.
When people love your appearance more than your personality, you end up surrounded yet alone.
This is why so many attractive people feel isolated:
you become seen by everyone, but known by no one.
If you want, I can also write replies, comments, or a shorter/edgier version more in the typical Looksmax tone.