greeds
Iron
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2023
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It should be obvious but, constantly checking your reflection doesn't change how you look; it only changes how you feel about your appearance at that moment.
It quickly turns into a vicious cycle: you don't feel entirely comfortable in your own skin, you check the mirror, and you start focusing on specific imperfections or simply normal things like the lighting, your facial expression, different minor flaws, and so on. You then feel worse and check again.
In reality, nothing has changed in the meantime, but it starts to feel like it has.
Take my recent vacation, for example: I was constantly preoccupied with myself and observing my own appearance, rather than simply enjoying the moment. Looking back, it didn't help at all; it only made everything feel more tense and took me out of the experience.
It might feel like you are seeking reassurance or clarity by checking yourself out, but in reality, you are just resetting that feeling over and over again.
Your appearance doesn't actually change every time you look in the mirror, but your *perception* of it does.
There is something else to note: the stress this all entails in some cases could play an active role. When you are constantly monitoring yourself and worrying about your appearance, you don't feel at ease, and that often shows in your facial expression and overall demeanor—looking tired or tense, or appearing weighed down by worry.
So, it becomes a kind of vicious cycle. The act of obsessive checking causes stress, and that stress likely makes you feel worse (and sometimes look worse, too).
Ideally, you should look at your reflection no more than once or twice a day—depending on the situation—and try not to gaze at it for longer than 5 to 10 seconds.
On days when I hardly look in the mirror at all, I feel much calmer and more at ease with what I’m doing; I’m even more sociable. However, it is something that takes some getting used to.
This applies to many people, regardless of how attractive you are. So, don't attribute it to being 'ugly,' and don't assume that attractive people don't experience this.
Something seperate yet related: stop worshipping Chads. Constant exposure to highly attractive faces can shift your internal frame of reference, leading you to compare yourself to an extreme that isn't representative of everyday reality.
Moral of the thread: less self-scrutiny, more presence.
It quickly turns into a vicious cycle: you don't feel entirely comfortable in your own skin, you check the mirror, and you start focusing on specific imperfections or simply normal things like the lighting, your facial expression, different minor flaws, and so on. You then feel worse and check again.
In reality, nothing has changed in the meantime, but it starts to feel like it has.
Take my recent vacation, for example: I was constantly preoccupied with myself and observing my own appearance, rather than simply enjoying the moment. Looking back, it didn't help at all; it only made everything feel more tense and took me out of the experience.
It might feel like you are seeking reassurance or clarity by checking yourself out, but in reality, you are just resetting that feeling over and over again.
Your appearance doesn't actually change every time you look in the mirror, but your *perception* of it does.
There is something else to note: the stress this all entails in some cases could play an active role. When you are constantly monitoring yourself and worrying about your appearance, you don't feel at ease, and that often shows in your facial expression and overall demeanor—looking tired or tense, or appearing weighed down by worry.
So, it becomes a kind of vicious cycle. The act of obsessive checking causes stress, and that stress likely makes you feel worse (and sometimes look worse, too).
Ideally, you should look at your reflection no more than once or twice a day—depending on the situation—and try not to gaze at it for longer than 5 to 10 seconds.
On days when I hardly look in the mirror at all, I feel much calmer and more at ease with what I’m doing; I’m even more sociable. However, it is something that takes some getting used to.
This applies to many people, regardless of how attractive you are. So, don't attribute it to being 'ugly,' and don't assume that attractive people don't experience this.
Something seperate yet related: stop worshipping Chads. Constant exposure to highly attractive faces can shift your internal frame of reference, leading you to compare yourself to an extreme that isn't representative of everyday reality.
Moral of the thread: less self-scrutiny, more presence.