Friday, November 21, 2014

Do You Think I'm Pretty?

I know, I’m a little late to the party. But I, like every human being with a stable internet connection, have seen and formed an opinion on Hollaback’s video showing a woman being catcalled, harassed, and even creepily followed by over 100 men while passively walking the streets of New York. I think most of the responses to this video have been positive (mostly women being like “YASSS FINALLY”), but there has been some negative backlash. Since the video was posted, Republicans and angry, neck-bearded “Pick-Up Artists” have been defending catcalling with statements like “Women should be flattered!” and “These men are just telling you they think you’re attractive, take a f**king compliment.”

Except the thing they don’t get is that when someone tells you you’re attractive, it's not necessarily a compliment. 

My mother’s favorite home video of me as a child is when I’m about nine years old, at the peak of my tomboy phase. It was the day I sang a solo in church. She curled and poofed my hair so that it was comically disproportionate to my head and forced me into a velvet dress and abominable sweater with fur around the collar. As I descended the stairs with a caustic scowl on my face, Grandma exclaims, presumably with her hand over her frail heart, “Bretty, you look so pretty!”

I cross my arms and scowl deeper. “I don’t want to be pretty. I WANT TO BE TOUGH.”

Although in the past 14 years I’ve developed some more noble aspirations than to be “tough,” I still understand where nine-year-old Brett was coming from. “Tough” bears more fruit than pretty. Tough gets shit done. Tough demands respect. Tough gets to the top. Tough protects you from things and people that want to hurt you.

“Pretty” does none of those things. It does nothing. Pretty is passive. Pretty is weak. Pretty invites misuse, even abuse. Pretty is something one might use to describe a thing, not a person.

Fast-forward three years. I am twelve years old. I look in the mirror one morning and all of a sudden I am unfamiliar to myself. There are dark circles under my eyes. My skin looks pallid and my eyes look small. I have started breaking out on my chin and forehead.

“I’M UGLY!!!” I cry from the bathroom. Mom whisks me upstairs and opens up her cavern of war paint. She puts concealer under my eyes, blush on my cheeks, mascara on my eyelashes, shimmery eyeshadow on my lids, gloss on my lips. My face feels sticky and heavy.

When she is finished, I peek in the mirror again. “Am I pretty now?” *

*”Pretty” being relative here. I was still an ugly-ass 12-year-old by all accounts

I had no idea I was actually a decently attractive human being until my late teens. In addition to being among the most exotic-looking people at my high school (I know, not a lot of genetic variability in Bountiful, Utah), I had terrible acne, terrible self-esteem, and got zero attention from boys. None. Nobody ever even looked at me. I was legitimately surprised that I got asked to prom, and even then assumed that he was just a noble white knight whose mom felt sorry for me and made him ask me. 

By the time I got to college, I had (mostly) grown into my facial features, and my defiantly un-feminine physique started vaguely resembling that of a woman. Boys started paying attention to me and it wigged me the eff out. I was completely unreceptive to any advances because it didn’t occur to me that they might have actually been attracted to me. It took several guys literally grabbing me by the shoulders and yelling “YOU ARE PRETTY” in my face before it finally clicked and I was like, “Oh. I am genetically suitable for men to want to copulate with. Awesome.”

I didn’t feel like I deserved the attention. And moreover, I didn’t want it. I won a genetic lottery. Two attractive people* decided to reproduce, and my body was the result of a completely random, statistically improbable combination of genes. I literally did nothing to deserve pretty.

Pretty was, and is, an accident.

*Shout-out to Matt and Andra for being attractive and then being attractive together. That was a good decision.

I don’t want to appear ungrateful. It would be unforgivable for me to not to acknowledge the privileges of moderate attractiveness in this totally imbalanced and backwards world. Attractive people are, on average, more successful than their less attractive counterparts. They are more likely to find love, get married, and make healthy babies. But that doesn’t mean my soul is not wrecked over the fact that society values something we can’t control over our individual merits. I see my mom, who is smokin' hot for 54, busting her ass at the gym, shelling out for botox and eyelash extensions in an attempt to cling to a hologram of pretty. She is strong, healthy, talented, smart, funny, and compassionate, but she honestly believes her worth varies inversely to the lines on her face. Pretty does nothing, but the idea of pretty threatens to destroy amazing women like my mother.

When a woman is walking down the street, trying to get from A to B, and a man she doesn’t know tells her she’s beautiful, or hot, or sexy, or “pretty,” it is not a compliment. We are not our bodies. At times, we don’t even identify with our bodies at all. Bodies are just the meat-ships the better parts of us move around in. Catcalls have no more meaning to us than, “some shapes are round” or “there is cheese.”


When someone tells me I’m pretty, I don’t just “take a f**king compliment.” I don’t say thank you. When someone tells me I’m pretty, I always say, “You know…I’m some other things too.”

If you really want to give a woman a compliment, for the love of God, don’t start with telling her she’s pretty. Tell her you admire her wit and intellect. Tell her she’s a good listener. Tell her her smile lights up a room or that her laugh is contagious. Tell her how she makes you feel when she talks about the things she’s passionate about. Tell her she is beautiful, not because of her face or her boobs, but because she is a human being and human beings are inherently beautiful.


XOXO betches,

An ugly girl in a “pretty” girl’s body