You can choose your friends. You can choose your nose. But you can’t choose your friend’s nose. But you can choose a new nose for yourself – if you don’t like what they are born with, that is. You can just chew out on Tiktok. Name self -service tax, a price you pay to make options for your body that can contribute to the outer spots. This becomes particularly true if this plastic surgery is a “ethnic rhinoplasty”, an extremely examined procedure circulating to Tiktok jaid.
Plastic surgery is one of the most controversial issues of the digital age. The battle between the perception of self-love in relation to our right to do what we want in our bodies to make ourselves happy was an endless tug of war. In a socio -political system that rewards desire and proximity to whiteness above all, it is almost impossible to make any choice for our appearance that is empty by any external components. Then add our growing known to the internalized anti-blacks … and you have a bottomless confusion, contradictions and ruthless crises. They are all quite confusing.
Can you love yourself and still take plastic surgery? Is plastic anti-feminist surgery? Should every choice make a woman to adhere to feminism? These quandaries have contaminated large tiktok pockets for years, but a recent video from Zuri.the.alchemist caused the reason once again. In her video, Zuri shared a video of her ethnic rhinoplasty trip and the video, which is now in four million views, met with a strong digital vitriol. From the stitches of videos to negative comments, the internet quickly expressed its dissatisfaction with its new nose in categorically harsh ways.
“Anyone who did this is a smooth criminal.”
“I just know that Tim Burton doesn’t play for you.”
“Call the police.”
These were just some of the comments found in the Zuri video, but that was just the top of the proverbial iceberg. After publishing her results, she became the face of abundant digital discourse, launching her to “not love” her features and to congratulate her previous nose.
This, of course, presents an interesting contrast to the way they are discussed in any other context in any other context. Bulbish, spacious noses rarely praised the mainstream, except for a few melodic screams in a “formation” of La Beyoncé. Rapper Glorilla presented similar comments after sharing his nose work earlier this summer.
Restless rage around plastic surgery
In general, the only noses that praised the internet are the post-surgical increase. This makes the piles of speech aimed at black women with rhinoplasty that are surrounded as promotions of self-love and “genuine concern” encounter as unconscious efforts to speak under the appearance of a woman without fear of reaction. Talking about a woman’s natural appearance? Means. Sneaky. Unpolished. But to have fun for a woman’s appearance after a permanent surgical change that probably came after years of internal races and for some reason you are just considered as a member of the public who simply “says how it is”. But the truth is, no matter how you dress it or try to turn it around as a serious reason.
If the only time the champing black features is after a surgically changing personal insecurity (regardless of the external factors affecting the reported insecurity), then your tiktok gets is not as insightful as you might hope to appear.
