Are You Beautiful?
Before the ring. Before the wedding. Before the babies and the house and the life, you have been building a Pinterest board for since you were nineteen. Before any of that, there is a conversation nobody is having with you directly. So here it is.
The “I am worth it” culture is one of the most damaging lies sold to women in the last decade. Not because women do not have value. They do. But because this particular version of worth has been weaponized into a blank cheque that demands gifts, trips, jewellery, fancy dinners and luxury goods from men who barely know you, justified entirely by the fact that you exist and consider yourself attractive.
That is not worth. That is entitlement with a filter on it.
The Price Tag You Put on Yourself Is Not Real
Worth in a relationship is not a number you assign yourself based on how good your selfies look. Worth gets built. It comes from how you treat people, how you show up in hard moments, what you bring to the table beyond your appearance, how honest you are, how loyal you are, and how emotionally present you are capable of being.
A woman who demands five-star treatment before a man has seen her on a bad day, before he has watched her handle disappointment, before she has demonstrated a single quality beyond looking good on a Saturday night, has not established worth. She has established a price. Those are entirely different things.
Worth earns over time. A price tag gets slapped on in front of a mirror.
What the Filter Is Actually Hiding
Here is the part that the “I am worth it” crowd does not discuss in the caption. Modern beauty, the kind that fills your feed, the kind that triggers comparison in millions of women scrolling at midnight, owes an enormous debt to technology and chemistry.
Filters that smooth, brighten and reshape in real time. Makeup that contours an entirely different bone structure onto a face. Lashes that do not belong to the person wearing them. Lips injected into a shape they never naturally had. Skin presented as flawless, which spent three hours in editing before it reached your screen.
None of this is inherently wrong. Women have adorned themselves since the beginning of human history and will continue to do so. The problem is not the makeup. The problem is the gap between the performance and the reality, and the self-worth ideology that has been built entirely on top of the performance rather than the person underneath it.
Lipstick on a pig is a cruel phrase. The more accurate version is this: filters on anxiety. A contoured highlight on depression. A perfectly posed, confident smile on a woman who cannot leave the house without checking her appearance fourteen times because, without the paint, she does not recognize herself.
The “I Am Beautiful and Confident” Caption Is a Cry for Help
Not always. But more often than the algorithm lets on.
The woman posting her seventh mirror selfie this week with the caption about self-love is frequently the same woman who lies awake cataloguing everything wrong with her body. The influencer selling confidence in her bio is often the person least able to sit with herself in a quiet room without a screen for company.
Social media has created a performance of confidence that has almost no relationship to actual confidence. Real confidence does not need seventeen approvals from strangers before breakfast. Real confidence does not collapse when a post underperforms. Real confidence does not require a full production to walk out the front door.
What the platform rewards is not confidence. It rewards the performance of confidence. The distinction matters enormously because millions of women are now optimizing for the performance while the actual thing quietly deteriorates underneath it.
The Naturally Confident Woman Is the Most Threatening Thing on the Internet
She exists. She is out there. She has pimples and a scar and days when her hair does nothing right, and she genuinely does not care enough to perform about it.
She is comfortable in her skin, not because her skin is perfect but because she stopped making her skin the measure of her value years ago. She is attractive in a way that no filter produces because what reads as attractive at the deepest level has always been ease, presence, and the quiet assurance of a person who knows who they are without needing a comment section to confirm it.
She does not demand luxury dinners to compensate for the insecurity she is not admitting to. She does not require a man to perform financial devotion before he has earned anything because her value is not measured in what she can extract. She brings something real, and she knows it, and she does not need to announce it.
That woman is not the one building a following on the “I am worth it” content. She is too busy actually being worth it.
