Thatâs literally every glow-up tiktok in a nutshell.
Mainstream glow-up culture is messy. Itâs expensive, extreme, quick, unrealistic and superficial.
You are here, reading this, because the universe is on your side. The world wants you to become your highest-self. This is a sign that you are on track to becoming a glowing goddess. Because glowing goddesses are educated, continually improving both physically and mentally and are intentional with their time.
A quick goddessâ-eye view
With your time in mind, hereâs a quick goddessâ-eye view (aka birdâs-eye view) of this article:
- For those of you who donât know what in the world a glow-up isâŚstart the article from the first headingâsome Urban Dictionary quotes will not fail to amuse you!
- Donât let brands and consumerism capitalise on your insecuritiesâitâs honestly a crime because youâll read to realise how obsessed people are with splurging on glow-ups
- Quick and extreme glow-ups are not successful, sustainable or healthy (unlike what mainstream media portrays)
- If you want to TRULY and EFFECTIVELY glow-up and become a better version of you, read until the endâbecause the less than five minutes youâll spend reading this is going to help you 1000 times more than the amount of time you spend on social media.
Hold onâŚI just want to make it clear that Iâm not hating on glow-ups. Iâm supportive of glow-ups depending on your purpose (they should be glowing goddess goals and nothing less!) and your way of making it a reality. With that out of the way, letâs unveil glow-up cultureâs problematic obsessions and break free from those toxic traps to find successful, sustainable and healthy ways to glow-up on our own terms.
What in the world is a glow-up?
Hereâs what the Urban Dictionary has to say:
- âGlow up means when someone who was ugly are ugly will get cuteâ (what the heck was with that grammar? đđ¤Śââď¸)
- âTo go from the bottom to the top to the point of disbelief [for example] Wow she really did glow up. From ugly duckling to gorgeous swan!!â
Basically, a glow-up is a process in which society thinks you become more attractive. Itâs in shows like The Princess Diaries (okay, but Anne Hathaway/Mia was conventionally attractive even before her makeover). And, itâs all over social media seen with celebrities (like Bella Hadid, Kylie Jenner and Blackpinkâs Lisa) and influencers. (Not saying that artificial glow-ups are bad as braces and facials fall in that category, but celebrity transformations are expensive on a whole other dimension!)
Bringing us to the topic of howâŚ
WEâRE OBSESSED WITH SPLURGING đ¤
Social media is slapping a price tag on these extreme glow-ups. You see girls splurging hundreds, thousands and tens of thousand on that five hour haircut, that designer dress and those claws.
LISTEN UP: this isnât to say Iâm against spending money on yourself. I actually believe itâs important to invest in yourself. But, glow-up culture has transformed into an unbelievably profitable market. A marketing geniusâ sole purpose is to turn peopleâs insecurities into cash. Money may not grow on trees, but it does grow on insecurities.
WEâRE OBSESSED WITH THE QUICK AND EXTREME
Glow-up culture on TikTok looks like this: the âbeforeâ is portrayed as needing to be âfixedâ, unloved and unaccepted versus the âafterâ where theyâre confident, transformed and âgood enoughâ.
We all have our good, bad and just plain normal daysâand thereâs nothing wrong with that. If youâre always focused on your imperfections, youâll always find them.
âWhat you focus on, grows.â
paraphrasing my old psychology teacher who used to pause mid-class at the tiniest disturbance lol
(Be prepared for some tough love in this paragraph.) You feel you need to glow-up to be âacceptedâ by others more? You canât even accept yourself because youâre always focused on how youâre ânot good enoughâ. As I said before, if you think like this, your mind is not going to be able to accept yourself even after youâre âglowed-upâ because there will always be another negative thought about yourself. Youâll just become another person with insecurities hidden under your shirt with a glowed-up facade.
Honestly, glowing-up mainstream media mode (if thatâs not a thing, Iâm coining it), is like (or may even involve) going on a fad diet. It isnât sustainable so it doesnât last, leaving you yo-yoing between the âbeforeâ and âafterâ, âbeforeâ and âafterââŚIT GOES NOWHERE! ITâS A WASTE OF TIME!! (I may or may not be talking from experienceâŚ)
Glow-up culture is obsessed with extreme makeovers because apparently the greater the difference between the âbeforeâ and âafterâ, the more âsuccessfulâ the glow-up is deemed. Completely throwing the ideas of sustainable self-development and the power of the marginal 1% gains (more on this in the near futureâjoin the newsletter T-3-2-1âŚLIFTOFF to be on top of new glowing godess reads, inspo, journal prompts and tea) out of the window.
Here are some glow-up culture myths:
- That you can go from insecure to confident overnight solely due to a physical glow-up.
- That real growth is easy and quick.
- That you need to glow-up after a break-up.
- That you need to glow up for someone else.
- That you need to glow up for summer.
All for validation.
Glowing-up is not a sprint, itâs a life-long marathon where we strive to improve our lives one step at a time.
WEâRE OBSESSED WITH APPEARANCES (ONLY)
How many times in glow-up culture, pop culture and on social media have you seen content that correlates oneâs size and weight with their happiness and health? I knowâitâs bad.
Chasing after mainstream beauty standards is impossible because the finish line keeps on changing and extending. Beauty standards arenât fixed for eternity, compare Audrey Hepburn to Kim Kardashian for example. So if your self-acceptance is tied to how your external appearance fits in with society (instead of your mindset)âitâs not self-loveâitâs just insecurity in a different dress.
Which is why we need toâŚ
Redefine âglow-upâ
Throughout this article Iâve said the words âmainstream mediaâ a bit too much. So I want to propose something new. I call it gentle-stream media (read my about page). In gentle-stream media, glowing-up is more importantly an internal journey. (By the way, you can relax in lavieenroseemily.com because everything in my digital secret garden is gentle-stream media.)
Also, can we just pause for a sec and think about why you want to glow-up?
Why do you want to glow-up?
Take your time, journal, shadow-work (an article on this is also coming soon, in the meantime, join T-3-2-1âŚLIFTOFF to use La Vie En Rose đ Emily journal prompts every Monday morning as part of your motivating morning routine).
Do this: treat yourself like how youâd treat your own child (just imagine it if you need to like me). Hereâs another journal prompt:
If you treated yourself like your own child, what would you do that youâre not doing right now? And why?
If you treated yourself like your own child, wouldnât you give yourself unconditional loveâduring the good, bad and normal?
Self-love is a key ingredient to a true glow-up because self-love gives you power. It gives you your power to glow-up on your own terms and not anyone elseâs.
Now, letâs not forget that glow-ups are not limited to just physical ones, there are (just to name a few):
- mental glow-ups
- career glow-ups
- personality glow-ups
(If you want me to write another article delving more into one of those glow-ups, Iâd love it if youâd drop a comment đâIâll write one if a lot of you want one.)
I do want to touch a little more on that last oneâpersonality glow-ups. People are going to remember how you made them feel for longer than they will remember whether or not you had a pimple on your nose or even your name.
âIâve learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.â
Maya Angelou
If you take one thing away from what youâve just read, it should be to try a mental or personality glow-up before a physical one. Youâll probably find that you no longer âneedâ that physical glow-up.
Redefine your glow-up with your terms.
If you havenât heard this for a whileâor you donât realise it yetâlet me tell you thisâŚ
You are enough.
Trust me.
love,
emily