Sunday, February 24, 2019
My Hips My Caderas
In the excerpt, My Hips, My Caderas by Alisa Valdes, gives distinctive examples of her life story to invent a meaning for how rules of order perceives women. the States strives to fit the perception of bang because it is the single physical characteristic that makes us matter. Her anecdotes show us how the land shapes our thoughts to brainwash us. Alisa Valdes personal experiences argon a service to provide a better explanation of how we perpetrate in order to be welcomed in society. Beauty is in the eye of the culture. This is an essential quote that summarizes the moral of Valdes story.Being a biracial cleaning woman, she received perspectives from two cultures about the route she hold games. Valdes is white and Cuban. She is a girl with hips and curves. She is seen as voluptuous. White Americans and Cubans have different viewpoints on how women should look and what beauty is considered to be. Valdes consistency type isnt accepted in by all of her family because of the ty pe of the different type of society they live in. As a child it confused her as to what herself image should be. Her mothers side of the family is white Americans who believed world faithful was the key to beauty.In America, we have some(prenominal) reminders of what we should look like. Our models are size zeros. All our foods are low plump or reduced in calories producing dieting. We also promote surgery to stick more or less skinny. Hips or la caderas are seen as fat which is ugly, ugly being the antonym for beauty. On the contrary her fathers side believed that the thicker you were or the more curves that complimented ones body made you more of a woman. That notion highlighted a womans beauty. Caderas, often referred to in her explanation, scarcely translated is hips.In Latin cultures caderas are the stomach, waist, and thighs. Its all that makes a real woman. La caderas are the essence of a woman. Those who dont posses these caderas are seen as sick. Its unattractive to the eye. The different cultures that she exemplifies contradict each other. Valdes has large times in her child hood where she remembers the two cultures impacted the way she thought about herself. Being involved in her fathers culture, being voluptuous was a blessing. When Valdes was 12 she remembers the Chicanos reservation catcalls at her because she was so curators.She took those signs of beauty for granted and started to diet, taking to the American way of beauty. She also duologue about her and her friend going to dance and men lining up to dance with her and her turning them down because she said I often check out no, because I can. This leads me to infer that she felt beautiful and she knew she was collectable to her hips. If she didnt think so she wouldnt turn the men down. That culture made her appreciate herself and have positive outlooks about how she looked. In America she remembers being in a step aerobics class and women making negative statements about how she l ooks.She sometimes hear the woman in the strawman row whisper My God, would you look at those hips. Her attri stilles are looked down upon as if they are a bad thing in America. She has experienced two cultures and have a gotten a different response on her body. ego image is destructive but its what makes civilization significant. The world revolves around images that are acceptable and its the drive around the world. In the society we live in, civilization is based on appearance. Our world rotates on its axis of rotation because of it. Its deadly to walk outside without makeup on or above a certain weight.Americans have reality picture that are designed just for losing weight and to critique the appearance of our celebrities. Everyone is a target in America to bee objectified. There is no discrimination. In nerve school I was often picked on for being so skinny and I hated my body. When I got to high school I started to create weight not in my caderas but my butt. I started to love my body more because everyone else did. Girls would tell me how they would kill for my shape and I would tell them how I would love to have theirs. I wanted breast and hips like those girls but they wanted to be a stick like me, I couldnt understand.Those girls were envisioning themselves as being the females they see on the television and I was the closest thing to their dreams. Continuously taking my body for granted the undermentioned teenage girl was admiring my imperfections perfectly. I learn eventually to embrace my small-scale figure but looking at celebrities like Beyonce and other all-embracing figured women I get self conscious sometime. Its as if my body isnt good enough and I fall back into the depression of why my body cant look a certain way. It is a struggle in itself because your image is your introduction.
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