My Big Nose (Sydney Salter)
When I was fourteen years old, my dad's new girlfriend took me to a plastic surgeon, thinking that a nose job would make me beautiful. The surgeon said that I was too young. The next one did too.
That was the moment that I found out that I had a big nose.
Obviously I spent my high school years feeling insecure about my nose. I hated getting my photo taken. I thought that my big nose was the reason that my biggest crush didn't like me back. I yearned for a nose job.
The nose job that I got when I turned eighteen added a bump to my nose.
But I didn't look much different overall. No one seemed to notice that my nose had changed. But I felt different inside--a hard-earned lesson. My nose had never been the problem, my lack of confidence was the issue.
I headed off to college with my big nose, its new bump, and the knowledge that confidence comes from within, not from superficial things like beauty.
All of my adult life I have spent a lot of time reading, thinking and writing about beauty standards and self worth. I wrote my first novel My Big Nose And Other Natural Disasters to explore the idea of giving a fictional character more agency than I possessed as an insecure teenager.
Now I'm enjoying being an older woman, and the freedom of being less objectified as a result. I understand more about the personal wounds and societal pressures that caused my dad's new girlfriend (now my stepmom) to try to help me meet societal beauty standards. I don't like what happened and I wish I'd left my big nose alone, but we live in a world that makes it really difficult to be a woman who doesn't adhere to the ever-changing, always fleeting notions of what it means to be beautiful.

If we'd only been able to read the minds of those around us, we'd have realized everyone in those days was running on the same emotional hamster wheel.
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