ANSWERS: 2
  • BIG BOOBS
  • Honestly, I don't think my culture's standards of physical feminine beauty are much different from the rest of the world. The one thing I can point out is that many Americans, especially women, think the preferable weight is slightly under the average healthiest weight, probably because so many of us are tubbos. We overestimate how thin we should be. If we're talking fashion instead of physical beauty, then my culture definitely has had some influence on what we think is the best way to accentuate our beauty. I'm a southern white girl, and there are fashion expectations tied to that. A lot of people would like to believe my state is just full of busty blonde cowgirls, in red boots and tight jeans. Or there's the wilting magnolia, that swooning southern belle in a puffy dress perspiring in the heat. So while more women here prefer some bright cowboy boots to PVC stripper pumps, both serve the same purpose, making your legs look good. Culture changes how we use and define beauty, but the desired goal is the same. My personal standard is just please don't look like a jackass. I'd rather see an ugly girl in a great outfit than a beauty wearing some abomination of fashion. Huge sweaters as dresses with footless tight weren't cool when I was in pre-school, and they aren't cool now. To me there's nothing more beautiful than a woman that knows how to play up her good features, downplay her bad ones, and can look great without looking like she spent a lot of time trying. I'm straight, so my opinion of female beauty is mostly non-sexual. Maybe guys and lesbians actually like sweater dresses.

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