Jamie Lee Curtis y la rebelión contra la perfección

Jamie Lee Curtis and the rebellion against perfection

In a world where social media glorifies eternal youth and pinpoint perfection, Jamie Lee Curtis's voice stands out as a necessary echo. The actress, with decades of experience and an authenticity that transcends trends, has called cosmetic surgery and the obsession with retouching "a genocide of female authenticity."

Her words resonate because they come from someone who knows the industry inside and out: an ecosystem that rewards physical appearance over talent and punishes naturalness. Curtis denounces how many women feel they have no choice but to "fix themselves up" to remain visible, both on screen and in real life. It's a reflection that transcends Hollywood and resonates with any woman who has ever felt she doesn't fit the perfect mold.

The problem is that this obsession with perfection isn't just individual: it's collective and contagious. Digital culture amplifies it with filters that smooth skin to the point of erasing identity, and with algorithms that reward the most symmetrical faces and the thinnest bodies. The result is a generation that feels inadequate without retouching, even in their daily lives.

Curtis's stance is not a rejection of self-care, but a defense of the right to age, to change, and to show oneself without shame. In her words, there is an invitation to rebel against the invisible pressure to always be the best possible physical version of oneself, as if being a good human being were not enough.

Perhaps its most powerful message is this: real beauty isn't afraid to show its lines, its marks, and its story. And if an entire generation dares to follow that example, we will witness a silent revolution worth far more than any viral filter.

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