The Asian Age

Not so loud and clear

Internet trends make waves, but are they successful in spreading the required awareness? We examine...

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT

Recently, nail artist Asa Bree graced the Internet with a gift. With realistic depiction of the vagina as nail art, she aims at promoting art and self-acceptance. According to her, this not only promotes nail designing as a kind of art but also allows women to accept their body as their own, promotes self-love and teaches oneself to love and accept another person for who they really are with such an artistic depiction of the female vagina.

This isn’t the first trend to have taken the Internet by storm like this. Previously, social media was inundated by videos of the ‘Ice Bucket Challenge’ too. But what’s worth wondering is do these awareness trends really spread the awareness they are intended to.

Life coach Khyati Birla doesn’t entirely believe so. According to her, creating awareness around such issues is generally a structured methodolog­y. “I don’t see how this trend can spread the serious awareness that these issues deserve,” she says, adding that trends like these are often frivolous and irresponsi­ble. “Imagine a relative flaunting such nails in your home with your kids around. Some trends are just not right for a mixed crowd. I personally believe we can teach our children in a better way. And even try to create far more awareness in an audience about sexual issues without using such detailed graphics.”

Kinjal Pandya, consulting psychologi­st, thinks that the nail art trend is extremely loud and, for her, best avoided. “It is all right to want to talk about vaginas and female body parts as a part of creating awareness, but I have my doubts about this. As loud trends like these rarely ever attain what they aspire to attain,” she says.

Kinjal also adds that creating awareness aside, these are also personal ideologies that needn’t be paraded around in such an open manner. “To accept one’s body for what it is, one doesn’t need to have vaginas on their nails. They can be proud of themselves just strongly believing in their idea,” she points out.

Khyati agrees with Kinjal that this is a loud trend, and thinks that being subtle is more advantageo­us than in-yourface loud. “A metaphor works far more strongly, especially for issues concerning private body parts, than an accurate graphical representa­tion to convey the point,” she says. “Look at sanitary napkin advertisem­ents. Would you actually want to see a bloody sanitary napkin?” she questions as a matter of fact.

Concluding, Kinjal adds that feminism and body acceptance are important issues faced by women in today’s age, considerin­g how there are trolls present in both real and the virtual world. But trends along these lines do more damage than imagined.

A metaphor works far more strongly, especially for issues concerning private body parts, than an accurate graphical representa­tion to convey the point KHYATI BIRLA LIFE COACH

 ?? TOPKNOTNAI­LS/INSTAGRAM PORN_NAILS/INSTAGRAM ?? “Accepting oneself for who you really are is all in the mind — you needn’t wear fancy nails to prove it to someone else that you love your body.”
TOPKNOTNAI­LS/INSTAGRAM PORN_NAILS/INSTAGRAM “Accepting oneself for who you really are is all in the mind — you needn’t wear fancy nails to prove it to someone else that you love your body.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India