Let’s not pretend we’re better than we are.
If someone walked into a room - confident, funny,
interesting - but with a visibly curved spine, a pronounced hump, or a body
that didn’t fit the neat, symmetrical template we’re used to… most people would
hesitate.
Not out loud. Never out loud. But internally? Yes. They would. And that’s the part no one wants to talk about.
We live in a culture that screams “love yourself” and
“beauty is within”, while quietly rewarding only one kind of body.
Straight backs. Even features. Effortless symmetry. Scroll any dating app and
you’ll see it - a parade of sameness, filtered and polished into something
almost inhuman.
Fake boobs. Fake lips. No wrinkles. Fake everything.
So where does that leave someone whose body tells a
different story?
Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
Attraction is not a democracy.
You don’t vote on it. You don’t reason your way into it.
It’s immediate, instinctive, and often brutally shallow. And physical
difference - whether it’s a limp, a scar, or a hunched back - interrupts that
instant recognition we’ve been trained to respond to.
But here’s the second truth, the one that matters more:
Attraction evolves.
Spend ten minutes with someone and you’ll notice their
posture.
Spend an hour and you’ll notice their mind.
Spend a week and you’ll forget the first thing entirely.
The problem isn’t that people with visible differences are
“less attractive.”
It’s that most people never stay long enough to get past the first glance.
Dating someone with a visible difference forces you to
confront something most people avoid:
How much of your attraction is real… and how much is
conditioning?
Because if your desire disappears the moment a body doesn’t
meet expectation, was it ever about connection? Or was it about comfort?
Let’s flip it.
Imagine being with someone who has had to build themselves
without relying on surface-level approval. Someone who learned early that
charm, intelligence, humor, and depth weren’t optional — they were survival.
That person walks into a relationship with substance most
people never develop.
Not despite their difference.
Because of it.
So would you date a hunchback?
Most people will say “of course” — because it sounds kind,
evolved, enlightened.
But the real answer shows up in action, not words. In who
you swipe past. In who you give five minutes of your time. In who you allow
yourself to see beyond the outline of their body.
This isn’t about pity.
It’s not about being “a good person.”
It’s about asking yourself a simple, slightly uncomfortable
question:
What are you actually attracted to — and who taught you
that?
Because once you start pulling at that thread, things
unravel quickly.
And what’s left is a much more honest version of you.
Not prettier.
But real.
Enough preaching. I’ll hop off my soap box now.