阅读下面短文,从各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中选出最佳选项。
Imagine looking at yourself in the mirror; you do not look
like these stick -thin models seen across the media. Your legs are too big,
your bottom is too small, and you are too pale. You are too “ugly” You stare in
wonder and anger, “Why don't I look like them?" However, you don't need to
imagine this situation, because this is a bitter truth for millions of people.
In the media,one
can quickly see the ideal body, the ideal face, and the ideal person. The
advancement of unrealistic beauty on social media causes millions of people to
become dissatisfied with their looks.
Dissatisfaction with one's appearance can cause dangerous
behaviors like dieting, which result in eating disorders like Anorexia Nervosa
(神经性厌食症) and Bulimia Nervosa (神经性易饿病). Eating disorders have seen a
dramatic increase following the rise of social media, 119% increase according
to recent statistics. According to Brittany Tackett, a mental health professional,“30%
-50% of patients in eating disorder hospitals used social media as a means of
supporting their eating disorders.”
Not only can social media become a support-system for
unhealthy behaviors, but an article written by Rachel Simmons, a Time magazine
writer, suggests that people who spend more time online tend to link their
self-worth to their looks. A study conducted by Park Nicollet Melrose Center
also says that in the 1990's, fifty-percent of women wanted to lose weight. Now
it finds that eighty-percent of women want to lose weight. Although this higher
percentage cannot be directly related to the rise of social media, one can
argue that the unrealistic and damaging beauty expectations that social media
presents contribute to this number.
In addition, social media causes stress. A survey was
conducted in which people were asked whether or not they used social media, and
how stressed they felt they were. The study found that “social network users
are, in fact, 14 percent more likely than non-users to characterize their lives
as at least 'somewhat stressful.' Non-users are 28 percent more likely than
users to say their lives are 'not at all' stressful”. Additionally, stress may
have more connection to self-confidence than is believed.
So,there
you are again, standing in front of the mirror criticizing the parts of your
body which do not follow the idealistic images of models seen on social media.
Your legs are too big, your bottom is too small, and you are too pale. You are
too “ugly”. Although this time, you realize it is not you who are the problem.
The problem is the unhealthy and unrealistic standards that social media
encourages. So the next time you are looking through Instagram, opening WeChat,
or commenting on Twitter, ask yourself, “Is it worth it?”