Vox First Person: There’s a mathematical equation that proves I’m ugly. Here’s how I learned to ignore it. (2024)

I am ugly. There’s a mathematical equation to prove it. Or so I was told by the boy who sat behind me in my seventh-grade art class.

I’m going to stick my pencil through the back of your eye,he told me, laughing.It’s not like you could get much uglier. Even the teacher thinks so.

Vox First Person: There’s a mathematical equation that proves I’m ugly. Here’s how I learned to ignore it. (1)

This story is republished from Narrative.ly

Two years earlier, a different boy, whose name I can no longer remember, angrily asked me what was wrong with my face, after I beat him in a game of handball during recess.You have the weirdest set of eyes I’ve ever seen, he told me. When my teacher overheard this, he sent the boy to the principal’s office, where I would later go and give my side of the story, only to be told that I needed to not be so sensitive.

So when the boy in my art class continued poking me in the shoulder with the back of his pencil, I said nothing.

My art teacher that year was named Ms. J. She had a laugh so loud it echoed down the corridor. She wore beautiful, bright colors and taught us about artists and movements I had never heard of, and encouraged us to explore what art meant to us both collectively and as individuals.

Every week, Ms. J. required students to research an artist, a movement, or a piece of artwork that we were drawn to.Art isn’t about what you see,she would tell the class.It’s about what you feel. Show me what you feel.We had to research and write a one-page report explaining our topic and what it meant for our art. After school on Wednesdays she would hold studio time, when students could come in, work on new projects, and discuss the things we had learned in class. It was usually just me and a handful of other students I had become friends with.

One week, Ms. J. spent the first half of class discussing the role of beauty in art and how the very idea of beauty was subjective and dependent upon the interpretation of the audience. She taught us about the “golden ratio,” the mathematical equation that, in many ways, explained beauty. During the Renaissance period, artists would use an equation to create balance, symmetry, and beauty in their work. It was first explained more than 2,000 years ago in Euclid’sElements,and describes a sequence found frequently in nature. Based on Fibonacci’s sequence, the ratio combines symmetry and asymmetry in a way that is alluring and attractive to the eye. It was often applied to design, architecture, and nature, and the closer an object’s measurements were to that ratio, the more beautiful it was.

Vox First Person: There’s a mathematical equation that proves I’m ugly. Here’s how I learned to ignore it. (2)

Courtesy of Ariel Henley

One week, during a discussion on facial structure and drawing portraits, Ms. J. mentioned the golden ratio again. She told us that scientists had studied this equation, using the formula to quantify beauty.

“They analyze and they measure,” she told us. “They measure the hairline to the root of the nose, right between the eyelids. And from right between the eyelids to the base of the nose. And from the base of the nose to the bottom of the chin. If these numbers are equal, the individual is said to be more attractive.” She gestured as she spoke.

She told us that the ear should be the same length as the nose and the width of an eye should equal the space between the eyes. The ratio states that the length of a woman’s face divided by the width should have a ratio of 1:1.618 —in order to be considered beautiful, that is. She showed us work by Renaissance artists like Raphael and Botticelli.

I had never understood mathematical equations or ratios, and so the only thing I learned from her lesson was that these were the beauty standards a woman must meet if she wanted to be deemed worthy.

Ms. J. went further, telling us that additional research into the role of the golden ratio in determining female beauty reveals the translation of these calculations into an attractiveness ranking system. Individuals, mostly women, were rated on a scale of 1 to 10, based on the symmetry of their facial structure, with most individuals scoring between a 4 and a 6. Never had an individual been ranked a perfect 10, but still we lived in a society that found the need to measure and rate and rank and score.

I couldn’t help but think that if my appearance had been measured against the “golden ratio,” my formal rating wouldn’t have been higher than a 2.

The afternoon the boy in art class told me I was ugly, I told my mother that I wanted to die

I grew up having every flaw pointed out to me. I grew up believing I was wrong. It’s part of the territory that comes with being born with a facial disfigurement as a result of Crouzon syndrome — a rare disorder where the bones in the head do not grow. My eyes were too far apart, too crooked. My nose was too big. My jaw was too far back, my ears too low. There were regular appointments with doctors and surgeons trying to fix me and my twin sister, who was also born with Crouzon syndrome. Some of it was for medical purposes, other times for aesthetics.

I would sit in a room while doctors took pictures of my face from every angle. They would pinch and poke, circling my flaws. I would sit and let them pick apart my every flaw. And I wanted it, I did.

“Fix me,” I would beg.

They would do their best.

I’d have surgery, recover, and return for more pictures, more circling, and more detailing of every flaw. I was obsessed with symmetry, obsessed with bridging the gap between the person I was and the person I felt I should be.

The afternoon the boy in my seventh-grade art class told me I was ugly, I told my mother that I wanted to die. She brought me to a therapist the following day.

My therapist’s name was Beth. She was a middle-aged woman with red, curly hair that fell just past her shoulders. She had a round stomach and round glasses and almost always wore green. I would sit in Beth’s office, play Mancala, and tell her of my dreams to travel and write. We almost never spoke of my appearance.

One day in March, I arrived a few minutes late to my appointment. I entered Beth’s office where she sat facing the burnt orange plaid couch that looked straight out of a 1975 home furnishings catalog. We did not play Mancala. Instead, Beth looked directly at me and asked me if I was happy.

I did not know how to answer, and so I cried. She took a tissue from the small table next to her and gave it to me, listening as I sobbed. When the tears stopped, we sat in silence for several minutes.

“It’s like when you reread the same sentence over and over again without understanding what it means,” I said, finally. “That’s how I feel about my life, about what I look like.”

Vox First Person: There’s a mathematical equation that proves I’m ugly. Here’s how I learned to ignore it. (3)

Ariel Henley

She nodded as I spoke, looking at the tablet and pen sitting next to the tissues on the small table. She began to reach for it, but stopped. Instead she folded her hands and put them in her lap.

“I don’t understand it,” I continued. “These things, they just keep happening, and I know it has to mean something. It has to. I want my suffering to mean something. I want this pain to matter.”

She responded by giving me an assignment. She told me she wanted me to take a picture of my face every day for the next few weeks. She told me I had no connection with my physical self, because my appearance had undergone drastic changes so many times. This made sense to me, and I was surprised I had never made the connection.

“You don’t have to show these to anyone,”she told me. “Just take them for you.”

I was skeptical, but agreed.

I used to cry at the sight of a picture of myself. The tears would consume me, and I would spendthe following days refusing to leave the house. Seeing images of the person I was made me angry.

I was ugly.

“Their faces resembled work of Picasso”

When I was 9 years old, my twin sister and I were interviewed by the French edition ofMarie Claire. Two women came to our home. My mother put us in dresses and curled our hair, and we sat at the dining room table, which we were only allowed to do on special occasions. The women took pictures of us and asked us questions about our life. All I can remember of them is their accents and the way I felt confused when they kept implying that I was different.

In the center of the table sat a framed picture of my sister and me from when we were 5. We were in coordinating blue and white sweaters and holding strands of pearls. It was one of those forced mall photos that families like to hang in their homes to convince everyone else they are happy. I hated the picture. My eyes were bloodshot, and I looked weak. It was taken only months after I had surgery to expand my skull and advance the middle of my face. They broke my bones and shifted everything forward — necessary to rectify the premature fusion of my skull. They took bones from my hips and put them in my face. I had to learn how to walk again.

A few years later, I found theMarie Clairearticle buried beneath memories and a thick layer of dust in the attic. I sat on the plywood floorboards and began translating with the basic French I had learned in school. The words spoke of the way the bones in my head were fused prematurely and described the devices that the doctors invented in the garages of their homes as a last resort. I cried as I read the words, because it all felt so simple. The way they described it, I mean. They didn’t mention the weeks in the ICU or the fact that my mother spent her nights hunched over the edge of my hospital bed, too afraid to leave. The article didn’t mention that I was a person and not a disease, and stretched across the page, in big bold letters, I saw it:

Their faces resembled work of Picasso.

The words stamped the page right below a picture of my sister and me sitting at our kitchen table, laughing likenormalchildren. But we weren’t normal children, because normal children don’t get written about in French magazines. Normal children don’t get called ugly in French magazines.

I was embarrassed, or maybe I was more ashamed, and I found myself wondering how I ever could have thought someone could think I was special. I felt the weight of the world on my shoulders, and it felt as though the whole world was laughing at a joke I wasn’t in on. I slammed the magazine to the floor and spent the rest of the night in my room.

“Picasso was an artist. You are God’s artwork,” my mother would tell me.

“God should take up a new occupation,” I would say back.

I shredded the magazine that night.

How I realized that my body, my face, my scars tell a story —my story

A few weeks after I found the article in my attic, I told Ms. J. about it. About how my face was compared to a Picasso painting. I told her of the assignment Beth had given me and asked her if I could incorporate my project into my class assignments.

Ms. J. was supportive of my idea. She told me that appearance, much like design aesthetics, is arbitrary and exists only to assign meaning and purpose for those seeking it, but that ultimately our unique attributes are our signatures. They’re the stamps on the world that only we can leave. They’re the things that set us apart and make us beautiful.

Ms. J. walked over to her desk, which sat against the wall in the front left corner of the classroom. She began punching the keys on her computer, and I stood there, unsure whether I was to follow or not.

“Leonardo da Vinci explored beauty and symmetry through what he called the ‘divine proportion.’ He was a math guy,” she told me, “so he frequently incorporated mathematics into his work to ensure they were visually appealing.”

She turned her computer screen toward me, scrolling through an article with images of da Vinci’s“Profile of an Old Man,” “The Vitruvian Man,” and “Mona Lisa,”all famously beautiful pieces. She stood behind her desk, one hand on the computer mouse, looking up at me.

Vox First Person: There’s a mathematical equation that proves I’m ugly. Here’s how I learned to ignore it. (4)

Courtesy of Ariel Henley

“Do you know what da Vinci looked like?” She enlarged an image of an old man with long, white hair.

“I don’t know about you,”she quipped, “but he doesn’t look too pretty to me.”

I laughed.

“Being compared to Picasso may seem like an insult, but it’s an honor,” she told me.

“You are a masterpiece.”

Today, when I think of da Vinci, I do not think of the physical body of the man. I think of da Vinci as his talent, as his brilliance, as his legacy. His work is often said to have been a window into the extraordinary inner workings of his mind, and it reminds me that we are all more than our bodies, more than the ratio of our eyes to ears to nose to mouth.

I used to find the existence of algebraic and geometric formulas that explained beauty oddly comforting, because then at least there was an idea — something to work toward. But art isn’t necessarily about beauty. Art is supposed to make you feel something, and I began to realize my appearance was my art. My body, my face, my scars told a story —my story. But I guess that’s how life works sometime, only noticing beauty in retrospect and poetry in silence. Sometimes I catch my reflection in the mirror and I remember the words of my teacher —beauty is subjective — and suddenly the reflection I see doesn’t feel like such a stranger.

Ariel Henleyis a 25-year-old writer from Northern California. She has a BA in English and political science from the University of Vermont and will begin her journey as an MFA candidate in creative writing in fall 2016. She enjoys writing about her experience growing up with a facial disfigurement as a result of Crouzon syndrome, as well as issues related to equality, human connection, and understanding trauma through the lens of her own experiences.

This essay originally appeared onNarrative.ly.

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First Personis Vox's home for compelling, provocative narrative essays. Do you have a story to share? Read oursubmission guidelines, and pitch us atfirstperson@vox.com.

Vox First Person: There’s a mathematical equation that proves I’m ugly. Here’s how I learned to ignore it. (2024)

FAQs

What is the formula for attractiveness? ›

Referred to as the “Golden Ratio”, this is the exact ratio measurement thought to be needed to achieve symmetry and beauty. This applies to all things including nature, buildings, and the human body. A person is thought to be attractive if the length of their face divided by the width of their face equals 1.618.

What is the most beautiful math equation? ›

Euler's pioneering equation, the 'most beautiful equation in mathematics', links the five most important constants in the subject: 1, 0, π, e and i. Central to both mathematics and physics, it has also featured in a criminal court case, on a postage stamp, and appeared twice in The Simpsons.

Do people find us 20% more attractive? ›

A new study shows that 20% of people see you as more attractive than you do. When you look in the mirror, all you see is your appearance. When others look at you they see something different such as personality, kindness, intelligence, and sense of humor. All these factors make up a part of a person's overall beauty.

Why is the number 1.618 beautiful? ›

The Golden Ratio is 1: 1.618, and the full equation states that when a line is divided into two parts in a ratio of 1: 1.618, it creates the ideal proportion. The Golden Ratio has its roots in nature, from plants to snail shells, and has been used as a guide for architects and artists across the world for centuries.

What is the Euler's equation for God? ›

One of the most beautiful equations in mathematics is considered to be Euler's formula, also known as Euler's identity. This equation, e^(i*pi) + 1 = 0, is a compact representation of several important mathematical concepts and has far-reaching implications in many areas of mathematics and physics including AI.

What's the hardest math equation you know? ›

x3+y3+z3=k, with k being all the numbers from one to 100, is a Diophantine equation that's sometimes known as "summing of three cubes."

What is the most powerful equation ever recorded? ›

Einstein's E=mc² is the world's most famous equation.

What is the golden formula for beauty? ›

One concept that has repeatedly emerged as a consistent measure of beauty is the Golden Ratio, often referred to in the context of facial aesthetics as the Phi Ratio. This proportion, 1.618 to 1, is believed to provide the blueprint for what constitutes a harmoniously proportioned face.

What determines if you are attractive? ›

Grammer and colleagues have identified eight "pillars" of beauty: youthfulness, symmetry, averageness, sex-hormone markers, body odor, motion, skin complexion, and hair texture.

How do I know my attractiveness? ›

Nine ways to notice your attractiveness
  1. You get compliments about your smile. ...
  2. You don't get many compliments. ...
  3. You grab people's attention and make them stare. ...
  4. A person's behavior seems strange or over-attentive. ...
  5. People gravitate toward you. ...
  6. People send you messages or contact you out of the blue.
Apr 10, 2024

What are the 4 ways to look attractive? ›

How to Look Beautiful Inside and Out
  • Embrace a Healthy Lifestyle. Looking beautiful starts from within. ...
  • Skincare Routine Tailored to Your Skin Type. ...
  • Enhance Your Features with Makeup. ...
  • Dress to Impress. ...
  • Take Care of Your Hair. ...
  • Practice Good Posture. ...
  • Smile and Be Positive. ...
  • Nourishing Your Inner Beauty.
Jun 12, 2024

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