Notes on eternity
Note: When Beauty Becomes a Narrative - The Ethics of Looking Effortless
Honesty around beauty has become strangely risky. Admitting to aesthetic intervention invites judgment; staying silent invites suspicion. For private individuals, privacy is a right. But when appearance is monetized, replacing professional care with narratives of “good habits” or “simple routines” crosses from privacy into deception.
This piece explores the ethical difference between aesthetic medicine and industries that profit from confusion and dependency, and questions why treatments that can genuinely improve how people feel are often demonized, while systems that quietly erode health are normalized. It also looks at how curated illusion reshapes standards of “naturalness,” shifts blame onto individuals, and erodes self-trust — especially among women.
At its core, it argues for proportionate honesty. There is nothing wrong with beauty or intervention. There is something wrong with selling fantasy as virtue, and with treating people as consumers of illusion rather than as intelligent adults.
Note: Self-Acceptance as a Product - Marketing, Energy, and the Ecology of the Human Being
At its core, this essay is about personal ecology — about restoring the conditions of rhythm, rest, nourishment, silence, and clear boundaries that allow energy to circulate and consciousness to deepen naturally. Rather than promoting self-improvement, ideology, or spirituality as a form of escape, it points back to the body as a living, sensing compass rooted in biological and energetic reality.
In this perspective, health and vitality are not moral achievements or aesthetic ideals, but natural consequences of coherent conditions. When the body is supported instead of overridden, energy reorganizes itself, perception sharpens, and presence returns without effort or force. Awareness emerges not through striving, but through the removal of chronic interference.
Self-acceptance, in this light, is neither indulgence nor denial. It is the ability to remain present with reality without self-violence, to listen to bodily signals without turning them into identity or shame, and to take responsibility for the internal and external conditions that continuously shape who we become.


