FWIW, I have a good friend who is a psychiatrist, and he mentioned to me that there is a correlation between attractiveness and behavioral issues, or mental issues. I don't recall if he specifically said "behavioral disorder" but it might have been something like that.
It's become a meme online about "hot" women being also crazy, but apparently there's some truth to it.
It's become a meme online about "hot" women being also crazy, but apparently there's some truth to it.
In my humble opinion, it's similar to the observation that small dogs have earned the reputation for being nippy, yappy and reactive, more so than big dogs. Maybe there's an innate, genetic disposition to feeling threatened, but my opinion is that it's a mostly a learned behavior. Small dogs are more nippy, yappy and reactive BECAUSE they tend to get away with the behavior. The owners might think, a bite, snarl or scratch from a little dog, well that's harmless, because the dog is so little and cute. Over time, the bad behavior is not corrected, and it becomes ingrained. Yet if a 100-pound dog snarled, bit or jumped onto a human, my bet is that they would be corrected immediately. A bite from a Doberman could get it put down, after all.
My opinion is that the "hot girl" typically doesn't have to try very hard to get attention. She gets attention, especially male attention, in spite of her petulance/meanness/rudeness/lying when she's lashing out. Yet if a "plain girl" acted that way, well she'd probably not have many friends at all, let alone suitors.
I am certainly not implying that all hot girls are "crazy" as the meme references, and I'm not implying that plain girls are always nice. Of course not. I just think that attractive women are generally given more behavioral leeway, because they are attractive. Think Mean Girls, who are idolized and popular, even though they're mean, spread nasty rumors and try to sabotage each other.
In a way, there's a genetic component to cuteness. Babies are basically "engineered" to be cute, to "compel" parents to care for them, even if babies are extremely needy and annoying, with their high-pitched crying, fussiness and frequent need for feedings and diaper changes. Babies can go from laughing to wailing in a split second, for no apparent reason, except general overwhelm. But, given their cuteness, they seem to control the people around them, compelling them to bend over backwards to meet their daily needs. It seems to me that some adults with BPD act in a similar fashion--they can start wailing in a split second for no apparent reason. Would people really tolerate that behavior in an adult, unless she was very attractive?


