The radical act of remaining still and content in one's body as direct resistance to consumer cultures demanding constant aesthetic self-improvement.
In Dipa Ma's practice, stillness is not passivity but profound stability. Applied to beauty culture, stillness becomes revolutionary: the refusal to chase, modify, or anxiously monitor one's appearance. Most beauty economies depend on perpetual dissatisfaction and motion—shopping, procedures, routines, comparisons. Stillness withdraws attention and resources from this system. It's a form of non-cooperation that doesn't require aggressive rejection but simply settling into one's body as it is. Across cultures, this looks different: in consumerist societies, it means stepping out of the beauty-industrial complex; in traditional societies, it might mean resisting imposed roles. Stillness allows us to ask: What do I actually want for my body? What makes me feel alive and present? This concept honors that beauty standards vary culturally precisely because they're constructed, not natural. True contentment in the body transcends all of them.
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