7 horrifying sacrifices in the name of the beauty of women of the past

We may lament that old values are fading into the past, we may condescendingly laugh at the naivety and ignorance of our ancestors, but when it comes to a woman’s desire to be beautiful (at any cost!), little changes over time:

1. Corsets





You know what men find especially boring? A healthy female body, that's what! Why do you think that in the 19th century the stronger sex hunted whales with such zeal? So that women can pull their bodies with corsets from the whale mustache and mutilate internal organs, of course.

2. Arsenic





In the 19th century, it was fashionable to eat arsenic to “give the face a blooming look, the eyes a shine, and the body an attractive roundness.” Arsenic, of course, was regulated by a whole set of rules – the moon must be arriving, the first reception – only one seed (until resistance develops), and if you start, you must continue to eat this filth for life – otherwise death.

True, there were side effects - arsenic accumulates in the thyroid gland and causes goiter. And sometimes death. But when it comes to beauty, who can it stop?

3. Tapeworms







In this case, women not only put their health in danger for the sake of a slender figure - they voluntarily planted in their body disgusting parasites.

The tapeworm eggs were taken in the form of pills, after which these creatures grew in the intestines, absorbing nutrients that were intended for humans. The host lost weight, parasites grew and became fat.

Some worms reached a length of 30 meters. True, if desired, then it was possible to get rid of the “guests”, but just imagine that from you, centimeter by centimeter, a long, flat, sticky and twisting worm is pulled out... Brr.

4. Foot bandaging





Many historians are inclined to believe that the roots of the fabulous Cinderella should be sought in China. In other cultures, it doesn’t seem like such a valuable quality, if a girl has a unique shoe size. But when it comes to China of the last millennium, everything falls into place.

This tradition seems to have originated sometime in the late 10th century. The idea was to tie the little girl’s feet as tightly as possible, so that they would eventually turn into “golden lotuses.” Evil, rotting lotuses with folds so deep that they could not be washed. (Men did not see this, because bare feet were not customary to show even the husband.)

The process of “mature lotus” was terribly painful, and ended in irreversible deformity of the legs and lameness. This is exactly what the Chinese wanted.

Insecure gait and feet of puppet size - for this and endured all the torment.

5. Radioactive cosmetics





The greatest advantage of the popular in the 1930s French cosmetics Flo-radia was considered to contain thorium chloride and radium bromide. Advertising cosmetics promised miracles: “Supplies cells with vitality, enhances blood circulation, makes the skin smooth, eliminates fat, prevents the expansion of pores, eliminates acne, acne, redness and pigmentation, protects, stops aging and smooths wrinkles, gives a fresh and blooming appearance.”

This cosmetics caused a stormy delight in women until their jaws began to fall off.

6. beladonna





The name of the plant “beladonna” translates as “beautiful woman”. Once her juice was buried in the eyes, why they began to “shine”, the pupils dilated. However, then for this beauty had to pay for the loss of vision.

7. Lead powder





The 1700s were very demanding on complexion. In those days, rarely anyone lived to adulthood without surviving diseases from which the face was covered with rashes or acne, which even after recovery remained ugly traces. The best way to hide defects was considered lead powder. It was an excellent remedy - inexpensive, well laid on the skin, making it smooth and silky. But then... a brain tumor, paralysis, almost all body systems begin to fail. The beauty had to be comforted by how beautiful she would be in the coffin.

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