Beauty Over Merit

In a bustling city, nestled between the towers of glass and steel, two men sat at a dimly lit corner café. The clatter of the world outside seemed distant as they sipped their coffees, lost in conversation. One, a man named Vincent, was grizzled and weary from years of work. The other, Samuel, was younger, his mind still vibrant with idealism.

Vincent, stirring his coffee absentmindedly, looked out at the passing crowd. His eyes caught the sight of a young woman, elegantly dressed, her every step turning heads. He sighed and shook his head.

“You see her?” Vincent said, nodding in her direction. “A girl like that could walk into any office, take any job. Doesn’t matter if she knows a thing about the work.”

Samuel raised an eyebrow. “And why do you think that is?”

Vincent chuckled. “Because men like us, men in charge, we let it happen. It’s not her fault, of course. It’s just the way the world works.”

Samuel leaned forward, curious. “You think it’s her beauty that gives her the job? And you think that’s a problem?”

“I think it’s not just beauty, Sam. It’s what men in power think beauty is worth. They’d rather see a pretty face than a competent man at the desk. Doesn’t matter if the girl’s never worked a day in her life, or if she knows anything about the job. They hire her because they want something nice to look at.”

Samuel frowned. “So you’re saying the problem isn’t the girl, but the men who put her there?”

“Exactly. It’s not her fault she’s beautiful. Beauty is a blessing, and a curse. She didn’t ask for this. She might be more competent than any man, but it doesn’t matter. The men in charge, they don’t see that. They don’t want to see it.”

Samuel stirred his drink thoughtfully. “But isn’t that the real issue, then? The men in charge, the ones who think like that—they’re the ones failing the whole system, not the woman who’s being objectified, not the guy who’s losing out on a job.”

Vincent nodded slowly. “You’ve got it. It’s the men. They don’t respect competence. They see beauty, and their brains stop working. They think it’s a prize, something they’ve earned, not realizing they’re making the workplace weaker by chasing distractions.”

“But don’t you think that’s changing?” Samuel asked, his tone hopeful. “Don’t you think there are men who value skill, knowledge, and the ability to get the job done, regardless of what someone looks like?”

Vincent smirked, shaking his head. “Maybe in some places. But look around, Sam. Look at the offices, the boardrooms, even this café. How many women do you think got where they are because of competence, and how many because someone wanted to look at them every day?”

Samuel paused, gazing at the young woman passing by the window. She was beautiful, no doubt. But he wondered—what would happen if she sat at the same table as them? What would happen if, instead of judging her by her appearance, they spoke to her, listened to her ideas? Would they find someone intelligent, insightful, and capable? Or would they dismiss her, as Vincent suggested, because they couldn’t see past her face?

“Maybe it’s time we started changing that,” Samuel said quietly.

Vincent raised his cup in a small toast. “Maybe. But change won’t come easy, not while men keep trading competence for beauty. It’s in our hands, Sam. Men like us have to decide—do we want a pretty picture on the wall or a worker who gets the job done?”

Samuel clinked his cup against Vincent’s. “I’d choose the worker any day.”

Vincent smiled, a glimmer of hope in his tired eyes. “Then maybe there’s hope after all.”

As the two men sat there, the young woman outside continued on her way, unaware of the conversation she had sparked. The city hummed on, indifferent to the struggle between beauty and competence playing out in the minds of men. But maybe, just maybe, that conversation would echo beyond the café walls, challenging the assumptions of those in power, reminding them that the worth of a worker is measured not in looks, but in what they bring to the table.

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