Appearance are deceptive

Deception is defined as an untrue falsehood, or is the act of lying to or tricking someone. An
example of deception is when you tell someone you are 30 when really you are 40.
Deceptive appearance People, often are able to put illusions into someone's head, which
can manipulate how they think and this affects the person's judgment on what is reality. ... In
the play, these illusions prevent the characters from seeing the reality of their situations and
help bring them to disaster.
One of the contributing factors to the stigma of mental illness is that it’s often not readily
visible. 

Whether we’ll admit it or not, we are a society that likes to see it to believe it. When
was the last time you heard “but she doesn’t LOOK sick”? Or the converse “she looks SO
depressed”. And that’s not just for mental illness – how often have we weighed in on whether
a co-worker was really ill enough to call in sick, or shouldn’t have come to work because
they were too sick. Just the other day a friend commented that someone ‘doesn’t look like
she has cancer’. Really???!!! Why is that we become self-appointed diagnosticians at the
drop of a hat? Who does that serve? Not the person who may or may not be ill; it serves our
egos

1.Looks are deceptive every ‘ugly’ person is a ‘bad’ person (or is guilty of whatever it is that
they are accused of).
2.Being always transcends appearance---that which only seems to be. Once you begin to
know the being behind the very pretty or very ugly face, as determined by your bias, the
surface appearances fade away until they simply no longer matter.
Appearance are deceptive cause it can lie and fake But behaviour and way of his/her
kindness does not

Comments

Post a Comment