It was a simple and innocent question, but I didn’t know how to answer it.
“Was she hot?”
I had met a woman earlier in the week who had impressed me and I told someone about her. This was the man’s instinctive question about the woman. He didn’t intend any disrespect. He apparently thought it was the obvious question about a woman who had impressed another man.
He didn’t ask whether she was brilliant. He didn’t ask whether she was funny. Or insightful or interesting or creative or loving. Or a dozen other things that seemed more obvious to me to ask. He was asking about how she presented herself sexually — because that’s what our popular culture has taught most people to value.
I didn’t know how to answer his question, because the things I found impressive about the woman didn’t start with superficial sexuality. Yes, she was very attractive, so she could have presented herself as a “hot girl” if she had wanted, but that was the wrong frame for this discussion.
I love physical beauty in women. And I appreciate sexuality in women. But all of the other things I appreciate about women are lenses which modify whether a women is attractive to me. Unfortunately, something in our culture now teaches men to see women as “hot” or “not,” irrespective of those other factors. And it leads more and more women to present themselves as mindless “hot girls” in order to gain approval and desire from men who have bought into that frame of judgment.
This mindset is dangerous and wrong — for both men and woman.

If we always beat ourselves up, how will we ever heal and grow?
Santa Claus at a loss when Rosie comes to tell him her troubles
We often act like madmen who’re eagerly bent on self-destruction
Ordinary miracles fill our lives, while we still demand wonders
Love & Hope — Episode 5:
Unexpected phone call can turn world from happy to miserable
Will you sell more days of your life
Good riddance, UAB football: Taxes shouldn’t subsidize college sports