pocketmerlin
Member
Hey, I'm a new member on here. I actually joined because I wanted to gain perspective from other Christians for this particular question, and while I found threads that are similar, I didn't find any threads that addressed my thoughts specifically.
Essentially, I am dealing with how to view hair transplantation as a Christian. Is choosing to have one done giving into sinful vanity, or is it permissible?
I'm 21 now and have had a receding hair line since I was 17. It's not yet to the point where half of the top of my head is bald yet, but it's very clearly receding and my forehead is huge-looking.
So here's where I'm at. I can't really get around the fact that this has affected how attractive I am to women, and I am looking for someone to pursue with marriage in mind...and let's just say they're not exactly lining up to talk to me (that's an exaggerated image to downplay my current frustration...I don't literally expect women to line up to talk to me). My internal back-and-forth that's driving me crazy starts with the sorts of sentiments that are bandied about in Christendom..."if all they care about is what's on the outside, then they're not who you want to be with anyway"..."your wife will love you for your character, not your appearance" or "you should want to be appreciated for who you are spiritually, not physically" and all sorts of stuff like that. I could cling to that stuff and just say that women who aren't attracted to me simply because of my appearance are shallow...but the other side of this back-and-forth is, well, the fact that those sentiments feel patently naive and essentially dishonest about the true nature of attraction. Of COURSE appearance matters. I feel the weight of this when I'm considering my attraction for women. Both who they are as a person and what they look like play a part in how I feel toward them. So, in fact, if I were being honest, I would completely agree with a lot of the women who have showed no interest in me despite my advances. I wouldn't choose me either if I had other options!
So now I'm thinking about whether it's legitimate to try to do anything about it. How do I reconcile the fact that God clearly meant for us a husband and wife to revel in each others' attractiveness (see Song of Solomon) and wanting to be someone whom a woman would find attractive in that way, with the commands not to focus on the outer appearance and not be vain? I honestly don't know.
The part of me that wants to justify planning on getting a hair transplant sees it this way: hair loss is a disease and it's not something we were meant to have, so getting a hair transplant is essentially the same as any other medical action to correct something that's wrong. It's the same as getting braces to straighten teeth. It's not the same as getting plastic surgery simply because you don't like your face, because not liking your face isn't a disease.
But then, when I examine this closer, it seems like this thinking could end up justifying anything and everything. Because, maybe you could make the case that while one may not have a technical disease that causes them to dislike their facial appearance, the fact is that they have a very large nose or whatever and that would seem to be an effect of The Fall as well (just like hair loss), and then any sort of perceived plainness in appearance is worthy of plastic surgery. And just maybe that is indeed an end this whole thing could logically go to and still not be unbiblical...but it truthfully does seem excessive and vain. And so I don't know what to think.
What do you think? Are thems the breaks, kid? Just suck it up and deal with it until I receive my resurrected body? Or am I free to use the technology that's available?
Essentially, I am dealing with how to view hair transplantation as a Christian. Is choosing to have one done giving into sinful vanity, or is it permissible?
I'm 21 now and have had a receding hair line since I was 17. It's not yet to the point where half of the top of my head is bald yet, but it's very clearly receding and my forehead is huge-looking.
So here's where I'm at. I can't really get around the fact that this has affected how attractive I am to women, and I am looking for someone to pursue with marriage in mind...and let's just say they're not exactly lining up to talk to me (that's an exaggerated image to downplay my current frustration...I don't literally expect women to line up to talk to me). My internal back-and-forth that's driving me crazy starts with the sorts of sentiments that are bandied about in Christendom..."if all they care about is what's on the outside, then they're not who you want to be with anyway"..."your wife will love you for your character, not your appearance" or "you should want to be appreciated for who you are spiritually, not physically" and all sorts of stuff like that. I could cling to that stuff and just say that women who aren't attracted to me simply because of my appearance are shallow...but the other side of this back-and-forth is, well, the fact that those sentiments feel patently naive and essentially dishonest about the true nature of attraction. Of COURSE appearance matters. I feel the weight of this when I'm considering my attraction for women. Both who they are as a person and what they look like play a part in how I feel toward them. So, in fact, if I were being honest, I would completely agree with a lot of the women who have showed no interest in me despite my advances. I wouldn't choose me either if I had other options!
So now I'm thinking about whether it's legitimate to try to do anything about it. How do I reconcile the fact that God clearly meant for us a husband and wife to revel in each others' attractiveness (see Song of Solomon) and wanting to be someone whom a woman would find attractive in that way, with the commands not to focus on the outer appearance and not be vain? I honestly don't know.
The part of me that wants to justify planning on getting a hair transplant sees it this way: hair loss is a disease and it's not something we were meant to have, so getting a hair transplant is essentially the same as any other medical action to correct something that's wrong. It's the same as getting braces to straighten teeth. It's not the same as getting plastic surgery simply because you don't like your face, because not liking your face isn't a disease.
But then, when I examine this closer, it seems like this thinking could end up justifying anything and everything. Because, maybe you could make the case that while one may not have a technical disease that causes them to dislike their facial appearance, the fact is that they have a very large nose or whatever and that would seem to be an effect of The Fall as well (just like hair loss), and then any sort of perceived plainness in appearance is worthy of plastic surgery. And just maybe that is indeed an end this whole thing could logically go to and still not be unbiblical...but it truthfully does seem excessive and vain. And so I don't know what to think.
What do you think? Are thems the breaks, kid? Just suck it up and deal with it until I receive my resurrected body? Or am I free to use the technology that's available?
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