The Beauty of Imperfection

Moushumi Chatterjee smiling in two photographs — one from her film career and one recent
Moushmi Chatterjee in her heydey

Moushumi Chatterjee smiling in two photographs — one from her film career and one recent
Moushumi Chatterjee — then and now — whose natural smile remained unchanged through her career

These two pictures of Moushumi Chatterjee — one from her heyday and one from recent times — teach us an important lesson.

You may be aware that she had gajadanta — slightly prominent or misaligned canines. But as you can see in the pictures above, she was one heroine who did nothing about them throughout her acting career. Yet it made no difference to her popularity. She remained a darling of Bengali audiences and of filmgoers elsewhere as well.

There is a certain beauty in imperfection or incompleteness. Moushumi, as well as audiences everywhere, accepted her slightly misaligned canines. And by accepting things as they are, we are also accepting a kind of flawed beauty.

Normally there is a relentless pursuit of perfection. When we come across something flawed, natural or raw like this, we pause for a moment and open up space for acceptance. By finding beauty in the most unexpected places, we release ourselves from the tyranny of perfection.

On a philosophical note, even happiness, on closer inspection, has its wrinkles and rough edges.

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