Here is my 1st draft for my magazine article
Author:
Heading: The Beauty of a Woman
Subheading: Be a Chilvarous Lady
Tone: formal tone to show proffesionalities
Topic: Beauty and empowerment, the power of feminity and beauty.
the article:
Audrey Hepburn, the late actress and humanitarian had this to say when asked about her "beauty tips". For attractive lips, speak with word of kindness, for a lovely eyes, seek out good in people, for a slim figure, share your food with the hungry, for a beautiful hair, let a child run his or her fingers through it once a day, for poise, walk with the knowledge you'll never walk alone. People, even more than things, have to be restored, renewed, revived, reclaimed and redeemed...Never throw out anybody.
Feminity, as timeless as it is, is such a rare things to find nowadays, here, but what about the internal, you say? internal beauty is just as important as the outer. And i believe that the key to feeling genuinely beautiful is letting your beauty inside reflect on the outside. So how does it give us power? Is it true that women who realise the beauty that they posses go so much further in life. I say this because being in touch with your beauty builds self-esteem, and self-esteem becomes widely the basis for your life choices. Sure, you can esteem yourself on the basis of other things such as achievements, but it is simply foolish to deny that the fact that you posses beauty and it is wasteful to ignore it.
So lets first talk about outer beauty. Outer beauty refers to the physical, one that we can tangibly identify, This all starts with keeping yourself healthy, which is attainable by having good habits. Beauty in this aspect is very fun to play with, as you can dress up in different ways, try new hairstyles, wear accessories, put on the different perfumes, the list could go on. Delving deeper into inner beauty, Once says, be a chivalrous lady.
So what does it mean to be a chivalrous lady in the present day? And is there any need to be? Surely, Chivalrous behaviour is simply, no longer relevant. Despite long conversations with my own contemporaries, i'd argue otherwise.
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