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"My husband is much more valuable than me - people ask if it doesn't bother me" - Voila! Sheee

2023-01-25T06:15:04.341Z


As part of a new online trend in which women are proud of their husbands who look better than them, the author published a video in which she stands next to her handsome husband, calling herself "average looking". watch


Love is not blind for this couple, at least after this video was posted on TikTok.

Author Hazel McBride claims that she does "look average" but she feels "so safe" next to her handsome husband - and all this happens in a viral TikTok video.

The 29-year-old posted a picture with the Dutch man, writing: "When will we see more insanely hot men with average looking women?"



The five-second clip shows McBride looking lovingly at her man, wrapped in coats in the cold weather.

Commenters loved the couple's energy and one commenter wrote: "I don't see an average-looking woman, I see two stunning people."

A woman and her more handsome husband (photo: screenshot, Tiktok)

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Another commenter added: "I wonder - why are you getting down on yourself like this?".

However, one person asked Hazel if the fact that her husband is so good looking makes her uncomfortable, and she said no, adding: "I'm so confident in our relationship and myself."

To add more fuel to the fire, one user chimed in to point out that her husband apparently "prefers inner beauty over outer beauty."



Hazel did not take it quietly and responded sarcastically that maybe he is willing to compromise on appearance because "his personality is average and mine is amazing?".

More people came to her defense in the comments section.

"Why is it that when a man calls himself average it is considered modest or amusing, but when women do it, it is considered "fishing" for compliments???"

asked one.

"I don't understand why people in the comments are so offended by her name" wondered another person.



The video is part of a TikTok trend where seemingly plain-looking women post videos and photos to declare how proud they are of their men,

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Canadian influencer Alicia McCarwell participated in the trend last year as well and received critical responses, some claiming that her husband Scott should be with someone thinner than her.

In response, she posted a TikTok video of her and her muscular husband wearing only towels.



"The world looks at us and immediately appreciates Scott more than me," McCarwell explained.

"They say things like 'Oh, she must not have been fat when they met' or 'Oh, she must be very rich. Or they try to explain his side of the equation by saying that he must be gay, or he has a thing for fat women.'



And she continues: "We were led to believe that someone as physically fit as Scott could never be in love or attracted to a fat woman," she said.

"And that's only because the world has taught us that our worth is measured by our bodies."

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Tags

  • women

  • Body image

  • shemanophobia

Source: walla

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