As far as today's society is concerned, in fact, it is almost common for such women in the workplace to do some plastic surgery, and public opinion is also understood and agreed. However, if the same thing happens to college students, they will get completely different reactions. This is actually understandable. First of all, college students are not financially independent, and spending their parents' money on high-end consumption such as plastic surgery will inevitably give the crowd a solid foundation; More importantly, college students are so obsessed with plastic surgery that they cater to the vulgar culture of "looking at faces" in the workplace.
College students are some fresh blood in the workplace, and I always hope that they can bring some changes to the workplace. But in fact, they succumbed to the ever-changing "hidden rules" in the workplace so early. Obviously, under the influence of general employment anxiety, the pragmatic orientation of college students has replaced people's expected skepticism and ideal feelings. The so-called "survival of the fittest", graduates are eager to increase all kinds of job chips is human nature. From this point of view, there is no difference in the core logic between today's college students' plastic surgery fever and the controversial "textual research fever" before.
In fact, this cosmetic behavior of college students is only a malpractice in the workplace, and it is only an absorption and feedback of the inherent preferences and rules of the game in the workplace. It is somewhat regrettable that college students do not naturally become the potential change force in the future workplace, but prematurely demand and shape themselves as "quasi-workplace people". Even so, we should admit that college students also have the right to pursue beauty and the "body control" of adults.