Lipstick Burkha — [new]
Authenticity doesn’t require a costume. It requires courage.
Let’s retire the term. Let’s name the problem: fear, not fabric. lipstick burkha
Stop hiding behind lipstick. Stop borrowing the language of real suffering to romanticize your people-pleasing. Authenticity doesn’t require a costume
A burkha is not a metaphor for emotional restraint. For millions of women, it has been a tool of state-enforced invisibility, physical restriction, and religious policing — not a choice about how to “show up” at the office or in a relationship. Let’s name the problem: fear, not fabric
The term “Lipstick Burkha” has been floating around wellness and spiritual circles lately, often used to describe a polished, feminine, outwardly “soft” persona that masks a woman’s true hunger for power, anger, or ambition. You wear the perfect smile. The glossy lip. The gentle voice. Meanwhile, you bury your drive under a cloak of likability.
But here’s the hard truth: comparing that performance to a burkha is not profound. It’s offensive.
The “Lipstick Burkha” Is Not Empowerment — It’s Erasure