Have you ever been ready for a night out and thought your outfit was perfect, only to be taken aback when you later looked through the pictures?
 
Your smile seems weird, your hair appears wild, and you're wondering how your buddies manage to look so put together when you barely manage to look respectable. We've all been there, even the most self-assured of us, looking at a picture that doesn't reflect how we're feeling at the time. However, the truth is that you are not alone in this. It turns out that the reason so many of us shudder at our own photos has some scientific basis.


According to Dr. Matt Johnson, a professor of consumer psychology and neuroscience, the mere-exposure effect is to blame. We're accustomed to seeing our mirrored self, a flipped picture of ourselves that we see every day. However, pictures present us in a different, unfamiliar way, which makes us uneasy, according to The Independent.
 
We become accustomed to it since we see our reflection in the mirror far more frequently than we see pictures. According to Johnson, "You're likely to become accustomed to that specific image of yourself if you're looking at your reflection in the bathroom every morning before you leave the house."
 

More information is provided by psychotherapist Eloise Skinner, who states, "Normally, you see yourself in the same mirror with the same lighting, the same viewpoint, and the same angle. There may be a slight disconnection when a picture is taken since it may capture you at a point in time when you have never seen your face or body from that angle before.
 

Here's why looking at our own photos can feel so off:

· Unexpected angles: Photos capture us from unfamiliar perspectives that mirror reflections don't show.

· Lack of control: We're used to posing a certain way, but candid shots capture raw moments we didn't plan.

· High standards: We tend to overanalyze our own photos, zooming in on every perceived flaw.

· Comparison trap: We might end up comparing ourselves to perfectly curated, filtered photos online.

· The self-perception gap: Our mental image of ourselves doesn't always line up with how others see us.
 

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