Beat-up: (adj) a thing worn out by overuse; in a state of disrepair.
I found myself sharing a message that didn’t match my lifestyle.
I was moved to proclaim the idea “Life With Style” while I, myself, was somewhat impoverished.
It introduced the possibility of hypocrisy.
In an attempt to advertise my slogan, “Life With Style,” I had purchased magnetic signs, which I placed on the side of my old, beat-up car, towing a trailer which short months earlier had been rotting in a corn field.
It was what I could legitimately afford, and I did my best to bolster it with repair and frequent cleanings, but to the average onlooker who saw my vehicle and trailer pass by, the advertisement, “Life With Style,” was an enigma, if not a farce.
I became convicted that I was misrepresenting my own cause with my beat-up situation, bannered by such a positive, exuberant concept.
Because let’s be honest–we’re human.We can’t envision a life with style without a decent paint job. Life doesn’t have style unless we are visually passable.
So I learned that you can call people hypocritical, judgmental or mean-spirited for the conclusions they draw upon eyeballing your circumstance, or you can realize that since they are susceptible to hypocrisy, judgmentalism and a mean-spirited nature, it might be a good idea to give them as little evidence as possible … for a case against you.
Thank you for enjoying Words from Dic(tionary) — J.R. Practix
