The Age of Approximation.

There was a time when truth arrived unannounced; barefaced, unfiltered, occasionally inconvenient. It had pores, asymmetry and the audacity to age. Today, however, truth has undergone a quiet rebrand. It has been contoured, lifted, laminated, injected, and algorithmically refined into something far more agreeable; an aesthetic of approximation.

Welcome, darling, to the era of the Artificial Look.

It begins innocently enough. A little volume here, a little lift there. Hair that defies both gravity and genealogy, nails that could double as architectural extensions, and faces that hold the light not because of life lived, but because of glass-skin serums and ring lights positioned with military precision. The body, once a biography, is now a mood board; curated, constructed, and constantly updated.

We no longer arrive; we render.

And in this rendering, something fascinating has occurred; we have become the physical analogue of our own machines. Artificial Intelligence learns from data to produce something convincingly human. We, in turn, learn from curated images to produce something convincingly real. The feedback loop is exquisite, and the illusion is near perfect.

But perfection, as it turns out, is a rather fragile fiction.

Scroll long enough and the faces begin to blur into one another; a soft convergence of identical cheekbones, identical lips, identical expressions of effortless effort. Individuality, once the cornerstone of beauty, now feels almost… rebellious. To look unmistakably like oneself is, in some circles, the ultimate act of defiance.

So what, then, is our truth?
Is it the face before the filter, or the one that receives the applause? Is it the body that wakes up in the morning, or the one that exists forever in flattering angles and forgiving light? Is authenticity something we possess, or something we now strategically deploy?

Perhaps, the truth has not disappeared. Perhaps it has simply gone underground, retreating into the quiet spaces where the camera is off, where the mirror is unkind, where the self is encountered without witnesses. There, in the uncurated moments, truth still breathes. Untouched. Unbothered. Unmonetised.

And yet, one cannot entirely dismiss the allure of artifice. There is creativity here. Agency. Even a kind of authorship. To construct oneself is, in its own way, a declaration; I am not bound by what I was given. There is power in that, undeniable, intoxicating.

But power without reflection becomes parody.

And so we hover in this exquisite tension, between invention and inheritance, between simulation and self. We are, all of us, a little edited now. A little enhanced. A little… improved.

Or so we tell ourselves.

The real question is not whether we have become artificial. It is whether we still remember what it feels like to be unmistakably, imperfectly, gloriously real.

Because in a world where everything can be perfected, the last true luxury may well be authenticity, the kind that cannot be injected, downloaded, or designed.

The kind that simply is.