This essay is a companion to Episode 7 of the Showroom Theory podcast, a conversation with LA-based bridal stylist Alysia Cole about visibility, authorship, and refusing the makeover machine. The ideas here expand on that conversation and push it further - into culture, commerce, and what the next era of bridal could become. Bridal culture doesn’t just sell dresses. It sells the idea that a woman must optimize herself before she is worthy of being seen. This essay unpacks the psychological, cultural, and economic cost of that lie and imagines what a more humane future of bridal could look like. There’s a lie at the center of modern bridal culture that no one names directly, but nearly everyone feels. It’s the belief that a woman must become someone else in order to deserve being seen. To deserve feeling beautiful. Not simply styled.Not simply celebrated.But improved, optimized, corrected, and refined until she’s finally worthy of her own visibility. As is the way with most untruths, this lie doesn’t announce itself loudly. Instead, it disguises itself as care. As preparation. As responsibility. As “wanting the best for yourself.” Wanting to show up as the “best version of yourself” for your partner. Somewhere along the way, the wedding industry stopped helping women celebrate who they are and started teaching them who they’re supposed to become. But beneath the language of glow-ups, routines, and transformations is a moral architecture that teaches women something far more insidious: You are not yet ready. The Economy of “Not Yet” At the heart of it, the wedding industry no longer revolves around choosing a dress. It revolves around managing a body, a face, a self. Entire economies have been constructed around the period between engagement and wedding day: weight loss programs, injectables, whitening treatments, skincare regimens, hormone resets, aesthetic procedures, detoxes, bootcamps, anti-bloat protocols, anti-aging rituals. Each one framed as optional but each felt as required. Make no mistake - this isn’t neutral commerce. This is an economy built on withholding permission. You’re allowed to be radiant, but not yet. You’re allowed to feel confident, after the work. You’re allowed to be seen, once you fix this. Fix you. We call it preparation. But what it actually produces is delay. Delayed joy, delayed belonging, delayed self-acceptance. The message becomes internalized long before the wedding arrives: there’s a version of you that deserves celebration, and the version standing here now is not her. When Care Becomes Control Of course, there’s nothing inherently wrong with wanting to feel beautiful, especially on your wedding day. And there’s nothing shameful about grooming, styling, enhancing, or experimenting. The danger begins when care mutates into control. Care says: you deserve gentleness in this season.But control says: you’re not allowed to arrive as you are. The bridal system increasingly mistakes the second for the first. It confuses discipline with devotion, optimization with self-respect, and perfection with meaning. A woman’s love, her commitment, her ritual, her future, her body - all become potential sites of management. Not so she may feel held, but so she may feel acceptable. The Moralization of the Bride What makes this lie so powerful is that it’s not merely aesthetic. It’s moral. The bride is praised not just for how she looks, but for how well she mastered herself (her consumption, her movement, her investment) in order to look that way. The “good bride” is organized, restrained, composed, and improved. The “good bride” disciplines her body and her emotions. The “good bride” treats her wedding as proof of maturity, worth, and personal growth. And from that vantage point, we’re no longer witnessing women mark a life transition, we’re watching them audit themselves. Essentially, bridal culture has turned selfhood into a performance of readiness. The Stylist Who Refuses the Makeover Script I recently spent an hour in conversation with Alysia Cole, an LA-based bridal stylist whose entire practice quietly defies the makeover narrative. Her clients don’t come to her for style correction, they come for permission. Not permission to look a certain way, not on her watch, but permission to stop performing readiness. To step fully into themselves, their styles, and their identities - just as they are now, without first earning visibility. She describes her most important role not as shaping bodies, but as witnessing self-trust: standing beside brides and grooms while they choose what already feels true, even when it contradicts the scripts they’ve absorbed from tradition, family, algorithms, or the industry itself. In a system that profits from perpetual “almost,” her work operates on a radically different economy: arrival. The Cost of Being the ‘Plus-Size Voice’ There’s an additional burden Alysia carries that rarely gets named. Because she works visibly, and because her work refuses the industry’s default body narrative, she’s often flattened into a role: the voice of the curve bride. It’s a category that pretends to be honorific while functioning as containment. It reduces a multidimensional human - a stylist, artist, business owner, cultural worker, mother, theorist of joy and permission - into a single representational function. And more dangerously, it allows the industry to outsource its conscience. Instead of dismantling the makeover logic at scale, the system points to one person and says: See? We’re addressing it. But this isn’t true representation. It’s guilt delegation. It also quietly demands a kind of forced optimism. The “inclusive voice” is expected to remain palatable, grateful, positive, and endlessly hopeful. But what the industry needs is not positivity. It’s neutrality. Neutrality that says:this body is not a statement.this client is not a movement.this existence does not require justification. This framing is not hypothetical. Alysia’s most visible media features often position her as a spokesperson for size inclusivity rather than as a full-spectrum stylist and cultural worker. Her voice is routinely activated when the industry wants to discuss bodies, but far less often when it wants to discuss taste, authorship, narrative, ritual, or the deeper psychological structures of bridal identity. This is how othering operates in contemporary bridal culture: through selective amplification. A person is welcomed into the conversation only along the axis that feels safe, legible, and containable. Everything else about their work becomes secondary… even invisible. Until bridal culture relearns neutrality, and until bodies are no longer assigned symbolic labor, inclusion will remain a performance rather than a reality. The Psychological Cost of Conditional Visibility While there’s certainly an argument for the second look as vehicle for expanded self authorship, the rise of second looks might not simply be about fashion. If we truly sit with transformation culture and bridal expectations, the second look could be seen as multiplicity under pressure. It points to women attempting to escape the narrowness of a single assigned self. One dress becomes a verdict.So they create another.And another. All the while trying to outrun the idea that one version of them must represent the whole. At the same time, algorithmic culture intensifies the comparison loop. Every body is measured. Every wedding is ranked. Every bride is evaluated against thousands of curated ideals. And in 2025, I think it’s safe to assume that some of those ideals are wholly unattainable - that is to say, completely fabricated by AI. The result isn’t inspiration, it’s surveillance. And when surveillance becomes internalized, a woman begins policing herself long before anyone else does. What the Alternative Already Looks Like What Alysia is building isn’t a niche philosophy. And I’m hopeful that it’s a preview of what’s to come. Her clients aren’t searching for the best version of themselves. They’re searching for the most honest one. And, as Alysia relayed to me between shared tears about raising girls who will one day inhereit our beauty hangups, the relief is immediate. When the requirement to improve dissolves, something else becomes possible for women: presence, risk, play, authorship, joy. The kind of joy you feel when you talk to Alysia. Full. Embodied. Contagious. This is not rebellion for its own sake. It’s cultural correction covertly hidden inside the seams of wedding gowns. The Collapse of the Makeover Narrative For some, the lie’s no longer holding. You can see it in the aesthetics emerging in direct contradiction of industry standards: the unruly, the irreverent, the queer, the uncorrected, the ceremonial, the strange, the intimate, the handmade, the unfixed. Designers abandoning polish for meaning.Brides rejecting refinement for authorship.Communities building rituals instead of checklists. A new ethic is forming beneath the noise. It doesn’t ask: “How do I become better?” It asks: “How do I become more honest?” Presence Over Perfection Alysia tells me that what women are actually seeking in this season - in the transition from single human to married human - is not transformation. They’re really just seeking permission. Permission to feel at home in their bodies.Permission to celebrate without apology.Permission to be seen without earning it first. After all, control promises certainty but presence offers something rarer: belonging. And belonging is what gives a wedding its meaning. Not the perfection of the dress.Not the optimization of the body.Not the mastery of the plan. But the quiet, radical act of showing up intact. The Future of Bridal The most subversive bridal choice in the coming years will not be a silhouette, a trend, or a new approach to dressing. It’l