The fingernail on a single hand that men choose to paint may vary, along with their color of choice. Some guys may even step it up a notch and add a little design on top the color, but the single meaning that it represents, regardless of design, remains the same.
This trend, for men only, began in Australia, but it has made its way to America by guys who also want to get in on this incredible idea.
The first man behind the movement to paint his nail and pass the idea along was Elliot Costello, who met a little girl name Thea while he was travelling with a group called Hagar International.
Elliot and the crew landed in Cambodia to see how they could make an impact in this underprivileged area. But in turn, the tiniest villager left the biggest impression on Elliot, who realized an issue that’s much bigger than Cambodia and effects children all over the world, especially here in America.
While getting to know little Thea, Elliot met her on her level and did things that she would think was fun.
For this girly-girl, that meant painting nails. He painted hers, and she painted one of his as they talked about her life and also her struggles.
He learned that she had been sexually abused.
“In that moment, as she put polish on one of my nails, I told her I would always leave that finger painted to remember her, which also meant I would remember her pain.”
Elliot came out of this endearing interaction invigorated with ideas to make a change among men for the sake of children’s safety from sexual abusers.
That’s when he came up with the Polished Man project, which encourages men to become a #PolishedMan by painting one fingernail for a week. That single nail on a hand of five nails, represents the 1 in 5 children who will tragically be a victim of sexual violence at some point in their lives.
Elliot found that men need to be the voice of change for this abuse on innocent children to end, since 96 percent of this type of violence on kids worldwide is perpetrated by males.
Ultimately, the hope is to not just to see a bright nail on a guy and remember for a few moments that there are hundreds of thousands of children being abused each day and suffering the consequences from that for a lifetime.
Rather, Elliot would like the fingernail to be a start of a conversation about this sad reality, that could lead to more ideas to end it and maybe even donations to “support educational programs and resources for child survivors of abuse,” APlus reported.