When you've been rejected by the sum total of womankind without so much as a first date, yeah, you get bitter. Especially when you're at the age when you were told people start buckling down and marrying for the sake of marriage and they're not.
I'm in a bad mood today. It's resting heavy on my mind right now, and this constant shoving of pretty girls in my face is just aggravating it worse. Just a reminder of what I'll never have.
Not to poke your mood, but I have had the good fortune to meet a lot of very attractive women in my time. Some are practically angels-wonderful people, others reside at the other end of the spectrum despite breathtaking beauty. Outward appearance is no guarantee of inner beauty, and being hung up on that just objectifies the person, it doesn't relate to who they are. If their appearance is coloring your perception of them, that does neither of you any favors.
Guys have that 0-10 rating scale for looks, but I have found that attractive people who are oblivious to their physicality tend to have good personalities, while those who are aware of their appearance can readily grow bitter or use that to their advantage, at times ruthlessly. I have seen, too, where being beautiful can work against a woman, and they can become jaded because of the never ending pack of hounds who just want to own them or get in their pants, ad who don't care who they are, deep down. I have found that girls (ladies) who'd rate a 5-7 often gain a couple points on personality, and that many who just don't have that good fortune in the DNA lottery to be attractive still have winning natures.
I can honestly say, that no matter how pretty, it's rare that I'd trade troubles with some fellow for the girl on his arm.
But if you have been fixated on looks, you may have passed many soulmates by. If you trust in God, know He has a plan for you, and that you may be looking in the wrong place. Bitterness won't help that quest, it will only make you less attractive.
And you do have one point, however. It is the pretty girls who get front page coverage, not the ones who are less attractive. It's all part of the 'attractive=good' stuff we get from a lifetime of being exposed to advertising and media, and I have found it just isn't always so. We have been programmed to have greatest sympathy for those who are pretty, ignoring that everyone has feelings and a right to live their lives.