The Plastic Surgery Procedures Men Are Getting Most

I would not get plastic surgery. There is a limit to what it can do.

Parenthetically, I recently lost about 30 pounds and I look "better," which is not to say, "good."

There is a female in my circle of friends and acquaintances (50-year-pld daughter of a friend) who has had a significant amount of "work," and the effect is amazing. She was homely as a teen and young adult, and now she looks like a well-put-together, pretty teen, head to toe.
How can I contact this woman? :p
 
People do this to look young, when I ask women in bars to guess my age they usually say early 40’s, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
 
People do this to look young, when I ask women in bars to guess my age they usually say early 40’s, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.
You know that everyone always “guesses” lower than they actually think just to be nice, don’t you?

No one ever answers that question honestly
 
“Ten years ago, many male patients came in quietly, often framing it as something they were ‘doing for work,’ or after encouragement from a partner,” Dr. Claudia Kim, board-certified plastic surgeon and chief medical officer atNew Look New Life Cosmetic Surgery in New York City, told HuffPost. “Now, men come in well-informed, having done their own research, and they’re much more comfortable talking about aesthetics as part of overall self-care.”


Would YOU get plastic surgery?

If so, why?

I wouldn't get it, just because I don't think the money spent is the best use of money. Other people can make other decisions, of course.

I have no problem buying make up, decent clothes, getting my hair done, etc. Those are truly "cosmetic", easy "fixes". But I am not comfortable spending the $$$$ to go under the knife.

What I don't get are all these very young women--early 30s--getting botox and filler. It AGES them. I pointed out a woman to hubby who has had a lot of work done. He guessed her age at 45. She's 32.
 
You know that everyone always “guesses” lower than they actually think just to be nice, don’t you?

No one ever answers that question honestly
Unless there is an obvious pattern of being off 10-15 years.
 
What I don't get are all these very young women--early 30s--getting botox and filler. It AGES them. I pointed out a woman to hubby who has had a lot of work done. He guessed her age at 45. She's 32.

That's the danger of vanity: A beautiful woman ends up looking freakish, and could have just stayed natural and been a beauty.

There are a lot of young men with 'hair greed' who want to look like Elvis that are doing the same thing to their hairlines, the good doctors in that field do work that is undetectable, but some of these young guys go to quacks who have them going down the repair road.
 
Back
Top Bottom