There was a major paradigm shift in facial aesthetics in the early 2000s. Okay, everyone wanted to become beautiful, but having surgery was also a very scary thing.
The stories of those who had surgery and whose mouth and face were crooked, those who were stretched like a sheet, those who were someone else but could not be recognized by their brother-in-law, those who were bald, and those who were blind were literally passed down from word to mouth. It was an example.
I wish there was a way to become younger and more beautiful without surgery.
The request was this: doctor, whatever needs to be done should be done immediately, it should be painless, there should be no swelling or bruises, and if there is, it should heal quickly, without scars, cuts, or knives, without narcosis, and it is very nice. Let it be so that no one will understand, and it shouldn't be too expensive to get the boy married.
This list of demands, which plastic surgeons said were impossible to meet, was considered "reasonable" for the cosmetic industry. In a short time, "miraculous" products and devices began to take their place in the market one by one. All of them were doctor-approved, some were completely FDA-approved. It was not a "requirement" for practitioners to be surgeons, surgeons were already very boring, they were always worried about cutting and reaping, and by the way, they did not understand the female soul very much.
In this environment, the inevitable rise of minimally invasive practices began. Botulinum toxin and synthetic filler applications have become a part of daily life. While the age of application was reduced to the graduation proms of high schools, in the conversations of friends, those who turned 30 and did not have anything done to their face started to be labeled as unkempt.
A complete aesthetic madness...
It is unknown whether the society was about to go crazy or whether the multi-billion dollar cosmetics industry drove society crazy, but once the arrow was out of the bow...
Billions of units of botulinum toxin were administered to millions of people in the last 20 years, tankers. full of synthetic fillers were applied.
In the last 10 years, Winterfell would spend the winter with the energy spent on energy-based applications such as radiofrequency, focused ultrasound and laser for facial aesthetics.
Only in the last 5 years, train tracks were put under people's skin, just for the sake of thread lift. If we lay the threads called spider web and French lace end to end, we can tie a ribbon around the world.
It was the era of minimally invasive procedures and facial rejuvenation surgeries were now out of fashion. It's hard to believe, but even some plastic surgeons seemed convinced of this.
Who would go under the knife for something that could be done with a needle? Technology and medicine had advanced so much that no one who "knew how to take care of themselves" would ever grow old as before... We were saying...
Really, where did these old faces suddenly come from?
These must have been the ones who definitely missed the minimally invasive aesthetics train.
Maybe they didn't miss it, but unfortunately what worked for everyone else didn't work for them, maybe the hands of the doctors who performed the procedure were not "magical" like their friend's doctor.
Maybe this was all too good to be true. Just like those anti-aging creams that were applied in handfuls and spent tons of money in the 80s and 90s... How did the movie stars, the beauty icons of 20-30 years ago, suddenly age? Or could they not afford anti-aging creams that taste like a regenerative care complex developed in Swiss laboratories?
I think you already know the answer.
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