Question:

..........PLASTIC SURGERY?

Hi, if you can have any plastic surgery what will you like to change about yourself .... answer frankly.this is a hypothetical question, so no anti-plastic surgery critics.i just want to know what is the most common thing people hate about themselves and why.

Answer:

I have heavy eyelids. It's hard to explain exactly how they change my eyes. You know on most pictures in a magazine, where a woman is wearing makeup and you can see the actual eye lid? I miss out on that because I basically just have a fold. It almost gives my eyes a more asian appearance. Sorry to be so unclear on that--but that's something I'd like to change. I think it's called an eyelid lift. The other thing that's bothered me is the asymmetry between my two breasts. Every woman with natural breasts has an asymmetry in that one is slightly larger than the other. When I finally filled out in my twenties, one side is just a bit more noticeable than the other--tiny bit more so than most women have difference-wise. Now that I'm pregnant, I'm hoping that they will even out a little more, but if I had the money laying around and the time, I would probably get them evened out after I was done having kids and breastfeeding.
At 22 years old, I had a tummy tuck after giving birth with an additional 70 lbs. to lose! My 5' frame went from 100 to 170 lbs., then back down to 100 lbs. within that year. Everyone thought I was crazy to resort to plastic surgery at 22 years old. But even after losing the weight, I still had the roll of extra skin around my belly that I didn't have before getting pregnant. So today, at 40 years old, I still have a flat tummy with no stretch marks whatsoever (oh yeah - when they pull and tuck to tighten the belly, they cut off the extra which is usually the part that contains the stretch marks!) Plastic surgery is not changing yourself, but improving upon what you already have!
I did have what could be classified as plastic surgery to correct a drooping eyelid. It was covered by the insurance because of it’s severity. I had a condition known as Ptosis of my right eyelid. Now, I could still see just fine, and by looking I couldn’t tell any problems. So I suppose the severity was more than expected. I did it for cosmetic reasons, however. I saw myself in the mirror and felt that, were I someone other than me looking at myself, I’d think I was some stupid redneck or something. So I corrected it. It took almost half a year for it to get back to normal. The first few days were pretty irritating and I kept tearing and couldn’t wash my face. 3 days later the bandage was removed and I had to sleep with an ’eye shield’ which is pretty much a big, thick plastic lense with holes for air in it that I had to tape over my eye. Sometimes it would come off; once I found it got on my arm! I couldn’t put eyeshadow on for a long time because if I did, the lid would swell a little. When things DID get back to normal, I wore all types of makeup and my self-esteem rose a lot! I don’t think too bad about myself anymore, and I look at myself in bathroom mirrors to see if I look presentable - which I hadn’t done before. BUT...if you wanted something that hadn't happened yet (or ever), I'd say, all the normal female surgeries would apply since I'm realin' in the years...
Many people have the mistaken belief that plastic surgery got its name because it involves the use of some sort of plastic or other manmade material, when in fact, the term plastic surgery comes from the Greek word plastikos, which means to mold or to shape. By the way, the first published use of that word was by German surgeon Karl Ferdinand von Graefe (1787–1840), one of the pioneers of plastic surgery.
I have a rather long nose and when I smile it looks awkward. Hence I have decided to undergo Rhinoplasty. I am hoping that the surgery will set this deformity right and enhance my looks.

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