Plastic Surgery Denial Syndrome (GONE WRONG)




Carol "Your lips are not intended to be flotation gadgets for your face on the off chance that it overturns."

Have you seen Nicole Kidman recently? Delta Burke? Pamela Anderson? Kathie Lee Gifford? I have and it makes me truly dismal. These ladies were either delightful, or out and out really, preceding having an excess of systems to attempt and keep their looks. Joan Rivers is acclaimed for an excessive amount of plastic surgery, as was Michael Jackson. Nicole Kidman was an exceptionally delightful lady, who in all probability would have matured well, yet now... 

So what I ponder is: When these individuals look in the mirror now, what do they see? 

Do they look in the mirror and say, "Goodness, am I hot at this point. Don't I look youthful and awesome?" 

Then again do they see what we see? In the event that they see what we see, they would not leave the house. They would sue their plastic specialists, and they would instantly quit infusing Botox, Restalyne, Juvederm, and so on. They would hold up, in the shadows, until their appearances tackled some similarity of human, and after that reemerge looking perhaps more established, yet at the same time like themselves. 

Poor Priscilla Presley was infused with a fake filler that has demolished her face. In any event Priscilla has openly recounted to her story and conceded that she knows she looks loathsome, yet shouldn't something be said about every one of the other people who assume they look fantastic? 

I think there is some plastic surgery dissent disorder in play. I am a psychotherapist and work essentially with ladies managing weight and self-perception issues. What I have discovered is that with regards to weight, we can't see ourselves precisely. We can't see when we have put on weight and we can't see when we have lost it. It is the most unusual thing. The main time we can see, is the point at which we see ourselves out of the blue. Like in a store window as we cruise by, a photograph, a changing area mirror at edges, and so on... There is a weight foreswearing disorder in play without a doubt. 

My supposition is that it is the same thing with awful plastic surgery. You go into it with the end goal of looking better. Perhaps it is just an excessive amount to take, and to concede, that you experienced surgery, significant anesthesia, paid a considerable measure of cash and left it looking more awful. Possibly we can never truly see ourselves and if there is a center of self-hatred, any change is great. I don't have the foggiest idea, yet I ponder boisterously. What do you think? 

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