posted by admin in Uncategorized
Cosmetic surgery
has for a long time now been considered as one of those things, you just sort of do at one point in your life. People are no longer hiding their cosmetic procedures, but are rather proudly flaunting them, telling the world, they are not embarrassed of them one bit. Even celebrities are coming out of their closets, pointing out parts of their bodies that either weren’t there before, or looked slightly different, before a surgen sculpted them with his knife. Yes ladies, and gentlemen, we are deep into the era in which plastic surgery is considered as a completely natural part of life.
Now, I have nothing against plastic surgery (heck, I even know exactly what I will get fixed when I will have enough money), but I do believe that it shouldn’t be taken as lightly as it sometimes is. We’ve made the whole thing so accessible, and so present in our everyday life, that we lost sight of one small, but yet very important detail. Plastic surgery is SURGERY. It’s going into a coma (doctor created coma, but a coma nonetheless), it’s somebody opening you up with a knife, and it’s a long, painful healing procedure. It’s an operation, that our bodies don’t need, but we put ourselves through due to vanity purposes. When I was almost about to go under the knife myself, with the dreams of a smaller, and more manageable rack when I wake up, it was this very notion, that made me decide to wait a little longer, and se if I can maybe find a way to love my breast. I wish I could say I have, but that would be a lie, and now, two years later, I’m considering that operation once again.
It is hard, if you feel you can’t be confident because a part of your body looks wrong to you, and I believe that if there is no other way to make a peson feel comfortable in their skin, plastic surgery is a completely valid option. I’m only advocating that the decision to go under the knife shouldn’t be taken lightly. It is SURGERY after all, and I think you’re ready for it only if you can stomach all of what will be going on to your body, while you’ll be out cold on the operation table. If not, I suggest you give yourself a couple of years, and reconsider. Maybe you can learn to love yourself just the way you are today.