No honey, we can't afford to send you to college, but doesn't mommy look pretty?
http://www.newsweek.com/id/132240?GT1=43002
http://www.newsweek.com/id/132240?GT1=43002
Deco*Boom said:Bring back the days when a size 14 was desirable!!
- DB
gluegungeisha said:A size 14 was quite small in the days where it was desirable.
$ally said:No honey, we can't afford to send you to college, but doesn't mommy look pretty?
http://www.newsweek.com/id/132240?GT1=43002
$ally said:Mommy should have spent the money on therapy to learn to like herself instead.
Despite the marketing nickname "mommy makeover," which can sound like a trip to a day spa, these are serious surgeries with potential complications that can require additional procedures—and disruption for kids. With breast augmentation, for example, the initial operation is not likely to be the last. Implants may last 10 or more years, but they do not last a lifetime, according to the FDA. About a quarter of all implant patients have to have another operation within five years due to problems like leaking, breast asymmetry and encapsulation of the implants.
Then there are the body image issues raised by cosmetic surgery—especially for daughters. Berger worries that kids will think their own body parts must need "fixing" too. The surgery on a nose, for example, may "convey to the child that the child's nose, which always seemed OK, might be perceived by Mommy or by somebody as unacceptable," she says.
The book doesn't go into any medical detail. "They should do more about what the surgery is," says my own eight-year-old daughter. "Kids," she says, will want to know more about "what they're going to do to you." But on the other hand, if they knew more about the procedures they might not want their mothers to go through with them. As my daughter points out, "a five-year-old is going to be horrified that their mom is getting water balloons put in her breasts."
+1 threecharactersdakotanorth said:Plastic surgery, when needed, is fine. Burn victims, birth defects, etc.
Plastic surgery, when it will help the outside convey the inside of the person (for example, he was fat, he lost weight, now he's thin but has excess skin) is good too.
When it's treated as an overhaul- ie, "I'm bored with my appearance" or "I just don't like my nose anymore" then it's a gray area that I don't agree with.
Plus, this book seems to GREATLY gloss over the medical ramifications of SURGERY.
The name has changed from Plastic Surgery so it doesn't sound like what it really is- physically manipulating skin, fat cells, muscle tissue, cartilage and bone. It's easier to sell to people when it doesn't sound so bloody and gruesome.
Everybody gets old- everyone develops wrinkles. Bodies sag, hair turns gray. It's a fact.
$ally said:No honey, we can't afford to send you to college, but doesn't mommy look pretty?
http://www.newsweek.com/id/132240?GT1=43002