Still, my friend started to go on and on about all the things it could be until she made me crazy, so I called the dermatologist and had the damn thing removed. It turned out fine. The doctor looked at it and said, "It's a freckle with a bee bite, but since you're here, let's lob it off."
Anyway, as she was burning the freckle off my skin, she started to talk to me about other cosmetic procedures that she and her plastic surgeon partner do. She said, "You have a baby face, but sooner or later that baby face will show its age."
So, she sent me home with a few dozen brochures that showed me how I could look better. I am probably the most easily influenced person on the planet. I poured over those brochures lamenting the fact that I could not afford to do any of them right now. Not helping to assuage my "getting old" fears were my friends who offered a variety of comments such as "Wow, they can contour your chubby cheeks!" Or "What would you do if you didn't have that fat face?" Or "Why don't you just get your hair straightened instead with that Brazilian smoothing system?"
Well, at that point, I was not thinking my hair was an issue, but now I knew it was. My husband dismissed the doctor's comments with what I think was a sweet gesture. He said "I love that fat face. I married it, didn't I?" When my daughter called home that week, I told her about my freckle removal visit and the convo I had with my friends about the Brazilian straightening system, and she emphatically objected to me getting anything done. Finally, someone who appreciated my "assets".
"Dad and I count on your hair especially when we are in crowds. We can spot you a mile away!" Then she went on to explain how when I would chaperone school trips, the kids wanted to be with me not because they loved my chaperoning skills but because they knew they would never get lost. Apparently, the consensus was that my hair was like a beacon of light guiding the lost little lambs home.
Who knew? Anyway, I did laugh off the whole cosmetic surgery thing within a few days, but about two weeks later, I met with some other friends for a girls night out. I told them about my freckle experience, and they all easily admitted to having work done. One had her boobs done and her tummy tucked. I sort of guessed the boob one because she did appear to re-develop in her forties, and I never knew a woman to naturally do that. Yep, her drooping petals found life again, and her tummy tuck did take off about 10 years from her figure. Another friend had liposuction on her thighs, and the third, her eyelids lifted. Wow. I didn't even know you could get your lids lifted. Where do they get lifted to? They seemed like they were in the same spot as I remembered, but I can't be sure.
They were all so proud of the work, and to be honest, their doctors did a great job. The boob friend, whose new husband bought her "the girls" as a wedding gift, invited me to touch them, so I copped a feel to see what they were like, and I have to tell you I was impressed and a little jealous. I go to the freaking gym and swim my butt off at least three times a week, I lift weights, and I still have some problem areas. I even do that exercise to tone my chin and slim down my face - you know the one where you open your mouth really wide and then close it into a pucker. I do 10 reps of 10 per day. I usually do it while driving because it scares other drivers on the road. They think there is something wrong with me, and they leave me alone and let me go wherever I want.
Am I jealous that my friends could afford all this work or that they had the guts to do it? No. I mean I would still work out because I love to work out, but it did cross my mind that they are getting more sophisticated looking, while I may be looking like an aging Shirley Temple. Will there be a time when they start to look 20-something again, and I will be the really old friend they take pity on? If that happens, I may have to find older friends. That's a lot of effort.
I kicked myself for the feelings of self-pity that crept into my psyche, and I decided not to get caught up in this trap. I don't have anything against plastic surgery if it makes people feel good about themselves. But, it's not right for me -- now anyway. If I want to look perkier or flatter or thinner or whatever, I can still scour the Victoria's Secret catalog and find an accessory item that will do the trick. As long as there is a push up bra, and tummy flattening underwear, I guess I can make do. The hair - well, the world will have to deal.
Published by Donna Cavanagh
I like to make people laugh. My newest humor book "Reality: Fantasy's Evil Twin" is now available on Amazon. My other humor book "Life on the Off Ramp" and my poetry book "Poems for a Positive Day II" were... View profile
- Plastic Surgery and a Child's SmilePlastic surgery is used to treat the disfiguring and health threatening cleft lip and cleft palate. A group of plastic surgeons has formed a group to treat these conditions worldwide.
- Plastic Surgery: Some Facial Reconstructive SurgeriesThis article explains the difference between cosmetic and reconstructive plastic surgery and then looks at four different surgeries.
- Low Self Esteem and Plastic Surgery in Today's WorldPlastic Surgery is a modern phenomenon with major implications. Only recently has the fad become truly medical and gained the ability to change almost any part of the outer body.
- A Successful Sample Appeal Letter to Obtain Insurance Coverage for Plastic Surgery...Obesity surgery patients suffer with folds of loose skin after rapid weight loss over 100 pounds. It is usually necessary to repair this problem with plastic surgery which is excluded from most insurance coverage. See...
- Cosmetic Plastic Surgery in Today's SocietyCosmetic surgery may improve appearances, but it will never reach to its point where you are perfect completely.
- Ways to Avoid the Pitfalls of Plastic Surgery
- Dirve-Through Tummy Tucks?
- The Bachelor: the Bachelor Final Four Contestants - Secrets and Plastic Surgery
- Celebrity Plastic Surgery - Did They or Didn't They
- Zane's Top Ten Worst Celebrity Plastic Surgery
- Heidi Montag Tells People Magazine She's Addicted to Plastic Surgery
- The Ancient Origins of Plastic Surgery




25 Comments
Post a Commentthis is really funny! you write so well! i loved this
Thanks Kristi, I will keep in shape as best as I can, but we'll see down the road. :)
I'm with you, Donna! We're all going to get old no matter what and ought to "wear" our experience with pride. Is there anyone sexier than Isabella Rossellini or Annette Bening? I don't think they've had work done. And look what happened to poor Warren Beatty! No wonder Annette chose a different route! Your beautiful just as you are!
I've been looking for that "tummy flattening underwear", but I can never find any that goes up to my arm pits.
Love those facial exercises. Perhaps the tinted windows in my new car will keep passing motorists from staring at me if I do this! A great article about growing older gracefully. The boob job gives new meaning to "what is within a person".
Hurray for curly hair! (Even though mine is straightened for my avatar.)
I was laughing, as I was picturing in my mind, you driving down the street doing that face exercise. lol
I have a friend who got a face lift and when another friend saw her, she thought something frightening had happened to the first friend's face. BTW I'm older than you, you can be my fiend.
hahaha i love your writing! and your friends- it must be great to be around such consoling people! especially your husband "I love that fat face. I married it, didn't I?" i actually laughed out loud for that one!
good article! I, too, have that curly hair....hate it or love it, just long as it stays on my head and doesn't disappear...lol.