Fillers don’t make you look younger. They make you look different.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.


My mother also gets them in that spot and you would never tell, looks great.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:https://www.instagram.com/reel/Coh7EOKJ3nY/?igshid=MDJmNzVkMjY=

Refreshing to finally hear that fillers don’t fully ever dissolve, and they don’t make you look younger they change the way you look not for the better.



If you go to someone who actually knows what they are doing filler can absolutely make you look younger without making you look different. The problem these days is the evolution of the 'injector' who is far better at social media than they are at actually injecting. Find a Cosmetic Derm or a facial plastic surgeon, skip the medspa injector whose entire training was a weekend course by the filler company.


Nope. I had filler done by a gifted plastic surgeon. I actually stopped getting it because HE started looking like all of those creepy looking celebs and I knew it was a matter of time before I did too.


If he was gifted, he would have known what looks natural, for both you and himself.

Frankly, I've never found that plastics are the people to go to for this stuff. Most general plastics training is below the neck, why people think that plastics are better than derms for anything to do with the face has always confused me.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.


I know you think so but others don’t.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.


It looks odd to others. Sorry, but it's true.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.


It looks odd to others. Sorry, but it's true.


My experience is that people notice bad procedures of all kinds and then conclude those procedures always look bad. You have no idea how many times you didn’t notice.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.


It looks odd to others. Sorry, but it's true.


My experience is that people notice bad procedures of all kinds and then conclude those procedures always look bad. You have no idea how many times you didn’t notice.


That's what I thought. Until I couldn't afford to get filler anymore and all the friends who told me that I looked great and they couldn't tell admitted that they were lying.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.


It looks odd to others. Sorry, but it's true.


My experience is that people notice bad procedures of all kinds and then conclude those procedures always look bad. You have no idea how many times you didn’t notice.


That's what I thought. Until I couldn't afford to get filler anymore and all the friends who told me that I looked great and they couldn't tell admitted that they were lying.


It can go either way. My friend had them in her chin and stopped during pregnancy (hadn't noticed). Damned! She did look like a marionette doll that could unhinge her jaw to talk on command. Looked much better when she was able to smooth out that area again.
Anonymous
Then don't get them, OP. Now go find some other reason to claw down other women.
Anonymous
Yes, like a blowfish.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.


It looks odd to others. Sorry, but it's true.


My experience is that people notice bad procedures of all kinds and then conclude those procedures always look bad. You have no idea how many times you didn’t notice.


That's what I thought. Until I couldn't afford to get filler anymore and all the friends who told me that I looked great and they couldn't tell admitted that they were lying.


It can go either way. My friend had them in her chin and stopped during pregnancy (hadn't noticed). Damned! She did look like a marionette doll that could unhinge her jaw to talk on command. Looked much better when she was able to smooth out that area again.


And where is the filler going to go when she doesn’t stop filling?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:we have to normalize reality. Sad but true. Everyone gets old and "melts" and then dies. It has to stop being shamed.


It isn’t shamed. Some women can’t handle not being sexually appealing anymore or getting male attention. Their self worth is tied to how attractive they feel men perceive them.


I get procedures for myself and myself only. It has nothing to do with men (I’m gay) but it also has nothing to do with women. I want to look a certain way in the mirror. A way that looks familiar to me.

Take your projection of your own issues and shove it.


So if you were the last person on the planet you would still be doing procedures “for yourself”? Also, accept aging. You have a moment in time stuck in your head of what you are. You are constantly changing. The image in your head of “you”that is “familiar” is a mirage of the past.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.


It looks odd to others. Sorry, but it's true.


My experience is that people notice bad procedures of all kinds and then conclude those procedures always look bad. You have no idea how many times you didn’t notice.


That's what I thought. Until I couldn't afford to get filler anymore and all the friends who told me that I looked great and they couldn't tell admitted that they were lying.


It can go either way. My friend had them in her chin and stopped during pregnancy (hadn't noticed). Damned! She did look like a marionette doll that could unhinge her jaw to talk on command. Looked much better when she was able to smooth out that area again.


And where is the filler going to go when she doesn’t stop filling?


Filler dissolves. It also stimulates collagen as it dissolves. Hyaluronic acid is natural, it is in our skin, joints, pretty much anywhere in the body. Synthetic hyaluronic acid does not last forever.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:100% agree. Fillers just never fit the person's face. They look bizarre, even to strangers seeing them for the first time.


This is not true. I get fillers in my laugh lines. It looks completely natural. I was starting to get deep creases around my mouth. Now I look like I used to.


It looks odd to others. Sorry, but it's true.


My experience is that people notice bad procedures of all kinds and then conclude those procedures always look bad. You have no idea how many times you didn’t notice.


That's what I thought. Until I couldn't afford to get filler anymore and all the friends who told me that I looked great and they couldn't tell admitted that they were lying.


It can go either way. My friend had them in her chin and stopped during pregnancy (hadn't noticed). Damned! She did look like a marionette doll that could unhinge her jaw to talk on command. Looked much better when she was able to smooth out that area again.


And where is the filler going to go when she doesn’t stop filling?


Filler dissolves. It also stimulates collagen as it dissolves. Hyaluronic acid is natural, it is in our skin, joints, pretty much anywhere in the body. Synthetic hyaluronic acid does not last forever.


Incorrect. Not all fillers are the same. Some just sit there and migrate.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Martha Stewart looks amazing. I think it just depends who performs it and if patient knows when to say when. And no grossly big bottom lip. That always looks so ugly to me (when fake).


She had a lower facelift. Come on. 80-year old Martha had jowls prior and had a lift. She may have minimal filler here and there, but a lift pulls it so filler is unnecessary for many years. She had a lot of volume in her face and wasn't a 'hollower'.
post reply Forum Index » Beauty and Fashion
Message Quick Reply
Go to: