Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am thinking of doing a breast lift and tummy tuck. Can you reccomend your doctor - if he/she is in DC
I could recommend a few docs based on my consults, but they're all in NoVa (some have offices in Md too).
MD works. Happy to get any recs that you have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Am thinking of doing a breast lift and tummy tuck. Can you reccomend your doctor - if he/she is in DC
I could recommend a few docs based on my consults, but they're all in NoVa (some have offices in Md too).
Anonymous wrote:silicone or saline. how do they feel?
Anonymous wrote:Am thinking of doing a breast lift and tummy tuck. Can you reccomend your doctor - if he/she is in DC
Anonymous wrote:I'd also like to chime in here. I had a tummy tuck after losing a lot of weight. My stomach was literally hanging down like an apron or sack of chestnuts. It's not a matter of learning to be happy with what you have or heaping self-criticism caused by "society." Plastic surgery serves a purpose like other surgeries. A tummy tuck shores up sagging internal musculature and excess skin. It's not just vanity because you don't look like Barbie.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do you justify taking the physical risk for something so (literally) superficial? Why not just be happy with the body you had? (This sounds super snarky but it's an honest question... I would have never considered surgery before but I get it now and am trying to figure out why)
I think the risk of life-threatening complications for me, a healthy 36yo, is less than the risk of getting into an accident on the beltway. And of course it's wise to go with an experienced surgeon with a good track record. But to address the crux of your question -- yes, I did take a physical risk for aesthetic reasons. I just didn't, and couldn't, feel happy with the body I had. I guess I'm not as strong as some. I feel a lot better about my body now, and it's making me want to be a healthier, more fit person. I feel fortunate I had the means to do it.
Ironic?? because the society, culture and socio-economic class that made this possible may have also made you think what you were born with wasn't enough.
Anonymous wrote:Would you be okay with your children having surgery when they are older?