Yes, but for a good reason. I had my ears pinned back sometime in the 90s so I wouldn't be bullied. Yes, I was a kid and before you start judging you should've seen my before and after then you will understand.
I was the first stage 4 cancer patient in my region to undergo breast reduction; nobody I spoke with had even heard of such a thing during cancer treatment, but I had been doing well on targeted therapy (Ibrance) for about 3 years. That said, my E cup was impeding my weight loss plan, so my oncology team and I devised a plan together before ending up with 4 months of surgical complications including an antibiotic resistant staph infection that had to completely heal before I could return to cancer treatment. We expected me to be off treatment for about a month and a half, but nobody expected it to take 4 months to be back on my regular treatment that's been working so well for 3 years. I healed up from the breast surgery AND the surgery I needed to recover from staph, but in that time off Ibrance, the cancer spread to my bones. I'm starting a whole new cancer treatment later this week because Ibrance won't work on me anymore. I never want another surgery again! I wish I'd done it sooner many years ago instead of waiting. But insurance most likely wouldn't have covered it without cancer, so I don't know the right answer. My body _feels_ better, and yet I'm "sicker than ever" when they judge by the scan results. There's no lesson here. Just a weird story. I love my new bustline, but I hate the cost of it.
I have sinusitis and I got a small surgery inside my nostrils and it helped! So I can understand why Stephanie Rice got her surgery. P.s. my surgery was not plastic, I just needed to breathe better and my dad had his polyps removed for the same reason.
Would you ever get plastic surgery?
Yes, but for a good reason. I had my ears pinned back sometime in the 90s so I wouldn't be bullied. Yes, I was a kid and before you start judging you should've seen my before and after then you will understand.
only on my neck
I was the first stage 4 cancer patient in my region to undergo breast reduction; nobody I spoke with had even heard of such a thing during cancer treatment, but I had been doing well on targeted therapy (Ibrance) for about 3 years. That said, my E cup was impeding my weight loss plan, so my oncology team and I devised a plan together before ending up with 4 months of surgical complications including an antibiotic resistant staph infection that had to completely heal before I could return to cancer treatment. We expected me to be off treatment for about a month and a half, but nobody expected it to take 4 months to be back on my regular treatment that's been working so well for 3 years. I healed up from the breast surgery AND the surgery I needed to recover from staph, but in that time off Ibrance, the cancer spread to my bones. I'm starting a whole new cancer treatment later this week because Ibrance won't work on me anymore. I never want another surgery again! I wish I'd done it sooner many years ago instead of waiting. But insurance most likely wouldn't have covered it without cancer, so I don't know the right answer. My body _feels_ better, and yet I'm "sicker than ever" when they judge by the scan results. There's no lesson here. Just a weird story. I love my new bustline, but I hate the cost of it.
Sending prayers
I have sinusitis and I got a small surgery inside my nostrils and it helped! So I can understand why Stephanie Rice got her surgery. P.s. my surgery was not plastic, I just needed to breathe better and my dad had his polyps removed for the same reason.
How was the recovery?
I love China sorry for what she went through . So sweet 😢❤ 2:09
Plastic surgery is like gym training! Some people never get enough
Icons?