Valley of the dolls
Life in a land of plastic people
By: Chelsea Lankes
Issue date: 9/21/07 Section: Opinion
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In March 2007, the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery released statistics for surgical and nonsurgical procedures in the United States. In 2006 alone, there were 11.5 million cosmetic surgeries performed, a one percent increase since 2005. The most popular procedures were Botox injections and liposuction. As an avid observer, I can easily diagnose the most common symptoms of plastic surgery - frozen faces and tight tummies.
Despite what the statistics show, the root of the problem is not that the availability of procedures has increased. Nor is the problem that the taboo of augmenting the body is slowly disappearing. Instead, it boils down to greed and vanity. The cosmetic industry is banking off these procedures, and they feed on the insecurity of the consumer. The American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery reports the global market is now worth $20 billion, and the number of cosmetic procedures in the U.S. is growing by 15 percent a year. Not only is it advertised openly, but there are people going under the knife on national television, only further numbing society to the effects of plastic surgery. Society has successfully disguised the drawbacks of plastic surgery by homogenizing the product - perfection.
Women, men and even teens are undergoing procedures because no one is ever satisfied with what they see in the mirror. For some, plastic surgery is maintenance. For others, it's just one little imperfection that has been magnified to the point of obsession, and in some cases, it's wanting to transform their identity.
Plastic surgery isn't just a makeover on the outside, it's a confidence booster, or so they say. As soon as the obsession with our "imperfections" is satisfied by a procedure, the mind can rest at ease. Right?
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