lifestyle

24-year-old told she needs $17,000 worth of cosmetic surgery.

By MELISSA WELLHAM

I don’t know about you, but if someone asked me whether this woman needed to have plastic surgery, my answer would be a fairly vehement ‘no’.

24-year-old Phoebe Hooke, a journalist for CLEO magazine, recently went undercover and visited leading cosmetic surgeons around Sydney, and asked for their advice on what she needed to do to “fix” her face.

The answers were varied – in the sense that the doctors recommend a variety of procedures, not that anyone told her she looked more than fine just the way she is. A nose job, browlifts, fillers and botox and pretox (a cosmetic surgery aimed at women in their 20s) were just some of the helpful procedures offered to Phoebe.

The first cosmetic surgeon she saw told her that, “Your nose is dominating your face.”

And followed that up with the very polite explanation, “We need a plan to fix it. I don’t want to see some hanging kamikaze hawk thing going on.”

Others told her she needed a non-surgical brow lift (for only $3500), medical grade skincare (for an absolute bargain at $400), or that she should do something about her “missing cheekbones”.

Hooke told News Ltd that one cosmetic consultant, “suggested plumping up my cheeks with fillers to balance out my ‘boxy masculine jawline’. I felt a lump in my throat. Being told my ‘best feature’ needs $1100-worth of dermal fillers is heartbreaking.”

“At first, there was a certain excitement that came from being told how I could improve my looks, a bit like having the offer of a real-life Insty filter,” Hooke said. “But there’s a comedown: are my flaws really that obvious?”

As CLEO editor Sharri Markson points out, this kind of advice from cosmetic surgeons is reflective of a society where increasingly younger and younger girls are made to feel they don’t compare to a Hollywood ideal where the standard of beauty relies on photoshopped images and personal trainers.

But more dangerously, advice like this from surgeons is actually exacerbating the issue.

Markson was quoted on Today Tonight yesterday, saying that “In this day and age, girls are much more insecure about the way they look. You’ve got plastic surgeons who are preying on their insecurities, making them feel bad about themselves by goading them into this sort of surgery.”

“Young women, who are not grown up enough to make these decisions, are desperate to get ahead in the world. They’re desperate to be beautiful, to fulfill their dreams, and so they can’t judge properly about whether they need these cosmetic procedures or not.”

The point is, ultimately, that most young women do not need plastic surgery. I would argue that most women, full stop, do not need plastic surgery.

But medical professionals should definitely not be telling 24-year-olds like Hooke that she needs to stop the onset of crow’s feet around the eyes. Or that she needs fillers to reshape her cheeks, or redefine her jawline.

Professionals should not be advising young women to put a stop to their laugh lines, before they even appear.

Cosmetic surgery is an industry. And because it’s a money-making venture, if young women show up on the doorstep of their practice, pleading to be fixed, these plastic surgeons are going to offer their services.

Other industries – fashion, advertising, film and television – are all complicit in the beauty myth, too. They are all guilty of selling us women a lie that they aren’t good enough – telling us that we need to look a certain way to prove our worth.

But maybe it’s time these beauty-based industries started seeing a little bit more than smooth, tanned skin and big eyes, pert noses and plump lips – and started seeing the faces they are talking and selling to. And noticing that those faces belong to real people.

Do you think cosmetic surgeons should be telling young, beautiful girls that they need to have work done? 

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Top Comments

guest 10 years ago

The doctors didn't do anything wrong.
She asked them for their opinion.
If she asked a hairdresser for an opinion how to better her hair she would have got that too.

There's definitely some "butcher" plastic surgeons out there but to assume that all are "car salesman" is wrong.
She asked their opinion as their job.
In a way she set them up.
Perspectives on beauty vary and I don't agree with their views and she needs no surgery.
However it's still not the surgeons fault.
If you are extremely insecure or feeling unbalanced then you should see a Counsellor instead of seeking opinions from Plastic Surgeons.
Plastic Surgery should be reserved for age 25+.
Young people are often too immature or impulsive to make such decisions and fall to society pressures about how we should look.
They also often believe what people say about their looks even if the person is wrong.
A surgeon gives their OPINION.A potential patient agrees or disagrees.
Phoebe does not appear to yet have the mental maturity/age to do this yet which was why she was affected by/believed their opinion.
It was not the Plastic Surgeons job to reassure her selfesteem and she should not expect this.
The only lessons to be learnt from this experiment are

1.Don't set people up.Go to the right profession to help your emotional issues.

2.Some Plastic Surgeons have very warped,excessive and extreme views on beauty so don't believe everything they say they perceive because their perceptions are often wrong!


anon 11 years ago

I need some perspective. I have a mole right in the middle of my cheek and I am considering getting it removed. My doctor recommended I see a plastic surgeon to get this done so I do not scar. I tried talking to my girl friends about it but I felt so judged, one acquaintance even suggested i should accept that I'm ugly (her words were ugly people should learn to live with it). However idc what you say about the right guy not caring about looks, looks is a portion of what attracts 2 people and I worry i am missing out on love because of it. so is it worth it? (please keep in mind it is not affecting my health and will never affect my health.)

As for plastic surgeons recommending unnecessary procedure it seems like a great way to lose your reputation because there is such thing as too much and for me I just want the mole removed anything else and I may not look like my family.

Archy 11 years ago

A small scar won't scare a man off.