This entry was posted
on Friday, February 13th, 2009 at 8:41 am and is filed under Cosmetic Eye Surgery.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Both comments and pings are currently closed.
2 Responses to “I look tired all of the time.cosmetic surgery?”
The procedure is called blepharoplasty. That’s upper or lower eyelid surgery where they **** out the fat, fluids and/or reshape the lids. I would strongly discourage it though. The risks are too great. If you wake disfigured there’s no going back and you will miss the way you look now.
Try natural remedies. People think they need expensive creams when natural products work so much better. (For example fruit enzymes are the main components in expensive AHAs creams and lotions but you can get the same effect with lemon juice or mashing grapes and applying to face.)
For looking tired: if it’s dark circles try a concentrated vit K cream. it will take several months before you see results so you need patience. Regularly apply cucumber slices to the area to reduce bags. Put 2 metal teaspoons in the freezer and apply to eye for 15 min every day. Try getting more sleep. Making your own undereye “cream” by grating a piece of cucumber until you collect some juice, put it in a small container and apply the juice to your palm and add a small amount of eyecream (more juice than cream). Apply to eye area for 2 weeks and watch the bags disappear. Also cut out all drinking to zero! If you drink alcohol and have the blepharoplasty, the problem will return in no time and you’ll have wasted money and dangerous procedure for nothing!
Try the cold stuff first! Then decide about surgery. Good luck sweetie!
While I don’t disagree w/the other answer above me, topical ****** rejuvenation products only have about 10% influence on the quality of your skin. The biggest determinants are age, genetics, diet and environment. If diet and environment do not positively affect the way you want to look, and you’ve decided to opt for surgery, at least consult several surgeons in your area and ask A LOT of questions. Also, a ****** specialist might be able to produce better results than a surgeon with no body-area specialties. If you decide to do surgery, learn all you can about the procedure and possible associated risks and complications.
February 15th, 2009 at 5:22 am
pauline
The procedure is called blepharoplasty. That’s upper or lower eyelid surgery where they **** out the fat, fluids and/or reshape the lids. I would strongly discourage it though. The risks are too great. If you wake disfigured there’s no going back and you will miss the way you look now.
Try natural remedies. People think they need expensive creams when natural products work so much better. (For example fruit enzymes are the main components in expensive AHAs creams and lotions but you can get the same effect with lemon juice or mashing grapes and applying to face.)
For looking tired: if it’s dark circles try a concentrated vit K cream. it will take several months before you see results so you need patience. Regularly apply cucumber slices to the area to reduce bags. Put 2 metal teaspoons in the freezer and apply to eye for 15 min every day. Try getting more sleep. Making your own undereye “cream” by grating a piece of cucumber until you collect some juice, put it in a small container and apply the juice to your palm and add a small amount of eyecream (more juice than cream). Apply to eye area for 2 weeks and watch the bags disappear. Also cut out all drinking to zero! If you drink alcohol and have the blepharoplasty, the problem will return in no time and you’ll have wasted money and dangerous procedure for nothing!
Try the cold stuff first! Then decide about surgery. Good luck sweetie!
February 15th, 2009 at 4:14 pm
tubbs
While I don’t disagree w/the other answer above me, topical ****** rejuvenation products only have about 10% influence on the quality of your skin. The biggest determinants are age, genetics, diet and environment. If diet and environment do not positively affect the way you want to look, and you’ve decided to opt for surgery, at least consult several surgeons in your area and ask A LOT of questions. Also, a ****** specialist might be able to produce better results than a surgeon with no body-area specialties. If you decide to do surgery, learn all you can about the procedure and possible associated risks and complications.