It is hard to believe that I was once a top Lads’ MAG model, without noticing a piece of makeup, without a piece of makeup, it’s hard to believe that I ever have a MAG model from the top wax.
And while posing for publications such as Playboy and Zoo was very nice in the years, it came for a prize.
Former boy model Lisa Kemp has reversed all traces of her cosmetic improvements[/caption]
Lucy spent £ 80,000 on cosmetic improvements, including four boob jobs[/caption]
Desperate to look like Keeley Hazell and Lucy Pinder – the big stars of the glamor industry of the day – I spent £ 80,000 on fillers, breast implants, botox, veneer, hair extensions and treatments.
There was hardly any cosmetic procedure that I didn’t try.
But after 20 years of being “fake”, all traces of cosmetic improvements are banned from my face and body.
I have solved my fillers and even had corrective operation on my face to turn tweakings for years.
I even dumped the eyelash extensions and makeup.
Now, at the age of 40, I love my new, natural look and I was happy to hear from the decision of Geordie Shore Star Chloe Ferry to have her cosmetic surgery reversed.
Chloe, 29, is supposed to have spent up to £ 50,000 on nose courts, breast implants, fillers, eyebrow lifts, botox and liposuction.
This week she thanked fans for their support when she went to the hospital to start “a journey to correct my earlier work”, starting to have her Brazilian wandererlift reversed.
She explained that although she had hoped that cosmetic surgery would solve all her problems, only contributed to what would cause depression, fear and physical discomfort.
It eventually left her much worse about herself.
Such an honesty of a powerful influencer as Chloe is a relief.
Realizing that cosmetic tweak will not make you happy after Tweak is a difficult reality to accept.
But once you get there – as I did – it frees you.
You accept yourself for who you are and what you really look like.
In my heyday of models I felt that I had to look in a certain way.
Big breasts were important, thanks to stars such as Katie Price and Pamela Anderson.
False breasts brought you more work and hindride pays.
Later, when a wave of younger models came by, I noticed that I was fighting my aging face with botox and fillers.
I felt that I had to fight to stay glamorous.
Geordie Shore star Chloe Ferry has decided to let her cosmetic surgery go back[/caption]
Lucy now lives in the countryside and is a horse trainer and show jumper[/caption]
How times have changed.
Nowadays you will find me at home in the beautiful countryside of Bedfordshire with my partner, surrounded by my beloved horses and being great satisfied with my new life as a horse trainer and show jumper.
But I am worried that young girls have filled their lips to the size of the baboons of the baboons, to look like everyone Tiktok.
The most sad thing is that these girls don’t even have fun like me and my colleague glamor models were in the nineties.
We were dancing with friends and celebrated our glamorous appearance.
And we embraced our differences, each with our own individual style and personality.
Now girls seem to spend every reserve cent on fillers and botox instead of going out with their friends.
They are only in their bedrooms, which are omitted as if it were an art form.
Take selfie after selfie and filter hell out of their snaps until they are “perfect” enough to post online.
Social media and reality TV stars such as the Kardashians did not help with the trend.
‘Painful and expensive’
I was not the least a bit surprised to hear that, according to a recent government report, 36 percent of adolescents would do “what is needed” to look good.
No wonder it influences their mental health.
It is brilliant that Chloe has realized sufficiently, is enough, but the reversal of cosmetic work is painful and expensive.
My boob jobs, botox and fillers helped me to carry out a successful career in the glamor modeling.
I earned £ 4,000 a week practically nothing.
Posing for the mag photos of boys is fairly easy.
My career catapulted when I got a boob lane on finance, from a 28B to 30dd when I was 18.
Shortly thereafter I was scouted by a glamor model photographer in a car show in Birmingham.
That says it all, right?
Playboy soon knocked on my door.
But my youthful looks and big breasts were not enough when I reached twenty.
I had to keep track of the younger models.
I saw lines and wrinkles, so I had the arch and forehead of my cupid and it ran from there.
Chloe ferry for her cosmetic improvements[/caption]
It is thought that Chloe has spent up to £ 50,000 on nose lanes, breast implants, fillers, eyebrow lifts, botox and liposuction[/caption]
In my twenty and thirty I had so many tweaks that I lost track.
I spent around £ 16,000 on cheek and lip fillers, £ 10,000 in Botox, £ 4,500 in veneer and £ 10,000 in hair extensions.
I had a total of four boob jobs, costs £ 4,500 each and brought me from a natural 28B to a huge 32ff.
I can remember in the beginning how great I felt.
I finally had this incredible split and looked fantastic in swimwear.
With my long, blonde hair extensions it was as if I had arrived in femininity.
Unfortunately, women do not realize that the toll fillers accept.
Your skin is stretched over time and because your collagen levels naturally fall with age, it does not bounce back if you have solved the fillers.
I recently read that there has been a decrease of 27 percent in people who get fillers and I constantly hear that women who have solved theirs.
It is a step in the right direction.
I only hope that Chloe’s skin is young and elastic enough to repair itself when she dissolves hers.
I wasn’t that lucky.
When I had resolved mine in 2020, my face was so sunk and hang on that I had a mini facelift.
It cost £ 10,000 and I then had intense headache and will have the scars forever.
Fortunately my sister was trained in aesthetic procedures and resolved my fillers for me, which saved about £ 1,000.
It is also more painful than having fillers and I had many bruises and swelling.
Having my breast implants costs around £ 6,000.
I saw a very nice surgeon in Belgium, but I know it can be up to £ 16,000 for people in the UK.
Now I urge women to think twice before I get procedures.
It won’t make you happy.
My improvements made me rich, but I wish I had known the joy to be in peace with what I really look like – as I do now.
My happy place is in my training suit and Wellies, not the clinic of the surgeon.
Katie price back in her Jordan days[/caption]
U-turn will take time
Ashton Collins, director Save Face, who campaigns for safer cosmetic procedures, says:
“Fillers are dissolved by injecting an enzyme called hyaluronidase, which breaks down the material that forms the filler – usually hyaluronic acid.
The body can then break down and absorb the filling material naturally.
It usually requires multiple injections and can take up to fourteen days before the enzyme is fully in force.
It is difficult to insulate a very small area because the product spreads at injection.
So if you have solved lip fillers, this will probably reverse your entire lip improvement. “
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