The 3 Enemies of Quality Breast Enhancement Surgery
Like it or not, breast remodeling is a common concern in girls and women, and I don't believe that beauty surgery is always self-diminishing, or vain. This article is not at all against breast enhancement, but against the effects of poor quality, hit-and-run marketing. In the case of breast enhancement, unethical marketing has three names: the "fast", the "cheap" and the "natural". Read to understand what these three words sell.
Lately, breast enhancement has made it into state policies in welfare states. Educated women pressed mass complaints about their cheap implants, after these had caused them hassle and pain. Governments' reactions to their sufferings made breaking news several months ago. These women, and their wrong choices, proved that fast and cheap breast enhancement does not dwell only on poverty or lack of information.
After the international scandal involving cheap implants, the advertisements for "cheap" and "fast" surgery still makes it to the first page of Google, but with slight cosmetic changes. The two incriminated words, "cheap" and "fast" are gone. Instead of the word "cheap", you are simply presented with a price list, where materials are coded in letters and numbers, so all you can make out is that the advertised services are, in fact, cheap. Instead of the word "fast", you will now find the word "expert."
Apparently, finding the word "expert' instead of the word "fast" related to breast surgery options should be a reason for joy. The problem starts where these "experts" can guarantee what no other surgeon of any specialty ever could. These "experts" guarantee they will take you through the entire process of remodeling your breasts without any problem ever occurring.
In truth, each of us is an individual body capable of individual reactions that no doctor, analysis or machine can anticipate. If it were not so, we would never be debating medical negligence. We would have only the good doctors, who don't make mistakes, and all the doctor impersonators, who don't deserve to practice. As we all know, life is very far from this picture. As for the advertised expertise, it hides the good old promise of fast procedures, in fact.
The newest popular word in the Google first page results is "natural". Under its umbrella, one or two gyms advertise exercise, while a lot of anonymous "naturists" advertise pills, extracts and creams. Supervised workout routines cannot be altogether bad, and they are natural for sure. The pills, extracts and lotions are the problem here. For, if they do what their labels claim they do, and if they are, indeed, natural, then they are simply female-specific hormones..
Each body has an individual hormonal balance. It is not so easy to predict what too little is, what enough is, and what too much is for each hormone in every person's case. Every hormone influences the circuit of many others and there is an entire medical specialty namely Endocrinology that deals only with hormones. Also, in a more specialized world, "natural" means easy to assimilate, but not necessarily harmless. Before you buy, think of natural poisons.
If those little bottles and recipients contained what they promised, self-medicating for breast remodeling from the net might well change you into the bearded lady, and that could be forever. On the other hand, drinking tea and hoping for your breast to be remodeled will have you buy larger quantities of unverified products, without harming you that much. Nevertheless, it is not exactly good for your peace of mind.
The huge wave of unethical advertisements is meant to reinforce the idea that beauty surgery is more like cosmetics. In fact, it is not even the simplest surgical procedure of all. Only the core procedure itself is relatively fast and painless, but quality breast modeling surgery is a six-stepped and rather slow-paced set of procedures. There is no way in this world to make a six-stepped medical process very fast, or very cheap. Fake ads only prevent you from looking for something more reasonable: an affordable deal offered by a verified clinic.
Only one advice at the end of this article: love thyself.
Andrea A. Rosian is an ex-teacher, ex-teenager drama club coordinator and now a full-time freelance writer. Andrea writes articles connected to her activities and her hobbies, because she believes that quality content contributes to a quality online environment.
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