Not long ago, in the previous century/millennium, women and
men aged gracefully. They proudly accepted the fate of their faces; no one was
bothered by wrinkles, crevices or even gray hair. The flower children are
surely to blame. Those hippies of yesteryear firmly believed that they would
always look like they did when they were swinging through the 60's, 70's and
80's.
It was when the drug companies formed an alliance with
opportunistic physicians did they realize how desperately people clung to their
youthful appearance. They began to formulate lotions and potions, injections
that plump and paralyze and other modalities that would prop up aging faces and
satisfy the longing caused by a nation preoccupied with looking young.
These temporary courses of treatment were soon accepted by
the masses. In fact, the desired effect of just looking in the mirror became
painful if the visage looking back was beginning to show signs of aging.
Spending after tax dollars to chase the youth factor has
kept Big Pharma in the research and development business because they want to
hook you into believing that you are not pretty or handsome if you are not
using their products.
Celebrities were the first to use most every concoction
distributed. It was and still is easy to spot those television and film stars
who use fillers and paralyzing injections. Even though producers and directors
might cringe because the scene lacks believability when emotions are thwarted
if the face does not naturally respond, it does not stop the men and women on
our screens from using these items.
The same goes for surgical procedures. These users of
surgery and injections would like you to believe that that they look years
younger because Mother Nature has been so very kind to them. Public needs to know that fooling with your good looks can
have dire consequences and that there is no need to go into debt or spend
thousands of dollars needlessly on something that must be repeated and repeated
year after year.
Consequences are increasing now that MRSA (Methicillin-resistant
Staphylococcus aureus) has reared its ugly head. These super strains of
bacteria and infection produce grave health concerns. The administration of anesthesia can also create unwanted
side effects; couple that with risky procedures and you have the recipe for
disaster.
Every procedure, every injection is risky.
Cutting perfectly healthy tissue, re-draping the skin and
suturing it back together should be thoroughly considered as a life-threatening
event.
Allowing anyone to inject your body, your face with serums
that have not been fully tested or explored is ludicrous. Most injections used
by the medical community have not had extensive testing to show results for
long-term use. You are pretty much on your own insofar as long term use is
concerned.
Perhaps you are thinking there is no hope for your aging
face. Well, there is and it doesn't involve anything that would cause harm,
disfigurement or risk.
If you are wearing a droopy, sagging face, it is because the
muscles that support the skin are no longer taut. Instead they are headed south
because they lack exercise. Exercise for the face will plump up the muscles,
force oxygenate blood to the tissues and help you look years younger when you
dedicate only a few minutes per day to a routine.
Do not believe for one minute that surgery or injections
will work faster, better, longer than facial exercise. They will not. Just
because sutures have been removed and the suture line looks less red than it
did initially, does not mean you are healed from an invasive procedure. It
takes months and months, maybe even a year or more for complete healing to
occur.
If you erroneously believe that those paralyzing and
plumping injections have
stopped the aging process, think again. Aging
continues to affect the downward slide of your facial muscles even if they are
propped up and paralyzed.