Some Schmo wrote:I'm not critical of people getting plastic surgery either, but I think we should be honest about the reasons.
If you were burned horribly in a fire and were getting skin grafts, that would be one thing. Or perhaps it's a breast reduction to help with back pain. These are valid means to feeling better about yourself. But if you're doing it for a cosmetic improvement, there's no point trying to hide what you're doing there. Why would you feel better about yourself if you weren't getting positive feedback about it? Did they do it so they could look at themselves in the mirror without freaking out?
I think that the answers are more complex as I indicated in a previous post where I listed some of the reasons I think folks have cosmetic procedures. It's not unlike why people wear certain clothes, makeup, jewelry and stuff.
With regard to why people do things about their appearance and the impact of positive feedback, I can only give an example of something that happened to me yesterday. Three years ago, I stopped coloring my hair. I couldn't let it grow out when I was teaching so I waited for after I resigned. It wasn't the expense, it wasn't that I wanted to look "better" to other people. I wanted to look like me. My family gave me resistance at first, but I knew what I wanted for myself. Half way through I almost chickened out for sure because it looked like crap at that point! It took me a whole year to completely grow it out.
I can't tell you how many times after it was all done, that before I got into my car I would look at it in the outside mirror in daylight and smile my ever loving ass off, because I was so incredibly happy with it. I think it's pretty awesome. :-)
Yesterday, I was going down the stairs of a professional building and some woman (younger than me)was behind me. She said "Oh my god, I love the color of your hair!" We had a little conversation before we got into our cars. Yes, it made me feel good and I like it when I get a compliment, but that's not why I did it. I did it completely for myself.
So what if I had been born with a bump on the bridge of my nose and I felt like "me" was there behind the bump? What if I had a birthmark on my cheek that made me feel like it marred my face and I was tired of trying to cover it with makeup? What if my eyes were getting saggy and I felt like I didn't look like me any more? What if the person I saw in the mirror looked tired and not what I felt like inside? What if I had been born with a bump on my forehead from childbirth and I wanted that bump gone because it bugged me my whole life?
There are probably as many reasons for cosmetic surgery and the way we change our "look" as there are patients and people.