Monday, May 17, 2010

Plastic Surgery Addiction - Sick Society




What is Plastic Surgery Addiction?

First of all, cosmetic surgery addiction is a completely real condition and is no laughing matter. Some people literally become obsessed with the aesthetic surgery industry and set out to rebuild their entire body from the ground up. Many of these patients begin their journey simply wanting to correct a few specific anatomical issues, but progress to addiction after completing their initial surgical desires. Once these patients have fixed all their original bodily complaints, they find themselves searching their anatomy for additional regions to alter, fix or correct. Eventually, it is not a matter of what type of procedure is being undertaken, it is simply the obsession with surgery itself which brings these patients back to the operating room time and time again...

Causes of Plastic Surgery Addiction

Cosmetic surgery addiction can affect people just like any other form of dependency. While plastic surgery
does not offer a physical fix like drug addiction, it does satisfy a psychological need, like gambling or sex addition. Patients might encounter a surgical dependency for a number of reasons. The most common contributors to cosmetic surgical addiction include:

* Addictive personality
- This person is simply prone to dependency issues and can get hooked on almost anything.

* Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD)- can cause body image compulsions which drive the patient to make change after change. These compulsions are sometimes completely irrational, but extremely powerful.

* Positive Surgical Results - can cause some women to gravitate towards additional surgeries. Women who are pleased with their new body might seek to make more drastic changes to improve even more. While undergoing a few specific procedures does not qualify as an addiction, some patients simply can not stop.

* Unsatisfied Emotional Motivators - can cause the woman to continue in her search for an emotional placater. Sometimes a patient thinks surgery will cure some unresolved emotional issue, but fails to do so. These patients often continue to look for a surgical cure which will finally put their internal motivating to rest.

1 comment:

  1. I wonder why the article only mentions the female as susceptible of these unbalanced behaviors. Might the author be biased in terms of gender? The picture is great though! I would like to have it for Halloween!!

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