Home>News Center>Life
         
 

Plastic surgery and attitudes of beauty and success
By Bridget Lee (That's Beijing)
Updated: 2004-07-05 11:03

Li Fei cannot make up her mind. By turns consulting a small pocket mirror and a hospital pamphlet, the 20-year-old sits with a dozen other women in the plastic surgery department at Shanghai's Ninth People's Hospital, contemplating a future seen through different eyes.


Li Fei shows the "V" (victory sign)before undergoing plastic surgery in Shanghai. [That's Shanghai]
The young college student is considering eyelid reconstruction, the most popular - and most dangerous - cosmetic procedure in China. During the 30-minute surgery, doctors will cut, fold and sew her upper eyelids with what looks like a little fishhook to create a crease above her eyes.

Li Fei believes that creased eyelids will improve her chances of securing a good job and a suitable husband after graduation. "People often make judgements based on one's appearance," she says, peering into the mirror once again. "Bigger eyes make you look more awake, more beautiful."

Women young and old share Li's outlook and are lining up to undergo double eyelid surgery. Whether it's career ambition or a desire to marry well that provides the motivation, the procedure's popularity says a great deal about the shift in China's ideal of beauty. To some, eyelid reconstruction caters to foreign ideals of beauty - the Western caricature of Asians typically focuses on the eyes - and is nothing more than an attempt to 'look Western.' Those undergoing the operation typically deny that Audrey Hepburn is their goal, but it is hard to imagine what, if not the lure of looking a tad more European, makes wider eyes inherently more attractive than smooth lids. The grass is greener, perhaps?

While the daily application of glue or tape can offer a makeshift solution, many women are eyeing the operation, which can cost up to 3,000 yuan, as a more permanent answer.

Li Fei is not worried about the cost. "My parents are paying for it."

Growing numbers of women are convinced that the long-term financial benefits more than compensate for the initial outlay. This May, Li Fei will join six-million other graduates entering the intensely competitive job market. Her parents, fearing that the years of supplementary classes, private tutors, and instruction in the finer arts of music and dance may not guarantee her success, have joined the thousands sacrificing weeks' worth of salary to pay for their children's nips and tucks.

A survey of university graduates in 2002 found that 54.3 percent of new job seekers identified physical appearance as the defining factor in securing a position. The idea that good looks hold the key to opportunity has prompted Yu Peipei to spend almost two months' salary on plastic surgery in the hope of improving her performance at work. "I'm a salesgirl at a department store," she explains. "The better I look, the more I sell."

Her aunt, Wu Xiuying, fully supports her choice: "It is wonderful that women now have the opportunity to make themselves more beautiful. They should take advantage of it."

And they are. All over the city plastic surgery departments in hospitals and clinics are bustling with patients. In Beijing alone, there are now around 30 accredited clinics, and hundreds of unaccredited ones. Summer is peak season for plastic surgery, and most patients are 25 to 45 year-old women, many of whom are trying to enrol in performing arts schools.

"We're performing two to three surgeries a day on average," says Belinda Wang, marketing manager at Beijing's VIV International Medical Beauty Clinic (some of Shanghai's private clinics report performing 20 to 30 procedures a day to keep up with the growing demand, and the Ninth People's hospital conducted over 26,000 cosmetic surgeries last year, a 40 percent increase from 2002)

"Liposuctions and eyelid surgery are among our most popular procedures," adds Wang. "I'm very optimistic about the future ... the field is ever-improving and there is a developing 'beauty economy'." Ben Chang, the marketing director at Fu Hua Aesthetics, a private plastic surgery clinic in Shanghai that sees 8,000 patients a year, agrees: "Chinese culture is more accepting and open to plastic surgery ... and people now have money to spend to improve their quality of life."

One young woman's high-profile bid to improve her looks is perhaps responsible for the recent nationwide shift. Last summer, we first reported about Hao Lulu, an unemployed fashion writer from Beijing who completed six months of donated plastic surgery from the capital's Ever Care clinic in a 'live advertisement' for the company. Regular TV updates and splashy tabloid spreads detailed her every alteration for a rapt audience.

Hao's first deficiency - her smooth, creaseless eyelids - was the first to be erased. But she did not stop there. The aspiring actress eventually underwent US$36,000 worth of liposuction, breast implants, nose reconstruction, hairline correction, calf enlargements, and face-narrowing jawline surgery. Her efforts paid off, too. Her glamorous new look landed her a glamorous new job: a starring role in Taiwanese drama Meteor Garden alongside pop pretty boys F-4.

Not that all eyelid reconstruction patients are interested in fame and fortune. Sun Qingmei, an attractive 45-year-old divorcee, says: "I am just looking for an honest man to marry. I need help paying my mortgage and my son's school fees. I want to lift my eyes to look younger." She seems certain the investment will pay off. "It is my decision. I will pay what it costs."

Gao Lingjuan defends her choice with equal conviction. "This is not my fiance's decision," says the 35-year-old, dark glasses hiding bruised and swollen eyes. Gao was operated on a week ago, and she is here for a routine check up. "I trust the doctors here. Nothing went wrong."

Some are not so lucky. Liu Xingmei, a teacher in her 50s, is waiting for her final post-operative care after three separate visits to the operating room. She initially embarked on her surgical saga to solve a lifelong problem of sagging eyelids. "The first time I had it done, at a private home by a local practitioner," she says, "one eye ended up bigger than the other. The second time, I had it done at a salon but the stitches got infected. This time, I went to the hospital and it looks good."

Liu is just one victim of over 200,000 botched operations over the last decade, as untrained practitioners lured unsuspecting patients with promises of an instant new look. Eyelid surgery, if done incorrectly, can cause nerve damage, punctures in the eyelid, or even blindness.

Despite the continuing dangers of a largely unregulated industry, the women wandering the unadorned waiting room defend their choice for a new pair of eyes. Whatever their origins, the women say, double eyelids will bestow confidence and new opportunities.

Li Fei is still unsure but dismisses any suggestion that she is simply conforming to a Western ideal. "I am not trying to look like some American celebrity. I am just trying to be a better version of myself."



Lee-Hom Wang to sing solo in Beijing
Titbits of life in Beijing
The European premiere of Catwoman
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

Japan, China set up explosive Asian Cup final

 

   
 

Measures go online to protect surfers

 

   
 

President Hu to US: Keep promises on Taiwan

 

   
 

East-west gas pipeline wrapped up

 

   
 

Medical team heads for Tibet

 

   
 

New N. Korean missiles could reach US land

 

   
  Cambridge to teach Chinese language
   
  'Search Dog' romps through Chinese net
   
  Something clever up your sleeve
   
  DJing starts from scratch
   
  Cruise: I'm ready to fall in love again
   
  It's time to bring out the dancing shoes
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Related Stories  
   
China prepares pageant for 'artificial beauties'
   
Double eyelids, double luck in future?
   
'Artificial beauty' may sue pageant organizers
   
Artificial beauty pays out her ex
   
Beefcake competition held
   
Future male model is chosen
   
Beauty comes at a price-and risk
  Feature  
  Royal life takes its toll on Japan's crown princess  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 美女扒开大腿让男人桶| 456亚洲视频| 无码人妻一区二区三区av| 亚洲中文字幕久久精品无码2021| 特级黄色毛片在放| 午夜理论影院第九电影院| 香蕉视频免费看| 国产男女性潮高清免费网站| 92国产福利久久青青草原| 好男人观看免费视频播放全集 | 狠狠精品干练久久久无码中文字幕 | 亚洲AV无码国产精品麻豆天美| 欧美黑人巨大videos极品视频| 免费高清av一区二区三区| 老师那里好大又粗h男男| 国产午夜视频高清| 久草视频精品在线| 国产精品va在线播放| 16668开场直播| 国产精品高清一区二区三区 | 最近最新视频中文字幕4| 国产男女猛烈无遮挡免费视频| 99免费在线视频| 太深了灬舒服灬太爽了| 一区二区精品在线观看| 成人午夜又粗又硬有大| 中文字幕日韩精品有码视频 | 免费的三级毛片| 精品综合久久久久久99| 国产91精品新入口| 花季传媒app免费版网站下载安装| 国产女同在线观看| a视频在线观看免费| 希岛婚前侵犯中文字幕在线| 中文字幕一区视频| 我和岳乱妇三级高清电影| 女人爽小雪又嫩又紧| 久久久青草青青亚洲国产免观| 日本高清乱理伦片中文字幕啊| 久久精品加勒比中文字幕| 日韩精品人妻系列无码专区|