Beauty, however, comes at a price (eastday.com) Updated: 2004-07-22 09:07
The first thing you notice about Chen Qi (not her real name) are her
beautiful eyes, fringed by luscious eyelashes that make her the envy of many
women. Most dismiss her lashes as the result of the good genes, but the reality
is that the 21-year-old performing arts student has had her lashes "done" - they
are the result of eyelash transplant surgery.
"My eyelashes were thin and dull," says Chen. "I felt less
attractive than the other girls in my class. Even with mascara, my eyes didn't
shine. And on hot days, mascara just melts, making you look like a panda. My
goal is to become a professional performer, so the way I look really counts. And
I am not alone. Some of my classmates have also had plastic surgery, fixing eyes
and noses."
Beauty, however, comes at a price: in Chen's case, about 10,000 yuan
(US$1,200). But according to eyelash transplant recipients, it is well worth the
cost.
"I was losing my eyelashes because of age," says Zheng Yin, a 40-year-old
Latin dancer. "But ever since my eyelash transplant, I have received more
invitations to perform and I feel more self-confident in front of the audience."
Those who don't give a second thought to their eyelashes may wonder what all
the fuss is about, but after all, if the eyes are the window to the soul, then
the eyelashes are the window dressing.
Shanghai Time Plastic Surgery Hospital reports that they receive at least one
inquiry a day. At Shanghai No. 9 People's Hospital, one of the nation's leading
plastic surgery hospitals, Dr Liu Qing says that they perform several surgeries
every day, and receive hundreds of calls for consultations.
Dr Li Guihai, who performs eyelash and hair transplant surgery at the
Shanghai Time Plastic Surgery Hospital, explains that eyelash transplant surgery
is microsurgical. Done under local anesthesia, the surgeon harvests a dozen or
two hair follicles from the back of the head and implants them in the upper
eyelid. The procedure, which is virtually painless, takes about two hours.
"Little recovery time is needed, but there is some mild swelling for a day or
two. Then, the follicles grow like a plant seed, and long, permanent new
eyelashes grow in," he says.
There is one minor disadvantage to transplanted eyelashes, however.
"Because the follicles that are transplanted are from the back of the scalp,
they act like scalp hair they grow. So they definitely need to be trimmed," Li
adds.
In addition to the normal risks of surgery - infection, excessive bleeding or
scarring - Dr Liu says that the only real concern with eyelash transplants are
that some of the individual hair follicles will not "take" in the new location.
Still, at 6,000 to 10,000 yuan a pop, not everyone who wants it can afford an
eyelash transplant. There is an alternative: false eyelashes.
Jiang Weijun, 26, has them applied at her beauty salon for special occasions
like formal photographs or parties.
"They last only about one month but look fine. Most important of all, they
are cheap and affordable," she says.
False eyelash applications cost 100 yuan to 400 yuan and are quite popular.
Eva Beauty Salon, for example, says that on average they have 10 customers for
false lashes per day. Still, there are risks: When removing false lashes, the
adhesive glue can rip out the natural lashes.
In Shanghai, plenty of people can afford plastic surgery nowadays, which is a
direct result of China's economic boom, says Dr Pei Xi of the Shanghai Fuhua
Medical Beauty Hospital.
Economic prosperity created an affluent class who have changed plastic
surgery's original goal - the reconstruction of a damaged body - to an aesthetic
business.
In the realm of plastic surgery, physicians are no longer passing down
diagnoses like divine judgments, or even acting as gatekeepers, determining who
undergoes surgery. Instead, they are skilled practitioners, selling their
talents to those who apply.
Plastic surgery patients, too, are a different breed: These are not diseased
bodies in search of cures. They have become informed consumers shopping for the
best service at the best price.
Yet these informed consumers have also been informed by a changing standard
for beauty.
Today, Western pop culture has exerted enormous influences on aesthetic
standards, and beauty is judged by Western standards: Bigger eyes, longer
lashes, sharper noses and slimmer faces are the ideal in China, and probably all
over Asia.
In this youth-oriented culture, looking good means looking young, adds Pei.
For older women, cosmetic surgery is their only chance to find their fountain
of youth, while it has become a rite of passage for teenage girls.
Today there are about 230 private cosmetic clinics in Shanghai, an increase
of 130 since 2002.
The jump reflects the growth in the number of people seeking plastic surgery,
which has increased at a 20-percent annual rate in recent years.
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