Would a plastic surgeon really approve of plastic surgery for their child?

I often spit out that any plastic surgeon doing science, there is always someone underneath saying: doctor you are so ugly why don’t you do it? After I did some experience videos of the program, again someone spits out: would you approve of your child having plastic surgery? Or would you give your child plastic surgery? I believe the meaning of these words is that although plastic surgery has a glamorous appearance after it is done, there are some unspeakable after-effects in the back. Doctors are human beings who love their children. I treat each and every candidate as if they were my own family, and I will consider doing what is appropriate, but I will not do what is not appropriate. From my heart, those days when the popularity of net face, how many people offer double the price to let me do, I have not done, here is also a plastic surgeon’s bottom line. In terms of whether or not a doctor would agree to a child having plastic surgery, I think there are three scenarios. First, if the child is born with a disability, I will do it without waiting for her to learn to speak, such as cleft lip and cleft palate, cleft lip is done at one and a half months after birth, and cleft palate is usually operated at one and a half years old. In the second case, when the child is 18 years old and has her own aesthetic, she wants to do a double eyelid, do a nose job, fill in a little bit of depression wherever she is, I am all for it. I did it for my daughter, and I think it’s a very normal thing. Some of the candidates said after hearing this, “Prof. Lu, you’re really cruel, but I think it’s nothing. She ran out to do it and spent my money, not necessarily better than me. The third situation is that I would not agree to do even if I broke my legs. For example, the standard net face, swan head, eyelids down to the tip of the nose, high into the clouds. This kind of face is still good for the mirror, but if you meet in reality, it is so fake that it is hard to say. My view on plastic surgery is that I’ll do it only if I think it’s appropriate. If I think you are not suitable for it, I will not do it, I will not do it for any amount of money. I’ve seen a lot of people online criticizing me for having old-fashioned aesthetic views, outdated ideas, and not understanding trends. But let’s be honest, does being trendy really equal looking good? I don’t think so. For example, when we first started doing double eyelids in China in the past few years, the most popular style was the European style double eyelids, and all the eyebrow tattoos were the standard big knife eyebrows, but where have all these people gone since then? Now some of the net red face, the double eyelid do so wide, the corner of the eye open to the bridge of the nose, the outer corner of the eye open to the eye socket, do an eyelid down to call it innocent eyes? You feel good now, after five or ten years and then look? Your face is not clothes and shoes, you can throw them away or change them if you don’t like them, but your face is going to be with you for the rest of your life. If you think your face is cute now, will it still be cute when you are 50 years old? If you try to fix it back then, it will turn out to be more and more fake, and you will become a rubber man. Therefore, as a plastic surgeon, we must adhere to the bottom line of aesthetics, to do truly meet the public aesthetic appearance, if the plastic surgeon to pursue the trend, the pursuit of money, it must be in the “dummy” on the road farther and farther.