
Shawna Faith/TikTok
“Respectfully, you look like you’re pushing 45, stop getting filler or Botox, whatever you have, it looks so bad,” Eveler says, reading a comment from one of her past videos. “45? I get maybe late 20s, 30s. I’m 22, yeah, shocker,” Eveler said on camera while sitting in her car.
“I think it’s a personal preference, if I want to get filler. I feel like no one should stop you from getting filler because it’s your own face,” she said. “But people always told me that I look older and I get it, I look older, I might act older, but 45?”
Since posting the viral clip, Eveler has received even more replies from people commenting on how she looks. While some agreed with her that there’s nothing wrong with getting filler, others disagreed.
“There’s no way you’re in your 20s. Yikes,” one person wrote on her TikTok. Another comment read, “I guessed mid-20s. Definitely not 45.”
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Eveler, like many on social media, has been sharing her Botox journey on social media for a while now.
While undergoing these cosmetic procedures is a personal choice, Dhaval G. Bhanusali, a celebrity board-certified dermatologist atHudson Dermatology & Laser Surgery, tells PEOPLE that “cosmetics, while a beautiful art, is also a slippery slope.”
He explains that Botox and filler can offer temporary volume to various areas such as lips, cheeks, temples, under the eyes, or other parts of the face. They can also be diluted off-label to stimulate collagen in different body parts. When interested in these types of procedures, it’s essential that you “find someone who has your best interests at heart,” Bhanusali says.
The dermatologist notes that his practice typically performs similar types of cosmetic procedures only on individuals over 18 years old, emphasizing, “Even then, we tend to lean towards late 20s before initiating conversations around procedures. For more extensive work, we always prefer a later age when the patient has ample time to consider whether they truly want it, as opposed to just following a trend.”
“There is belief that starting before static lines occur is a way of prevent (or put off) wrinkles,” he adds. “There is some science and logic to the theory. We usually start once we see the beginnings of those static lines and minimize the contraction of the muscle to prevent further collagen breakdown.”
source: people.com