Surgery plan at 22. ( Body halo?)

G

GetbckMonsta

Iron
Joined
Mar 18, 2026
Posts
38
Reputation
16
Hey y'all going to turkey this November-december for lower and upper blepharoplasty, otoplasty ear reduction, and fat grafting. What other surgeries do people recommend. I'm considering hairline lowering with a hair transplant. But in terms of ROI? I am potentially looking into stem cell therapy. I'm not sure what implants are best for infraorbital area as I was diagnosed with hollowing by my local surgeon. But he only recommended a lower blepharoplasty with Pico laser and fat graft


I already had a rhinoplasty and fat graft into my chin. The result was pretty good though results took awhile for me to show especially the rhinoplasty. Even at 6 months I had residual scar tissue. Fat graft was ok but had to get it touched up with filler for real results to show as the surgeon can't really predict how much loss will occur during his procedure.

In terms of achieving body halo how can I do this also? Is rib removal an option for better proportions and to fix blocky waist??
 
Last edited:
calling a blepharoplasty, otoplasty, and fat grafting a good start while simultaneously asking what else to pile on in a single trip is a fast track to waking up in a turkish intensive care unit. packing that many distinct trauma sites into one operative window is an absolute nightmare for your lymphatic system and immune response. the sheer volume of systemic swelling you are going to experience from the combined lower face, eyes, and ears will literally strangle the survival rate of your fat grafts, turning a couple thousand dollars of transferred fat into dead, lumpy scar tissue before you even catch your flight home.
if you are looking at return on investment, hairline lowering via an actual surgical advancement is a terrible gamble compared to a standard hair transplant. scalp advancements leave a massive visible scar right at the transition zone that you will inevitably have to spend another year trying to hide with grafts anyway. just do a dense follicular unit extraction transplant to lower the hairline naturally. as for stem cell therapy, it is an overpriced gimmick with zero structural return on investment. it is a luxury skin texture treatment that will do absolutely nothing for your facial bone structure or projection. [1]
your local surgeon was actually giving you high-iq advice by recommending just the lower bleph and fat graft for your infraorbital hollowing. custom implants like silicone, porex, or peek are the only things that actually fix true skeletal infraorbital deficiency, but putting solid implants into a face that is already undergoing an otoplasty, upper bleph, lower bleph, and fat grafting all at once is begging for a massive, unmanageable infection. implants require absolute sterility and a stable environment to integrate with the bone. if you force a surgeon in turkey to cram implants under your eyes while your entire face is a swollen, bruised warzone from four other procedures, you are going to end up in a botched thread. do the blephs and otoplasty first, see how much volume the fat graft actually restores once the swelling dies down at the six-month mark, and only then look into custom implants if your bone structure is still completely recessed. [1]
did your local surgeon say your hollowing is from a recessed orbital rim bone or is it just genetic fat pad deficiency under the eye?
 
  • JFL
Reactions: polarpop
calling a blepharoplasty, otoplasty, and fat grafting a good start while simultaneously asking what else to pile on in a single trip is a fast track to waking up in a turkish intensive care unit. packing that many distinct trauma sites into one operative window is an absolute nightmare for your lymphatic system and immune response. the sheer volume of systemic swelling you are going to experience from the combined lower face, eyes, and ears will literally strangle the survival rate of your fat grafts, turning a couple thousand dollars of transferred fat into dead, lumpy scar tissue before you even catch your flight home.
if you are looking at return on investment, hairline lowering via an actual surgical advancement is a terrible gamble compared to a standard hair transplant. scalp advancements leave a massive visible scar right at the transition zone that you will inevitably have to spend another year trying to hide with grafts anyway. just do a dense follicular unit extraction transplant to lower the hairline naturally. as for stem cell therapy, it is an overpriced gimmick with zero structural return on investment. it is a luxury skin texture treatment that will do absolutely nothing for your facial bone structure or projection. [1]
your local surgeon was actually giving you high-iq advice by recommending just the lower bleph and fat graft for your infraorbital hollowing. custom implants like silicone, porex, or peek are the only things that actually fix true skeletal infraorbital deficiency, but putting solid implants into a face that is already undergoing an otoplasty, upper bleph, lower bleph, and fat grafting all at once is begging for a massive, unmanageable infection. implants require absolute sterility and a stable environment to integrate with the bone. if you force a surgeon in turkey to cram implants under your eyes while your entire face is a swollen, bruised warzone from four other procedures, you are going to end up in a botched thread. do the blephs and otoplasty first, see how much volume the fat graft actually restores once the swelling dies down at the six-month mark, and only then look into custom implants if your bone structure is still completely recessed. [1]
did your local surgeon say your hollowing is from a recessed orbital rim bone or is it just genetic fat pad deficiency under the eye?
Artificial Intelligence Ai GIF by Abdi Slick
 
  • +1
Reactions: iamnotgrayipromise
mr frankenstein here
 
  • Love it
  • +1
Reactions: GetbckMonsta and polarpop
Bro this is actually high IQ asf, mirin fs. Well this is what my surgeon said in Australia.

Infraorbital hollowing - this refers to a sunken appearance beneath your eyes,
particularly in the tear trough area

Periorbital hyperpigmentation this means darkening of the skin around your eyes, which is more noticeable on the left side where you sustained your injury.

So I did get assaulted almost 4 years ago.
I had a purple eye the didn't do any operation on it at the time of hospitalization. It went away though because I've went out slaying earlier this year. So I know it's not a problem its just I notice my area now and I'm wanting more confidence.



Surgeons Report CT Result
The CT scan from March 2023 showed that you had sustained a nasal bone
fracture as well as two fractures of the left zygoma (cheek bone) although one
was thought to be an old injury. On examination, I can see the infraorbital
hollowing on both sides, though it's more pronounced where you were injured.
 
Last edited:
I
calling a blepharoplasty, otoplasty, and fat grafting a good start while simultaneously asking what else to pile on in a single trip is a fast track to waking up in a turkish intensive care unit. packing that many distinct trauma sites into one operative window is an absolute nightmare for your lymphatic system and immune response. the sheer volume of systemic swelling you are going to experience from the combined lower face, eyes, and ears will literally strangle the survival rate of your fat grafts, turning a couple thousand dollars of transferred fat into dead, lumpy scar tissue before you even catch your flight home.
if you are looking at return on investment, hairline lowering via an actual surgical advancement is a terrible gamble compared to a standard hair transplant. scalp advancements leave a massive visible scar right at the transition zone that you will inevitably have to spend another year trying to hide with grafts anyway. just do a dense follicular unit extraction transplant to lower the hairline naturally. as for stem cell therapy, it is an overpriced gimmick with zero structural return on investment. it is a luxury skin texture treatment that will do absolutely nothing for your facial bone structure or projection. [1]
your local surgeon was actually giving you high-iq advice by recommending just the lower bleph and fat graft for your infraorbital hollowing. custom implants like silicone, porex, or peek are the only things that actually fix true skeletal infraorbital deficiency, but putting solid implants into a face that is already undergoing an otoplasty, upper bleph, lower bleph, and fat grafting all at once is begging for a massive, unmanageable infection. implants require absolute sterility and a stable environment to integrate with the bone. if you force a surgeon in turkey to cram implants under your eyes while your entire face is a swollen, bruised warzone from four other procedures, you are going to end up in a botched thread. do the blephs and otoplasty first, see how much volume the fat graft actually restores once the swelling dies down at the six-month mark, and only then look into custom implants if your bone structure is still completely recessed. [1]
did your local surgeon say your hollowing is from a recessed orbital rim bone or is it just genetic fat pad deficiency under the eye?
I would say that it's both recessed orbital rim bone both generic and through injury and also there could be a bit of a fat pad deficiency but when I was young I never had it only when puberty started. I did modelling well my mum made me do it when I was 12-13 and my eye area was perfect. Just when puberty hit and probably some bad habits but my grandpa had bad habits and had A tier skin orbitals but his dad was 10% African lol.
 
I
calling a blepharoplasty, otoplasty, and fat grafting a good start while simultaneously asking what else to pile on in a single trip is a fast track to waking up in a turkish intensive care unit. packing that many distinct trauma sites into one operative window is an absolute nightmare for your lymphatic system and immune response. the sheer volume of systemic swelling you are going to experience from the combined lower face, eyes, and ears will literally strangle the survival rate of your fat grafts, turning a couple thousand dollars of transferred fat into dead, lumpy scar tissue before you even catch your flight home.
if you are looking at return on investment, hairline lowering via an actual surgical advancement is a terrible gamble compared to a standard hair transplant. scalp advancements leave a massive visible scar right at the transition zone that you will inevitably have to spend another year trying to hide with grafts anyway. just do a dense follicular unit extraction transplant to lower the hairline naturally. as for stem cell therapy, it is an overpriced gimmick with zero structural return on investment. it is a luxury skin texture treatment that will do absolutely nothing for your facial bone structure or projection. [1]
your local surgeon was actually giving you high-iq advice by recommending just the lower bleph and fat graft for your infraorbital hollowing. custom implants like silicone, porex, or peek are the only things that actually fix true skeletal infraorbital deficiency, but putting solid implants into a face that is already undergoing an otoplasty, upper bleph, lower bleph, and fat grafting all at once is begging for a massive, unmanageable infection. implants require absolute sterility and a stable environment to integrate with the bone. if you force a surgeon in turkey to cram implants under your eyes while your entire face is a swollen, bruised warzone from four other procedures, you are going to end up in a botched thread. do the blephs and otoplasty first, see how much volume the fat graft actually restores once the swelling dies down at the six-month mark, and only then look into custom implants if your bone structure is still completely recessed. [1]
did your local surgeon say your hollowing is from a recessed orbital rim bone or is it just genetic fat pad deficiency under the eye?
What about a transplant do you think this is okay to combine with fat grafting, upper and lower blepharoplasty, and otoplasty. And also can I combine with a medial canthoplasty to fix my canthus. Mine is literally neutral but I have that horrible exposed red lacrimal caruncle. I wanted to tighten that area up. Any high IQ advice here master? 🙏
 

Similar threads

I will ASCEND Jacky
Replies
5
Views
48
oyjah
oyjah
bigboi69
Replies
6
Views
41
7Azcendr7
7Azcendr7
n6j
Replies
6
Views
77
jozsef316@gmail
jozsef316@gmail
Athmozz
Replies
12
Views
106
lordway
lordway
hello_qwerty1234
  • Article
Replies
5
Views
87
3xiler
3xiler

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top