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Who's my surgeon? Click here
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The
Plan
Applying the principles of beauty I learned as an art student, including
centuries-old rules of facial and body proportion, along with some
basic anthropological laws of human attraction, I drew up a plan
based on the following Wish List. Never in a million years did I
ever expect to eventually be able to check off every single one as
a fait accompli! |
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My
Wish List from 1988
I wanted:
- Larger, less tired-looking eyes
- A small feminine nose
- High cheekbones
- Fuller, better-shaped lips
- Perfect white teeth
- A smaller, more delicate jaw and chin
- To have just the one chin
- To eradicate premature facial wrinkles and acne scarring
- A flawless, unlined complexion
- A defined waistline and flat stomach
- To lose my love handles, saddlebags and cellulite
- Thinner thighs and slimmer knees
- To get rid of flab left over from being 50 lbs. overweight in the '70s.
- Not to have to wear a lifetime of hardship etched on my face
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The Raw Material
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My Procedures List
I had:
- Eye lifts
- Nose jobs
- Cheek implants
- Lip enhancement
- Cosmetic Dentistry
- Chin reduction
- Jaw reshaped
- Facelifts
- Breast implants in
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- Breast implants out
- Dermabrasion
- Chemical peels
- Fat transfers
- Liposuction
- Filler injections
- Laser treatment
- And much more...
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Caution:
Do not try this at home! Some of these procedures were a waste of
time and others had to be re-done. Full details of what works and
what doesn't are explained in my book Image and Cosmetic Surgery
Secrets.
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The
Result
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The Facts
Some highly inventive media folk keep "reporting" various
outlandish versions of what I've had done, claiming that I've
undergone almost 50 full-scale operations and spent tens of
thousands of dollars more than I actually did. (As if the truth
wasn't sensational enough!) It never ceases to amaze me just
how far some members of the press will go to spread confusion
about cosmetic surgery to their readers.* The
correct details of my surgery have been in the public domain
for years and are also fully recounted in my books so there's
really no excuse for such poor journalism. Once again for the
record, I've had 9 operations and spent less than the cost
of a new mid-range family car. Here's the breakdown:
I've had nine operations under general anaesthetic
over the past 21 years. Three of those were done in the 1980s
when I was just starting out. Two of the nine ops were to correct
the results of the latter. (Knowing what I know now, I could
have done everything in four operations!) Some operations encompassed
more than one procedure at a time, like a nose job plus liposuction,
lip enhancement and fat transfer. The relatively minor cosmetic
treatments that were not done by surgeons (nor required anaesthetic),
such as light chemical peels, permanent makeup, cosmetic dentistry,
filler injections, etc., are received in-office or at a salon
and are not by definition "operations."
*An old photograph of Miles Kendall
(whose had 2 operations, each encompassing several procedures)
and me dressed as Ken and Barbie is now making the "news" rounds.
We posed for it as a joke for a spoof feature in the UK's Now
Magazine back in 2001. For some reason a lot of newspapers
and internet gossip sites are only now running this picture
as serious "news" and claiming we've had 89 operations
and spent around a quarter of a million dollars on surgery!
Some of these stories have made me laugh out loud in spite
of myself. But on a more serious note, I've heard from a number
of patients over the years who allowed the press to "report" on
their surgery or have it filmed for television and ended up
bitterly regretting it because of the way they were falsely
portrayed. Considering how many hundreds of thousands of people
the world over have had, or are planning to have, some form
of cosmetic surgery, is it any wonder so few people admit it
and even fewer are willing to go public? |
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Since
no one had ever done this before, I had no role models to follow.
In fact I was told that it wasn't even possible, as there are
three rules in cosmetic surgery: 1) You can't make a plain person
attractive, 2) You can't change bone structure, 3) You can't
take more than 10 years off a face. I broke all three rules and
set a world record. I also wanted to look convincingly natural,
not plastic or "done." In the beginning there was a
lot of trial and error, and taking one step forward and two steps
back. But I never gave up and eventually got there in the end.
Now it doesn't matter that I never got to be a cheerleader!
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The Verdict
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When
Ohio native Cindy Jackson decided to transform her face, she followed
what she calls 'some basic anthropological laws of human attraction.'
None of this surprises researchers studying physical attraction... Perceptions
of beauty are universal and automatic, they say, in direct response
to specific facial characteristics.
Lynn Smith, The Los Angeles Times |
With
laser-beam precision, she has repositioned tissue, cartilage and
bone to transform herself into one of the most desirable women
of the late 20th century.
Corinna Honan,
The Daily
Telegraph |
She
altered her appearance with plastic surgery, emerging as a kind
of self-proclaimed test of the correlation between looks and success.
Hugh Downs, ABC 20/20 |
A
true scientist behind a beautiful mask.
Dr. Neil Shulman, author of the book and hit movie, 'Doc Hollywood' |
A
woman that has everything going for her. She is very bright, very
accomplished and very successful.
Jerry Springer, The Jerry Springer Show |
Cindy
is sitting opposite me... With her blonde hair, her pouty lips,
and her cute button nose, I have the weird sensation that all my
sexual buttons are being pushed. Which of course they are... Beneath
that plastic façade is an extremely intelligent woman.
David Thomas, The Daily Express |
You've
seen her on television, you've seen her in all the newspapers,
but Cindy Jackson in the perfect flesh still comes as a surprise.
She is much slimmer than you expect and much, much prettier. Not
Bionic Woman, not a Barbie doll, but intelligent, direct, engaging
and, here's the paradox, real.
Ruth Gorb, H&H Express |
Her
youthful looks and superb body have little to do with Mother Nature.
On meeting Cindy, her cool blonde perfection is intimidating. But
as she starts talking, it's clear she's still an unaffected small-town
girl at heart.
Paula Jones, The Sun |
Farm-girl
turned cover-girl.
Wendy Leigh, The Sunday Mirror |
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For
Cindy Jackson, the high priestess of cosmetic surgery, the pursuit
of perfection transformed her from nerdy nobody to one of London's
most beautiful sirens. Cindy truly is the ultimate makeover.
Sophie
Blyth, Cover Shots |
Some
women who've had cosmetic surgery look grotesque. Cindy looks great.
Candice
Bergen, Oxygen
TV |
She
has a beauty queen's face that won't fade with time or dull from
a dazzling socialite lifestyle. Her treatments read like a cosmetic
surgeon's manual. The details of which would make your blood curdle.
Katrina
Tweedie, Daily Record |
It
took determination - and a lot of money - to turn Cindy from an
average looking woman into a head-turning stunner.
Carol
Johnson, First For Women |
Undergoing
everything from facelifts to liposuction to nose jobs, she transformed
herself from a plain Ohio farm girl to a glamorous beauty.
Cathy
Stapells, Toronto Sun |
Her
metamorphosis began in 1988. From that point on, Cindy began to
completely redesign her face and body... A living breathing doll
brought to life by a surgeon's scalpel.
Todd
Newton, Plastic Surgery on E! |
She
has a Barbie doll body and a Hollywood face.
Esther
Oxford, The Independent on Sunday |
She
has a perfect face, a perfect figure and she looks about 20 years
younger than her age. Her image is so smooth and seamless you would
think she was the original, carefree natural beauty. This blonde
stunner who is now the toast of the London party circuit was once
a frumpy US farm girl.
Vicky
Davidson, Sunday Mail |
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Hers
is the modern fairy-tale of the archetypal ugly duckling who was
determined to be a swan... She is quite open about her odyssey
for a complete aesthetic overhaul. Facelifts, two nose jobs, three
eye operations, a permanent lip enlargement and fat-filling procedure,
three chemical peels and a dermabrasion, two breast operations
and four liposuctions later, the plain girl from Ohio looks Barbie-pretty
- highlighted blonde hair, picture-book profile, sleek limbs, hourglass
figure.
Deborah Hutton, Vogue Magazine |
Is
Jackson's quest to make herself physically attractive extreme?
By everyday standards, yes. Is it entirely misguided? Perhaps not.
Research demonstrates that it sometimes pays to be physically attractive.
Steven Neuberg, PhD, Social Psychology (University textbook) |
A
woman who looks 20 years younger than her age with an intellect
and understanding of human behaviour 20 years beyond her age. Cindy's
real-life perspective is amazingly consistent with volumes of scientific
research conducted by top scholars at universities around the world.
Gordon L. Patzer PhD, author of 'The Physical Attractiveness Phenomena' |
Cindy
Jackson has taken her innate brilliance and raw courage and sculpted
a Botticelli. She is magnificent.
Dr. Stephen Marquardt, Originator of the Golden Mask that mathematically
quantifies beauty. |
Since
1988 she has had just about every op going to transform herself
from farm girl to blonde bombshell... Living doll Cindy boasts
an IQ of 164 and Mensa membership to counter any bimbo image.
Paula Jones, Sunday Magazine |
This
is not a stereotypical ditzy blonde. She's incredibly bright and
has been very calculating about making these changes to transform
her life.
Leeza Gibbons, the Leeza Show |
Frequently
described as Barbie-made-flesh, it is a grave mistake to assume
that she is in any way Barbie-brained. Unique in having lived with
two faces, she is under no illusions as to which has given her
most power. Any theory that personality can sometimes win the day
is swept away as grown men literally dribble in her presence.
Janie Lawrence, Life |
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The
result is stunning. Ms. Jackson looks 25 and only has to step outside
her luxury Melbourne hotel to turn heads.
Veronica Matheson, Sunday Magazine (Australia) |
During
our interview that night I never felt so ugly in my entire life
as I witnessed man after man coming up to Jackson and telling her
that she was the most beautiful woman he ever saw. Not a single
man even glanced at me as I was sitting at Jackson's side. It was
a humbling experience for me to say the least. I saw a confidant
Yuppie visibly shake as he gave her his card. I saw a cocky rapper
bedecked with gold jewellery go completely gaga over her. It was
then and there that I became a believer in Cindy Jackson.
Tanya Augsburg,
PhD, Thesis
on Body Modification |
I'd
do her.
Howard Stern |
She
looked better at 35 than she did at 25, and better at 45 than she
did at 35. Before I met Cindy Jackson, I would never have believed
it possible for anyone to actually get younger looking by the decade.
Eileen Spence-Moncrieff, Goodlife Magazine |
I
first interviewed Cindy about seven years ago, just as her won
remodelling programme was beginning to earn her a certain celebrity.
Since then I have become older, fatter and balder. Cindy has been
moving in the opposite direction. She is even more physically delicate
and her face seems neater and prettier than before.
David Thomas, Sunday Telegraph |
Hyperfeminized,
hyperbuffed surfaces aside, it's Cindy's spirit that's lovable.
Surgery hasn't obscured the bookish farm girl with wild dreams.
Pat Blashill, Details Magazine |
Cindy
had a lot of things stacked against her apart from her disadvantaged
childhood... After years of watching silently from the sidelines,
she was aware of the power of beauty. Like a modern day Eliza Doolittle,
the unloved and unpopular Cindy deliberately turned herself into
a beauty to live the life of her fantasies... The new Cindy lives
a charmed life.
Jane Savva, Daily Record |
I
thought she was pretty before.
Cindy's Mom |
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Rag doll: Me
at age 6. Never lose sight of your dreams
- no matter how unlikely they may seem!
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