欧宝娱乐

Botox Quotes

Quotes tagged as "botox" Showing 1-11 of 11
John M. Gottman
“We move in response to our conversation partner鈥檚 face, and our brain also fires as we move those muscles and stirs the passions. Paralyzing the face is idiotic.”
John Gottman

John Sandford
“The thing about Botox is that when you've had too much, you then have to fake reactions just to look human--and it's impossible to distinguish real fake reactions from fake fake reactions.”
John Sandford, Invisible Prey

Aggie Blum Thompson
“We are at that age where men get sexier, and women get Botox.”
Aggie Blum Thompson, I Don't Forgive You

Jenny  Lawson
“The most unsettling part of the visit, however, came when the doctor casually asked if I鈥檇 ever considered having any work done, as they were having a special on Botox. Then I stabbed him in the knee with a pen. But just in my mind, because you can never find a pen when you really need one. In reality I just told him that I wasn鈥檛 a fan of paying money to inject paralyzing poison into my face and that I was actually quite proud of my laugh lines, which I view as a badge that tells people I鈥檓 not an asshole. He countered that it was really the frown line between my eyebrows that he鈥檇 focus on. I pointed out that I鈥檇 gone through a lot of living to get that frowny wrinkle and I wasn鈥檛 about to erase it now.
鈥淢Y HUSBAND MADE THAT LINE,鈥� I said, with a defensiveness that surprised even me. 鈥淭his line represents every time I have ever argued with him about everything in the damn world. It鈥檚 a line that says, 鈥楧on鈥檛 cross me or I will cut you.鈥� It鈥檚 practically a medal for time served and I EARNED IT.”
Jenny Lawson, Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things

Lisa Daily
“Botox is as common as seagulls in Sarasota, but most of the women I know who use the dermatologist鈥檚 little helper still have full range of expression. Except squinting, of course.”
Lisa Daily, Single-Minded

“Clostridium botulinum: Found in jams and preserves that weren't prepared properly, this bad bug produces one of the deadliest toxins on Earth-it enters our nerve cells and paralyzes them. Marketed as Botox, it's injected into people's foreheads to make wrinkles disappear!”
Jennifer Gardy, It's Catching: The Infectious World of Germs and Microbes

“We are here for helping you with your problems.At Cosmetic Laser Dermatology in San Diego are experts who regularly use Botox, Dysport, or Xeomin to minimize the appearance of frown lines in their patients.So what are you waiting for.Book your appointment today for your best treatment.”
BotoxSandiego

“Wrinkles on my weather-beaten face and hands mirror untold stories of those in the frozen ground whose crosses and headstones bear the same aged features. Wrinkles of joy and creases of laughter join in to create the landscape of this face. With today鈥檚 world of Botox and ageless beauty, are we too quick to dye grey hair and remove the well-earned crow鈥檚 feet that portray remarkable lives lived?”
Katherine Keith

Soroosh Shahrivar
“It started with a nose job, a staple in one out of every five Iranians, when she was in her mid-twenties. Then it was Botox. Then a face-lift. Now she's one strike away from being a bona fide palang, the name Iranians give to women who've had more touch-ups than a brush on a canvas. The word means "leopard" and Sahar believes the more operations she has, the higher the chance of her finding a husband.”
Soroosh Shahrivar, Tajrish

Donna Goddard
“While there鈥檚 nothing wrong with looking our best, our best is predominantly an inside affair. With modern technology and money, people can make themselves look considerably ageless. However, it is not the right type of agelessness. If we age gracefully and with minimal intervention, then we and those around us are reminded of the movement of time and the preciousness of life. Otherwise, the botoxed face can get quite a shock when death does not heed its camouflaged face.”
Donna Goddard, Love Matters

Louis Yako
“Botox"
In a friendly exchange with a shopper in a grocery story line, she joyfully declared:
鈥淭oday is my 50th birthday!鈥�
I said, 鈥淚t looks like the hands of Time have touched your face gently. Happy birthday!鈥�
鈥淭he hands of Time weren鈥檛 gentle on me, my dear. What you see are the wonders of botox,鈥� she said.
鈥淭hey say it freezes face features and expressions. Is that true?鈥� I inquired half-jokingly.
鈥淎t this stage of my life, it makes no difference. I no longer need any expressions. There is nothing worth smiling for or frowning upon. I spent decades expressing in every physical and verbal way possible, all in vain,鈥� she said. Her words were followed by a hopeless giggle that reminded me of the philosopher who wrote that as we advance in age, our fears are replaced with giggles.
She then continued, 鈥淭here is a time when you discover that all verbal and physical expressions are futile. In everyone鈥檚 life, there鈥檚 one defining event that freezes everything in their lives. Anything that happens after that event is no more than desperate and hopeless attempts to pretend that we are okay.鈥�
Before I managed to find the appropriate words, the cashier called on her. The timing was ideal as words froze on my tongue just like the botox freezes features and expression in a world in which words and expressions are of no use anymore.

[Original text published in Arabic on October 14, 2024 at ahewar.org]”
Louis Yako