Have you noticed how recently many celebrities, including Sherlyn Chopra and Uorfi Javed, are getting their implants and fillers removed? Recently, Chopra took to Instagram and revealed that she got her breast implants removed after suffering chronic back pain. However, this is not the first time celebs have undergone beauty procedures.
What is driving this trend? Let us explore.
Sherlyn Chopra, who underwent breast augmentation years ago, recently revealed that she has removed her implants after struggling with chronic back pain. She took to Instagram to inform fans about her decision.
Sherlyn added that the surgery was intended to restore agility, vitality, and stamina to her life.
In an earlier video, Sherlyn had said, “Hey guys, since the last couple of months, I have been enduring chronic back pain, chest pain, neck pain, shoulder pain, and also chronic pressure in my chest area. After a series of medical investigations and back and forth consultations with medical experts, I have realised that the cause of my chronic pain has been, that's right, my heavy breast implants. And so, in my best interests and to bring back agility, vitality, and stamina into my life, I have decided to have my breast implants removed once and for all.”
In choosing relief over the beauty ideal she once embodied, Sherlyn quietly spotlighted a truth rarely spoken about in glitzy headlines — cosmetic procedures come with consequences, sometimes lasting ones.
In an Instagram post on June 24, flaunting her ‘filler-free lips and face for the first time’. She captioned the photo dump, "All the trolling and the memes , honestly I had a good laugh ! Here you go this is my face without the fillers or swelling now, not used to seeing my face or lips like that. I’ve used a lip plumper here tho."
And it isn’t just India. Kylie Jenner, whose face arguably fuelled the 2016-2019 filler explosion worldwide, admitted to dissolving her lip fillers back in 2018. When a fan commented that she looked “like the old Kylie,” she responded by owning the change. It was one of the earliest mainstream acknowledgements that the overly sculpted, syringe-shaped beauty blueprint might not be the ultimate destination after all.
While personal choice is empowering, but when change stems from trend fatigue rather than individual desire, empowerment turns into pursuit — a chase without finish lines.
Whether it’s fillers or the fresh rewind, the question remains unchanged, and perhaps necessary now more than ever: Should changing trends ever dictate what we do to our bodies?