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October 28, 2016 | celebrity | Lex Jurgen | 0 Comments
Olivia Newton-John’s now thirty year old daughter and occasional invite to Hollywood parties is speaking out to young women about body dysmorphia. Chloe Lattanzi manages not to mention her enormous fake breasts as part of the hindsight learning lesson:
When I was in the height of my body dysmorphia, I had a whole bunch of fillers. I’ve had that all removed from my face because I like the way I look naturally.
What about those massive honkers? Why throw the baby out with the bathwater, eh?
Lattanzi cites social media as the greatest cause of so much consteranation and disappointment among young women about their bodies. There’s so much criticism about looks and flaws and suggestions on how to appear sexier. There’s also an option not to post titty selfies, though it’s rarely used. Or get a real job where you don’t have eight extra hours a day to spin in circles over superficial nonsense. Though nobody’s putting you on daytime television to talk about the grueling swing shift at UPS.
Body dysmorphia used to be called being a naturally insecure teenaged girl. It’s how boys ever got laid in high school. There’s a move among Millennials to make every regrettable feeling an illness. Illness implies it can be fixed. As opposed to life isn’t perfect and here’s one of the reasons why. Those tits are fabulous. If it makes you feel any better, nobody’s looking at your face.
Photo Credit: Instagram