Plastic Surgeons To Give Courteney Cox Smile Implant
Courteney Cox Arquette opened up to Marie Claire magazine recently, candidly sharing what life is like for an aging actress in Hollywood. Apparently, it's a living nightmare, as you come to realize your once-radiant good looks are being ravaged by time, pulling you kicking and screaming into middle age and beyond:
"I have issues with getting older, sure," she tells the mag. "There are huge changes in my body and my face, and I obsess over them. I just try to not have too many mirrors around."
Courteney also says that while she doesn't have a problem with those who have plastic surgery, her husband, actor DAVID ARQUETTE, does. "David has a huge problem with it, but I don't. It's hard getting older; it's hard not to be the young one anymore." That, along with Courteney's admitted self-judgment, has led her back to therapy. "I was starting to notice some things, and I wanted to stop judging myself so much ... I'm such a nurturer of others, I thought maybe it was time to start nurturing myself."
Some mental health professionals may disapprove of the band-aid solution of prescribing an aggressive round of facelift therapy to battle existential blues, but then this is Hollywood, where the best way to attack the root of a problem is to address its surface. Look for one-stop happiness clinics to start springing up all over Beverly Hills, where aging, desperately insecure (but still busy!) actresses can see to all their eyelift, tooth-whitening, and molestation-discussing needs, all from the convenience of a single, automatic reclining chair over a 45-minute lunch hour.