MY OBSESSION WITH BOTOX STARTED INNOCENTLY ENOUGH, WITH a routine visit
to my Hollywood dermatologist. I'd always had an unsightly frown
line between my eyebrows, but I used to consider it the mark of
a deep thinker. Living in southern California, I had heard a lot
about the cosmetic uses of botulinum toxin in recent years. Injected
just underneath the skin in the form of a product called Botox,
the toxin relaxes wrinkles by paralyzing the underlying facial
muscles. The effects typically last three to four months. In high
concentrations, botulinum toxin is a deadly poison. But Botox uses
extremely diluted doses. I confessed my curiosity to the doctor,
though the idea of having a potential biological weapon injected
into my face made me a little queasy. My doctor assured me that
the injection would take only a second. Just moments after agreeing
to s it, my forehead was relaxing in a state of botulism-induced
bliss.
A
few days later I noticed a difference: the frown line
between my eyebrows had disappeared! I was hooked. Now
millions of other American women can be, too; the Food
and Drug Administration recently approved the toxin for
temporary wrinkle removal. Mind you, most women in my
part of the country couldn't care less if Botox had FDA
approval or not. Statistics show that more than 1.6 million
cosmetic Botox procedures were performed in the United
States last year, and I'll bet that most of those were
in Los Angeles. Still, millions of women in America's
heartland — not to mention the rest of the world — are
unfamiliar with the wonders of a little shot of poison
in the face.
Not me. Increasingly comfortable with the procedure, I decide to try
a "Brows and Botox" event at the trendy Valerie Beverly Hills
cosmetics salon. I arrive fashionably late and leave my car with the
parking valet. Inside, I find dozens of denim- and Prada-clad women
nibbling finger sandwiches and sipping Perrier. Alcohol is a no-no;
it's hard to give informed consent to a medical procedure if you're
tipsy.
First
salon owner Valerie Sarnelle waxes each woman's eyebrows
into McDonald's arches. Then Dr. Jessica Wu, a Harvard
Medical School-trained cosmetic dermatologist, discreetly
shoots up the women with Botox as they sit in a makeup
artist's chair. The scene is a little jarring, like finding
a Clinique counter in a methadone clinic.
Like me, most of the women have been Botoxed before but have come to
sample the doctor's "technique." The buzz is that Wu's gentle
touch has earned her a celebrity following. She won't give names, but
discloses that before this year's Oscars, she made house calls to three
female presenters to give them Botox shots in their armpits. "It
eliminates perspiration," says Wu.
After
Sarnelle shapes my eyebrows and graces me with fake mink
eyelashes, I am ready for Wu. I worry for an instant
that the good doctor might deny me my fix. After all,
my last Botox shot is still working. But Wu takes one
look at me and determines that I am a prime candidate. "Around
the eyes," she proclaims. Wu and her two medical
assistants set up tidy rows of gauze, Q-Tips, gloves
and a biohazard-disposal pail.
As an assistant holds an ice-filled cloth to my face, I sign a consent
form. The doctor opens up two small vials, then hovers over me, needle
in hand. "Smile. Relax. Smile. Relax," she instructs, trying
to determine the exact latitude of my crow's feet. Two or three faint
pinches on each side of my eyes, and I'm done. That's it — no
stinging, no soreness. Days later I'm not aware of any new sensations — or
losing any old ones.
The other women at the event gather around me for a look. "You
know, you should catch the corners of your mouth before they start
to droop too much more," one suggests helpfully. Joleen Rizzo,
39, an Emmy Award-winning makeup artist, frets about living in a town
obsessed with looks and age. "Our standards are so much higher
here," she says. "I'm sure if I lived on some farm in Iowa,
I couldn't care less about Botox."
By die end of the afternoon, the Brows and Botox event evolves into
one big support group. I feel oddly close to these women 1 barely know,
as if we have shared some important rite of passage together and emerged
better—or at least better-looking—for it. Collectively,
we encourage Abbe Hausner, 45, to take the Botox plunge, but she remains
wary. "I think for my first time, I'd rather do it in private," she
says. Not me. From now on, I'm Botoxing in public.
© NEWSWEEK MAY 20, 2002