Greeting cards to celebrate plastic surgery

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    It cannot be denied that plastic surgery is slowly becoming a norm in the modern world where beauty is highly esteemed. Every year, the number of people going under the knife is tremendously increasing. So in order to make the most out of the situation, a North Texas entrepreneur launched a business that might earn him a huge amount of money.

    Lift Me Up greeting cards are now available for sale to those who are looking for ways to celebrate a family member’s plastic surgery makeover. The greeting cards are created by Camie Dunbar who believes that it is just appropriate for family members or friends to give encouragement and the needed ‘lifting up’ to those who have gone under the knife. Plastic surgery is a serious surgery so a little thing helps a lot in keeping your loved one encouraged in the duration of her or his recovery.

    A sample of Camie Dunbar’s greeting cards is this Botox card, which shows two characters spraying starch on each other. The message inside the card says, “Congratulations, you're now wrinkle free."

    For liposuction patients, an appropriate greeting card is also available, as well as for any other plastic surgery procedure from nose job to buttock augmentation.

    Dunbar stressed that her cards are meant to be funny and uplifting. She said that customers have sent her emails saying that the recipients of the cards were laughing so hard they thought they would burst their stitches.

    The Lift Me Up cards are available for $2.95 on Dunbar's Web site, liftmeupcards.com.

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  • Send Hallmark Back to the Drawing Board

    What's the real sickness here? Is it people taking care of themselves through plastic surgery or people who are so busy/numbed by modern life to have the time to write their own sentiments for people they care about? How is it any more crass to send a canned greeting to someone who's just had plastic surgery than it is to send one of those sappy Mother's Day cards with the washed out roses and cursive font on the cover? Maybe it's just because I work with a plastic surgery practice in Birmingham, Alabama, but I just don't see a big deal here at all. I say we require Hallmark to bring nothing but blank cards. Then people can actually express something other than store-bought emotions.

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