
The women under 30 having major anti-aging surgery — the kind once reserved for their grandmothers
NY Post
For Emily Cipryk, the decision to spend nearly $16,000 worth of plastic surgery came easy — and early.
At 28, the entrepreneurial influencer found herself looking in the mirror and having regrets about nearly a decade of failure to prioritize sleep — which she felt had left her looking tired and rundown.
The fashionable Torontonian would regularly scroll through her social media and see “beautiful women” she admired, whom she suspected had undergone cosmetic procedures. Soon, she found herself researching how she could achieve similar results. Quickly, she was on a plane to Turkey.
Cipryk is among the growing number of women barely pushing 30 are openly signing up for major cosmetic surgeries to stave off signs of aging — even as experts warn they’re only creating a new set of problems for themselves down the line as they grow older.
These women, from NYC and around the world, are still at the age where spending time and funds on makeup hauls, hair appointments, and skincare treatments is par for the cultural course.
But there’s a new, pricey wrinkle in their self-care routines — a growing, social media-fueled pressure to preserve their youth for as long as humanly possible.

The killing of Iran’s tyrannical Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei on Saturday in an unprecedented joint military attack by the US and Israel called Operation Epic Fury set off widespread celebrations from Iranians around the world — as President Trump said it would give them their “greatest chance” to “take back the country.” Meanwhile, in Iran, a lack of internet has made it impossible for Iranians to easily communicate daily conditions. Over a period of three days, with limited VPN connection, an eyewitness currently in Tehran — who, for her safety, is concealing her identity — shared her account of life under a country in the midst of battle with The Post’s Natasha Pearlman.




