Tracy Kiss has had four boob jobs, a Brazilian butt lift, a designer vagina, a nose job, two rounds of laser eye surgery, and once flew to Turkey to have three operations in a single day.
She has now decided she would rather look like herself.
The 38-year-old from Buckinghamshire, a former Page 3 model, spent more than £100,000 over two decades building an appearance that, by her own account, stopped feeling like hers.
READ MORE: I blew £4K on World Cup bets in five weeks – it spiralled into £250K of debt and cost me EVERYTHING
The eyelid reduction, jawline work and liposuction in Turkey were among the last of it.

Now she is going the other way, reversing what she can and living without the rest for the first time in 20 years.
What “stripping back” actually means
Tracy has had her implants downsized rather than removed.
Taking them out entirely would leave loose skin, so for now they stay, smaller than before.
The Botox has stopped. So have the fillers.
Makeup has shrunk to a BB cream when her rosacea flares and a bit of eyeshadow and lip stain for the occasional event.

The rest of the time, nothing.
“When I got to the point where my external appearance no longer resembled my internal personality, heart and soul, I made the decision to reverse my past surgical choices,” she told Creatorzine.
She hopes the implants can eventually go altogether, replaced one day with reconstruction using her own fat cells.
The technology is not there yet. She is waiting.
From weekly upkeep to £300 a year
The maintenance now costs less than £300 a year.

Her dead ends get trimmed every six weeks, she moisturises daily, and she uses a red light therapy mask a few times a week.
That is the whole routine.
Before, it ran to weekly nail and lash extensions, fake tan, monthly Botox and fillers, regular hair dye, and the surgery itself.
The gap between the two is most of the point.
“Life is about being the best version of ourselves, not a clone of several celebrities who happen to be in fashion at the moment,” she said.

“Returning to my natural appearance felt like coming home.
Now, I’m accepted and complimented for how I actually look morning, noon and night.”
She still believes in surgery
Tracy has not turned against the industry.
People should be free to change their bodies however they like, she says.
She would just like the people holding the scalpel to slow down.
“I do think patient requests should be questioned by surgeons,” she said.

“In an ideal world, where money is no object, I think most people seeking plastic surgery would love to change multiple aspects of their appearance.
But they don’t truly understand the impact this will have on them for the rest of their lives.”
Her thirties, she says, were the turning point. “I can’t turn back time to not having had unsuitable surgeries, but I can be the voice of reason for others to not make the same mistakes that I did in the past.”
Why it matters
For a creator, the face and body are the product, and Tracy spent twenty years and six figures shaping hers around what sold.

The reversal is its own kind of content.
And it arrives at a moment when “natural” is quietly outperforming “perfect”.
Audiences have soured on the filtered and the injected, and a creator who visibly undoes both is reading the room.
The wider move is already on. Anti-Botox posts, the rise of “de-influencing”, creators filming themselves getting filler dissolved.
Authenticity has become a sellable position, which is a strange thing for authenticity to become.
What happens next rests partly on science Tracy does not yet have.
The implants are the one thing she cannot simply stop paying for.


