Julia Morris has debuted her unbelievable transformation after having a beauty process.
The Australian TV character, 55, appeared on the Instagram web page of famend Melbourne plastic surgeon, Dr Andrew Greensmith, who shared earlier than and after images of Morris, taken 5 months aside.
Dr Greensmith revealed the I’m A Celebrity … Get Me Out Of Here! co-host underwent an higher blepharoplasty [eyelid surgery] and a forehead raise earlier this 12 months.
“This lady was happy to share her journey,” he wrote alongside the images. “A really challenging heavy brow was the major contributor to the upper eyelid appearance. Not only can this surgery help improve some visual field compromise but what a wonderful refreshing and rejuvenating effect it has on the overall face.”
Morris took to the feedback part to say the process was the “Best decision I EVER made”.
She added, “You opened my eyes, on so many levels. This comment is not spon [sponsored], just wide eyed praise & so happy.”
According to healthdirect.gov.au, an upper-eyelid blepharoplasty is often carried out beneath an area anaesthetic that’s injected into the eyelids, whereas a lower-eyelid blepharoplasty would require common anaesthetic.
The mother-of-two has beforehand mentioned she’s having fun with taking time to take care of herself following her break up from her husband of 16 years, Dan Thomas, in 2021.
Several instances up to now 12 months, she’s claimed she would “never” get Tinder, and that she’s “done with sex”.
“I have been renovating my house, right, and I have made the bedroom from top to bottom pink and fluffy,” she mentioned on the Sooshi Mango Saucy Meatballs early final 12 months.
“I had two friends come over the other day, and the boy walked into my room and goes, ‘Yeah, I’m soft’. That is the idea. This is a jizz-free zone.”
While the couple’s break-up was amicable, Morris defined within the April version of Australian Women’s Weekly that it was nonetheless “super sad”.
“But there’s a lot of layers happening at the same time. I’m famous for saying I feel like every year we’re going to break up,” she mentioned.
“But it definitely gets to that same point, which is that we are just not necessarily growing in the same direction. And then once you’ve got that in your headspace, the other person starts to become quite a pest.
“I think that’s where patience starts to wear down to, ‘I’m not living like this. How is this an example for my girls that this is an OK life to lead? No thanks.’”
Source: www.news.com.au