ve all seen pictures of them; they're people who treat cosmetic surgeries like they're massages. The more they have, the better they claim to feel. Any way you slice it, these people have more plastic than an in-debt college student.
Yes, it's tempting to have additional procedures, but plastic surgery can be as addictive as any drug. The sign that you're in a constant quest for—watch my fingers making quote marks in the air—"perfection" is that you're planning your next surgery as soon as you're finished the one before it.
So, yes, find your trouble spots and decide what will make you happy. Then pick an endpoint where you want your body to be, and deal with the reality of what you're going to look like when you get there. Look in the mirror, tell yourself what changes would give you satisfaction and then stop. If you can't stop—if you're constantly considering lipo-ing this, or tucking that—then it's not your skin you need checked. It's your head.
Bottom line: Before deciding on a procedure, you have to accept the fact that you're not seeking perfection; you're seeking improvements in your body and your happiness.