Prominent crow’s feet are evidence of a life full of smiles, laughter and a bank of happy memories. Absolute bliss, right? Right.
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And if we were offered a life full of smile-induced wrinkles or flawless skin and seemingly unhappier days, there’s no question which we’d choose. The flawless skin. Every day of the week.
Just joking. Happy memories. Obviously.
But luckily for us, science has prevailed yet again and we have the option to explore the best of both worlds. Now that should give you something to really smile about.
Preventative Botox. We’ve all heard of it, we’ve probably all scoffed at it. But the truth is, it works.
Having had it explained to me in layman’s terms, I was given the comparison of our skin and it operating no differently to a piece of fabric. You take that fabric, scrunch it up, stretch it back out and it’ll return to its original state. Repeat the process and again, the fabric will return just as it originally was. Repeat it a few more times, and as you stretch the fabric back out, you’ll notice that the creases that developed while it was being scrunched have now permanently imprinted the fabric.
Well, it’s the same deal with crow’s feet, smile lines, frown lines and all active movements of the face.
So as my crow’s feet deepened and it became clear that minimal-to-no smiling or laughing was never going to be a realistic option, off I went to my first preventable injectables appointment, AKA my first experience with Botox.
What exactly is Botox again?
First things first, Botox is actually just a brand name (some brilliant marketing work, props to those guys) for the neurotoxic protein botulinum toxin, AKA anti-wrinkle injectables.
Botulinum toxin is responsible for blocking the signals from the nerve to the muscles so that the muscles no longer contract which in turn ‘freezes’ the face and smoothes out any lines.
And in the case of preventative Botox, the stuff stops creases from developing and deepening more permanently.
Why I wanted under-eye Botox
My timeline went a little bit like this: I initially clocked my crow’s feet in a photo of myself. After thinking I was just super tired, I began to notice them again, and then again, and then again. Enlisting the help of an airbrushing app on my phone, I tried and failed to smudge them out each time I smiled in a photo.
From there, I started amping up my use of eye creams and anti-ageing serums with a particular focus on retinol-heavy formulas. I found the texture of my skin to visibly improve, but the creases weren’t going anywhere.
Next, I religiously used the NuFACE Fix Device, which applies gentle microcurrent energy to plump and smooth out fine lines around your eyes, lips and forehead. And while I definitely saw an improvement (particularly around my lip area), I still had a bee in my bonnet about my crow’s feet.
And thus, the Botox research began. I spoke to friends who have been Botox’ing for years, most of which had only done it in their foreheads and never around their eyes. I went to a free consultation where I very quickly found myself having a two year plan mapped out that involved cheek filler, lifting the eyelids and me, swiftly exiting never to return.
From the get-go, my goal was never complete smoothness. And I didn’t say yes to Botox until I found someone who understood this sentiment completely. As Nurse Aata (the woman whom I ended up entrusting with my face) put it, I didn’t want to look “like a glazed doughnut”. Wrinkles and fine lines are a sign of warmth, personality and lived experience. Qualities that I had no business parting with. So although I was happy to say sayonara to my relatively weathered, tired and scrunched up looking skin, I still wanted to hang on to the ability to express emotion.
My experience…
Before we begin, a little reminder: just like every beauty treatment, product or piece of advice, Botox isn’t for everyone. Some people loathe the very mention of it while others consider it no bigger deal than a routine facial.
We’re surrounded by celebrities who swear by it, and others who flat out deny ever going near the stuff (highly skeptical of a few, but that’s a conversation for another day).
The bottom line is, if it makes you happy, do as you please.
Only a few weeks into my first experience, I can already say that I’ll be a regular customer (if financial circumstances allow) for life.
From walking into Evolution Laser Clinics and meeting Nurse Aata for the first time, to saying goodbye and heading home, the experience (minus my 300 patiently-answered questions) took no longer than 20 minutes.
I’ve always commended myself for having a relatively high pain threshold (this is based purely off my mum telling me so), and I rated my Botox experience as fairly pain-free.
I found it to be less painful than a skin needling treatment and for another semi-random, ballpark comparison, I’d also describe it as less painful and uncomfortable than laser hair removal.
A large part of this I can confidently attribute to the superstar administering the treatment. There’s no question that anything near your eyes can set off an instant panic. And Nurse Aata put me at complete ease.
Arming both hands with two love heart-shaped stress balls to squish when the needle went in, her cues to “breathe in and breathe out” took my mind off the sharp jabs and put me into a complete state of focusing on nothing but the timing of my inhalation (I’m not comparing Botox to meditation, I swear).
Once the pricks (three on either side, a total of four units on each eye) were complete (a feeling comparable to sharp nails quickly pinching your skin), I was half expecting to look in the mirror to see little red dots, maybe some bruising, and some sort of sign that read “SHE’S JUST HAD BOTOX” as I navigated myself through the car park on the way out.
Nada. No evidence, and alas, no sign of my new crease-free face yet.
Taking a maximum of two weeks to see the full effects, I can openly say I spent the next 14 days smiling into every mirror and reflective surface I could find, eagerly monitoring the progress.
The final verdict?
I loved it. This is a treatment that delivers results. My crow’s feet have left the building and my skin looks softer, brighter and as if I’ve wiped my record clean of all the 30 degree days spent sans SPF. I can confidently whip out my largest, cheesiest grin without it instantly ageing me. I feel youthful, but not frozen. Improved, but not different.
Luckily for me, Nurse Aata left no stone unturned when it came to discussing my personal desired goals and outcomes.
Explaining to me that you can go soft rather than smooth, she’s an absolute wizard at mastering the sweet spot between keeping your face moving naturally but smoothing it out enough so it’s essentially crease-free.
Post-appointment, I felt no tightness, nor did I experience feeling “frozen” as I’d so often read about.
And no, it’s not cheap.
But would you really expect a substance being injected into your face to be a bargain?
The anti-wrinkle crow’s feet package at Evolution Laser Clinics will set you back around $250 for a session that will last you anywhere between three to four months (everyone responds differently).
Main image credit: Getty
Your crows feet are nothing. Mine are cross crossed both ways. I don’t like them but I am living with them. I do love the after photo though, you can see the improvement.
Interesting article. I am noticing fine lines under my eyes too and not happy with them.
Smile lines they like to say!
I’m not sure how I feel about Botox. You hear so many horror stories about it gone wrong, but then you see stories like this where it is such a success. Oh well, can’t really afford it right now anyway.
I’d rather Botox or Dysport than filler!
Very informative article about Botox Injections around the eyes at the moment I am 60 years old and have kept crows feet at bay through using good quality Eye Creams.
I dilute my regular moisturiser with serums and use that as eye cream! Such a delicate area!
Wow! You look so young Ruby (?) in the first photo and in the second photo you look seven. : ) It really does work. I’m not sure I’m so brave as you!
Gorgeous comment CCW! Bless!
If it involves needles then its a no go for me.
I agree too scared of needles.
I’m with you. Needles in the face noooooo……
I can think of something worse that I regularly experience- needles in the soles of feet!
Oh wow, thanks for sharing your experience, Ruby! Very very interesting.
Omg they don’t numb the area?! I don’t think I could handle that
They probably do numb it!
I don’t really have crows feet (well, not too badly), but I do have fine-ish lines that are particularly bad around the outer corner of my left eye heading south & inward. They’re getting worse as the years go by & they do bother me on occasion, but I’m neither brave nor cashed up enough to attempt Botox.
Try a tiny amount of retinol or an even tinier amount of a titrated retinoid!
I’m not afraid of needles but afraid to have a foreign substance in my body, I have so many allergies to medicines, chemicals, food etc I just cant risk it.
The results do look amazing so a great product for those who can afford and tolerate the procedure.
Each to everyone’s personal preference also everyone needs a nurse Aata that can make a first appointment comfortable and patient at ease.
I am also not brave enough to get injectables especially around the eye area.
I do same as you Ruby. NuFace (testing also if red LED will do extra things), skincare (main acids and retinol to resurface and smooth the skin, eye area as well as face, all same) . Still ok in terms of situation with lines (they do appear on the eye area when I am grinning like mad , that is normal in everyone). Otherwise all good. Thank you for sharing the experience! Well does not seem expensive, comparing how much we spend on skincare! (and some people on makeup too). Loove your results!
How is the NuFace? I’m very curious!
Interesting Seashells! I have also fineish lines developing on the left eye too. Strange. Not both sides equally (can’t see much on the right side when static, no smiling). My left eye is “lazy” so I thought muscles there subconsciously tighten to focus all the time? Meh, who cares. So are we injecting stuff on the left side then? haha
I have a bag that’s developed under my left eye!
Would love to hear thoughts on this
Interesting article, thanks for sharing.
I’ve always said I wouldn’t touch Botox but as I’m ageing and showing it more and more. I’m not sure if I will stick to it…
My tips on managing crows feet? Sadly I have no tips to reduce them or remove them. I just manage to live with them.
Needles anywhere freak me out. I do all i can to avoid them. There is no way I would pay someone to use needles on me.
Appreciate the details and the pictures! It’s good to know these things are available, though I’ve come to terms with my wrinkles!
Great results. Not something I’d try though.
My tip for managing crow’s feet is denial, haha!
Thanks for the blow by blow description of the process. I’m surprised at how natural the results look, Ruby – no frozen face at all!
Still, I wouldn’t spend that much.
Now here is a use for Botox I could get behind! Although I do have to say that I’m at the point in life where I really don’t care all that much if my face creases when I smile, which is nice.
Definitely see an improvement – I would have expected to see bruising around that sensitive part of the face.
A couple hundred bucks every few months… no thanks!
If the results lasted a year I would consider.
Very good point Yoh. When you think about how much money we spend on expensive creams and lotions the botox doesn’t seem that expensive but I think it sounds a lot because the cost is in one hit and not spread versus a tube of eye cream per month over a period of four months.
Great read Ruby. I’m a little too apprehensive to take the botox step. The crows feet don’t bother me too much, its the under eye crinkles that get to me. The cost and the idea of a needle getting that close to my eyes worries me.
I tried Botox twice a few years ago whilst I was looking for a job. It is expensive to keep up the treatment.
Keep in mind if you do decide to try it make sure your Operator is medically qualified. An injection into a nerve can leave you with a droopy eye.
The results are fantastic, not something for me though.
I didn’t see a real difference… Sorry…
Yeah, I have silk pillowcase and saw no difference when using regular. But have buckwheat hull filled pillow. This one you adjust so face just hovers (so comfy!!!) cradled neck/shoulder, scull and even ear is not squished (when you press into hulls to make a tiny dent)! You mold it to your liking. Neck aligned so perfectly etc. And no face in the pillow ever. Game changer for me (as a side sleeper, can’t stand my face being pillow stuffed). Even foam is not good. I had all sorts of pillows, buckwheat one is best! I sleep most of the night on right side, no lines ever when I wake up.
I think it’s due to my tendency to sleep on my left side. I’ve noticed I have a habit of squishing my face into the pillow & even though I now sleep with a silk pillowcase & wear a silk eye mask to bed (yes, I know, I’m a terrible person :oP), I can still wake up crinkly.
This is an interesting read. I wouldn’t have it done because I’m not that worried about the minimal fine lines around my eyes. Besides, I’d be way too frightened that something would go wrong.
I think this was a great article and I do get botox from a friend that I trust and love the feeling of looking less wrinkled, but I am 48.
Interesting reading, but alas this treatment is way out of my affordability. I’ll just have to “look my age” ( but I will refuse to “act my age” Ha.)
There is a slight difference but I am not sure whether I would consider it is worth the expensive upkeep let alone the risk of something going wrong as no matter how skilled the technician, they are still only human and mistakes can still be made.
You look gorgeous both pre & post procedure.
The results are subtle & natural. If I got Botox this is the result I’d choose, however as I no longer work it s unaffordable .
Good article. although i see no difference
Yes, very natural!
Only a slight difference if you are looking really close to someone’s face.
Looks like it works in the before and after photos
It looks to me like the smile in the second pic is less wide, therefore less wrinkles showing. I might be wrong….
I think my crows feet (claws) are here to stay.
Just eye cream.
I’m lucky that I don’t have crow’s feet, just really dark genetic under eye circles instead lol. Can’t have it all. If I did I’d definitely consider botox if I had the money to splurge. Rather use it on my forehead expression lines
Nice to see the photos of how it actually works. Not sure i will consider this even it is cheap.
Ruby, thank you for sharing your experience with Botox, but it’s not for me.
I don’t think I’d try this, I’m not a fan of needles.