The Aesthetic Mind
In this episode of The Aesthetic Mind, Dr. Dirk J. Kremer challenges one of the most persistent ideas surrounding ageing: the belief that the face tells a life story — and that changing it somehow means erasing something meaningful. We often hear that wrinkles reflect wisdom, suffering, joy, or experience. That the ageing face becomes a kind of emotional biography. But is that actually true? Drawing from both medical reality and years of observing patients, Dr. Kremer explores the difference between poetic narratives and biological ageing. Genetics, skin quality, tissue strength, fat distribution, and decades of repetitive facial movement shape the ageing face far more than the emotional events of a person’s life. This episode also examines something deeper: why so many people feel emotionally disconnected from their ageing reflection. Not because they are denying age, but because they no longer recognise the face they have identified with for most of their adult life. Far from being an attempt to “erase a story,” aesthetic surgery is explored here as something more subtle — an effort to preserve continuity, familiarity, and the alignment between inner identity and outer appearance. A reflective and thought-provoking conversation about ageing, authenticity, perception, and the psychology of recognition.
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