Maybe you've been doing this for a year. Maybe five. Every three or four months: the same appointment, the same zones, the same $400 to $600. And every time, within weeks of the injection wearing off, the same lines return — sometimes a little deeper than before. If you've quietly wondered whether this is just how it is now, you're not the only one. And it isn't your fault.
Here's what doesn't get said in the consultation: the reason your wrinkles keep coming back has nothing to do with how much Botox you're getting, how skilled the injector is, or your skin. It's the approach itself. Botox paralyzes the muscle so the wrinkle can't form when you express. The moment that paralysis wears off — around 12 to 16 weeks — the muscle moves again and the line returns. The collagen breakdown underneath, the thing that actually caused the wrinkle, has continued the entire time. Untouched.
That's not a failure of Botox. It's exactly what Botox was designed to do: mask, temporarily. But masking was never your only option. Korean dermatologists looked at this over a decade ago and asked a different question — what if you rebuilt the collagen layer underneath, where the wrinkle actually forms, instead of paralyzing the muscle on top of it?
Here are 7 reasons women are canceling their next Botox appointment and using this Korean approach instead: whether they've been getting Botox for years, were about to start, or recently lost weight and noticed new sagging that no injection seems to fix.