Woman Resembles Cancer Patient After Boob Job, Gives Birth to Baby Without Fingertips

Pomidor Quixote
Daily Stormer
February 23, 2019

Liza Hanks

Women are starting to be more open about the problems that boob jobs have caused them. Just last month, we learned about a slut that became suicidal after the surgery, and now the whore from this story reveals that not only did she come close to dying, but that her post-boob-job baby had birth defects.

Are you ready for another boob job horror story?

Daily Mail:

Liza Hanks had a clean bill of health when, in 2016 aged just 31, she started saying goodbye to her three young daughters and planning her funeral.

‘I felt like I was burning inside out, I knew I was dying,’ Hanks says, describing the ’16 months of hell’ she endured between getting silicone breast implants and having them removed.

Within a day of her operation, her eyes were purple and her vision became clouded. Her skin started shedding profusely, falling off her face like snowflakes. Her hair was coming out in clumps. Her body was covered in blistering rashes. She plummeted from 140 pounds to 87 and she would tremble as she walked. She was having regular seizures.

Doctors – in her hometown of Idaho Falls and across the country – were baffled. She became a mystery case, marveled at by hundreds of scientists at medical conferences.

After she tested negative for every autoimmune disease, doctors told Hanks their next best theory: that her fiance, a life insurance entrepreneur, might be poisoning her. (He wasn’t).

None suggested the breast implants could be to blame, and when one did, it wasn’t easy to get them out.

Even doctors follow good old “when in doubt, blame the man.” Doctors are more likely to think that her fiance was running some sort of slow-poisoning scheme on her than they are to believe the foreign objects they introduced and left inside her could be to blame.

At first she was like:

But then she was like:

Hanks got her first set of implants – saline implants, silicone shells filled with water – in 2008 after having two children and developing what she describes as a ‘mom bod’.

She’d lost most of the volume in her breasts, and started to blame her figure for issues with her husband of five years, with whom she is still close friends.

‘My love language is kind of physical so I blamed myself for any issues in my marriage,’ Hanks said. ‘If I was pretty and looked like those porn stars maybe he would be attracted to me.’

It seemed like a perfect, commonly-used, feel-good fix, and she was confident in her surgeon’s advice.

Yeah, women get breast implants because they want their evil husbands to be attracted to them. It has nothing to do with competition with other women, nothing to do with narcissism, and definitely nothing to do with being a whore.

You see how everything’s always somehow the fault of a man? Women can’t stop blaming men for everything even though they have “freedom” now. They’ve been “liberated” now. The vagina has been unleashed, but they still think men are responsible for everything.

They’re already treating us as if they had no agency, so why don’t we just go ahead and remove the agency we’ve given them and which they think they don’t have?

She had them for seven years and everything was fine.

In retrospect, she believes that set did do damage – she developed sudden anxiety, which she blamed on her marriage woes, and her third daughter was born two months premature in 2009, inexplicably without fingertips. (Years later, there is now a study trying to track birth defects in children of women with implants)

But Hanks treated them as random incidents and moved on – getting a divorce in 2011, and teaching her daughter to be proud of her differences.

“Be proud of your missing fingertips.” Valuable lessons from mom.

Women should stay the fuck away from breast implants.

Not because they could end up like this:

But because not getting breast implants is easier than having to brainwash their kids into thinking they should be proud of their deformities while their mommy paying a lot of money because she didn’t like her boobs is the reason they have those deformities in the first place.

Really, it’s not worth it, ladies.

Your kids are more important.

Liza Hanks before her implants

It wasn’t until after Hanks’s second set of implants – this time silicone ‘gummy’ ones – that she learned about breast implant illness and the myriad of symptoms associated with augmented breasts.

In January 2015, aged 31, she felt a lump in her breast and got that petrified feeling that many women have experienced.

She went in for a mammogram, which involves resting the breast on a machine to be scanned. With implants, it is often a logistical nightmare that requires force because the machine can’t scan through them.

Hanks heard a ‘rip’ and the saline implant shifted out of place, leaving her in ‘screaming pain’ and ‘lopsided’.

The golf-ball-sized lump needed to be removed and biopsied, and thankfully the results came back negative.

But Hanks says, with regret, that she remembers feeling just as consumed by concerns about getting reconstruction surgery.

‘I had such low self esteem,’ she explains. ‘I have a different perspective now. But at the time, I just needed to schedule with a plastic surgeon to get this fixed.’

It was not a complex procedure; women who get breast augmentations are advised to get replacements every seven to 10 years, anyway.

This time, Hanks’s surgeon recommended a newly-re-approved silicone implant, a ‘gummy’ device (because it is the texture of gummy bears) that is meant to feel more natural (‘squishy’ rather than ‘solid’), is meant to have a lower risk of leaking, and is supposed to hold in place better because of its texture.

They are inserted the same way – while the patient is under anesthesia, the surgeon makes a cut under the breasts, arms and around the nipples, inserts the implant either above or below the chest muscle (depending on the anatomy) then sutures everything up.

Hanks wasn’t aware that the companies that make silicone breast implants, Allergan and Mentor, have never (to this date) completed the necessary human trials needed to prove their safety.

No surgeon mentioned to Hanks that silicone implants were banned in the US for 14 years (1992-2006) over concerns that they could leak, break, cause autoimmune diseases and cancers – and, crucially, that those concerns remained.

There was no mention that ‘gummy’ implants had entered the market in 2012 without a public FDA hearing, and that there were no studies on how the new metals and chemicals they contained affected human bodies.

She didn’t know that the FDA was being sued for allegedly hiding reports of side effects – allowing pharmaceutical companies to avoid reporting serious reactions, as is required by law for Class III devices (the most dangerous category).

But Hanks says it became clear within hours of surgery, on January 10, 2015, that something wasn’t right.

Yeah… something wrong with those eyes… and with that skin…

‘As soon as I woke up from that surgery I felt brain fog,’ she said.

‘Everyone blamed it on the anesthesia – “you just had surgery”. All of that.’

But it progressed.

First, her eyes started turning purple and red. Then they started burning and her vision was clouding.

Separately, she started experiencing regular confusion and anxiety about everything.

She had muscle aches, indigestion, and inflamed rashes all over her body, particularly her arms.

Her hair started falling out, her skin was shedding.

For the first time in her life she was allergic to mown grass, breaking out in rashes in spring. She developed food intolerances – ‘I would drink a glass of milk and I would get these allergic reactions.’

Dermatologists suggested steroid cream and injections. She was put on antibiotics, diets, prescribed more sleep and less stress.

But it kept getting worse.

Doctor after doctor kept suggesting steroids, autoimmune medications, or a new diet, but none worked.

Soon she was having regular seizures, and was in constant excruciating, burning pain.

‘I would have screaming crying fits, my mom would hear me screaming “please don’t throw me in the fire.”‘

Definitely not the Instagram fantasy she had when getting her second set of implants.

In late 2015, Hanks and her ex-husband decided the ordeal was too traumatic for their three daughters, then aged 10, nine and seven.

‘The trauma of seeing their mom going from healthy and active to dying was more than they could take,’ Hanks said, crying.

‘They would get nightmares.

My youngest daughter stopped talking, she stopped communicating. Whenever she visited mommy she would close her eyes, she stopped looking at me.

So I made the decision to say goodbye to my children. I believed that this was the end for me. I remember the smell of death, what it tastes like, what it smells like.

‘I couldn’t walk to the bathroom myself.

‘I looked down at my emaciated body, thinking, “this is what it feels like to die, this is what it looks like, this is what it feels like.”’

Liza Hank’s daughters.

In April 2016, Dr Baker told Hanks there was limited scientific literature to support his theory but he strongly suspected the implants were the source of her agony.

‘She was literally on death’s door,’ Dr Baker, MD, told DailyMail.com. 

‘Her central nervous system was shutting down. All her labs were just pristine, but that doesn’t tell you really what’s going on inside the lymphatic system.’

At first he tried to find other sources ‘because she really liked her implants’, but eventually they ran out of options for what could be happening. 

People don’t connect the fact that when you put a foreign substance in your body it might react. Your body is programmed to heal but when we put implants in, that may inhibit the body’s ability to heal.’

Hanks went back to her surgeon and asked him to take them out.

He said he couldn’t, saying there is no evidence her symptoms were caused by implants and she was too weak for a non-urgent procedure.

It’s something many women report: that they are unable to get insurance coverage and/or a willing surgeon to remove the devices.

Hanks says the pushback led her into a desperate spiral.

We were looking at YouTube videos and contemplated removing them ourselves, I was that desperate,’ Hanks said.

We have a friend who is a mortician. I planned my funeral.’

Eventually, Hanks’s surgeon agreed to remove the implants under local anesthesia after she got a note from Dr Baker. She had to pay for the procedure.

When I woke up post-op in the recovery room and I took my first full breath, I didn’t feel that weight,’ Hanks said.

‘I didn’t have that feeling of burning inside out. I felt light inside, it was a very airy feeling.

‘Two weeks later I bounced into my surgeon’s office and said “hi I’m alive!” They couldn’t believe the life that was breathed back into me.

‘He said I guess implants aren’t for everyone.’

She appears to be feeling better now and her daughters haven’t committed suicide yet after all that trauma.

It looks like she got the implants out in time.