We live in an era where everything is content. What we eat, where we travel, and increasingly, how we heal.
If you spend any time researching plastic surgery, you will immediately be pushed toward exposure. You will find endless galleries of "Before & After" photos. You will be pointed toward public forums where women post their most vulnerable, day-two post-op anxieties for strangers to dissect. You will see clinics trading discounts in exchange for the right to broadcast a patient's surgical journey to millions of followers.
The plastic surgery industry has normalized the idea that your body—and your deeply personal transformation—is marketing material.
I fundamentally reject that.
Before I became a Plastic Surgery Architect, I spent thousands of hours listening to women who had walked this path. And one of the quietest, yet most pervasive fears I heard was the fear of permanence. What if someone finds my photos? What if my question on this forum is tied back to my name? What if my vulnerability lives on the internet forever?
"Your healing journey is not content. It is a deeply personal, medically sensitive, and emotionally complex transition. And the idea that you should have to sacrifice your privacy to get answers is a broken standard."
When we feel scared or uncertain, we naturally look for reassurance. But retreating to public forums or chasing someone else's "after" photo doesn't provide real safety—it only opens you up to the opinions of strangers who do not know your anatomy, your history, or your heart.
We now have the science to prove how dangerous this is. A pivotal 2025 study by Dr. Anita Sethna highlighted the severe bias surrounding plastic surgery on social media. Her research confirmed what I have witnessed as an Architect for years: these platforms do not reflect medical reality. Instead, they feed you a heavily filtered, algorithmically biased distortion of what surgery and recovery actually look like.
True education requires absolute safety and objective truth. You cannot ask the real, heavy, vulnerable questions if you are terrified of who might be watching, and you cannot make an empowered decision based on a biased social media feed.
That is why I am changing the rules of how women prepare for surgery.
This summer, we are opening the doors to The Regan House—a secure, digital sanctuary designed for unparalleled education and absolute privacy.
Inside, you will find 14 distinct virtual rooms representing every area of plastic surgery. But here is what makes this space entirely revolutionary: It is the only place on the internet where your digital footprint is intentionally erased. Inside the virtual Doctors Lounge, you navigate using your own personal avatar, stripping away the intimidation of the clinical room. When a surgeon you have "favorited" enters, you will receive a notification. Your avatar can simply walk over, join them at a table or on the couch, and begin an informal chat.
There is no rigorous preparation required because this is not a consultation. It is a LIVE, real-time opportunity to connect with the elite, rigorously vetted surgeons of The Regan Surgical Collective. You are free to ask educational questions like, "If someone is 50 years old with a lot of neck volume, how is that typically addressed?" without ever having to cross into vulnerable, personal territory.
And when that live conversation ends? It disappears.
There are no transcripts. There are no recordings. There are no digital trails for data scrapers to find. We ensure the space remains secure by logging that an interaction took place, but the details of your conversations belong entirely to you. You take your own notes. You keep your own counsel. You are finally given the rare, protected freedom to learn without fear.
My first job has always been to protect my clients. That is why they are never used as public content, and it is why The Regan House was built.
You deserve the best surgical guidance in the world. But more importantly, you deserve the privilege of keeping it to yourself.
The doors to The Regan House open August 1st. Join the waitlist to secure your key.