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hung “It looks like I’ve had plastic surgery.” I’ll give you the prescription for a simple OK.

Posted on April 14, 2026 by Admin

It sounds like you’re quoting a confusing or mistranslated line. I’ll break it down simply:


🧠 “It looks like I’ve had plastic surgery”

This usually means:

  • Someone’s appearance has changed a lot
  • Often used jokingly when face looks different (weight loss, swelling, makeup, lighting, etc.)

It does NOT necessarily mean actual surgery.


🧾 “I’ll give you the prescription for a simple OK”

This part doesn’t make clear sense in English. It might be:

  • A mistranslation (from another language)
  • Or fragmented text from a video/script

It could be trying to imply:

  • “I’ll give you a simple solution/approval”
  • Or “take this and you’ll be fine”

But as written, it has no standard meaning in medical or everyday English.


🧠 Bottom line

  • First sentence = exaggeration about appearance change
  • Second sentence = likely broken or mistranslated phrase

If you saw this in a video or post, send the full context—I can decode what it’s actually trying to say.

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