The charcoal snaps. It’s a clean, dry sound, like a finger bone breaking in a silent room. I’m leaning over my pad, trying to capture the specific, frantic twitch in the defendant’s left eyelid-a tic that speaks of guilt more than his testimony ever could. I am Aria J.-P., and my life is spent translating the architecture of the human face onto paper. Usually, I’m looking for the truth in a courtroom, but today, as I stare at the smudge of gray on my thumb, I’m thinking about the lies we tell ourselves about the faces we buy. This morning, before the trial, I killed a spider with my shoe. It was a sudden, violent thwack against the mahogany floorboards of my apartment. I didn’t think; I just reacted. The resulting stain was a messy reminder that force without precision is just a disaster. That’s exactly how I feel about the term ‘board-certified’ in the world of aesthetics. It’s a term used with the force of a blunt object, but it often lacks the precision of the truth.
Most patients don’t realize that the ‘American Board of Aesthetic Medicine’ or the ‘Global Board of Cosmetic Surgery’ are often just organizations created by doctors, for doctors, to circumvent the actual rigorous standards of the medical establishment. They aren’t recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS), which is the only body that actually matters when it comes to institutional oversight.
It takes roughly 18 years of focused education and training to become a legitimate, board-certified specialist. To get a certificate from a weekend ‘aesthetic board’? Sometimes it takes only 48 hours and a check that doesn’t bounce.
Anatomy of Deception
I’ve spent 28 years drawing faces, and I can tell you that the difference between a surgeon who understands the deep fascial layers and someone who took a three-day course in ‘injectables’ is written in the scar tissue. I see it in the way a brow doesn’t move when a witness cries, or the way a lip catches the light like a piece of overinflated plastic. It’s a failure of anatomy, and it’s a failure of honesty.
“They are technically ‘double’ certified, but neither of those certifications taught them how to reconstruct your mid-face.”
“
People talk about being ‘double board-certified’ as if it’s a superpower. In the legitimate world, this usually means a surgeon is certified in General Surgery and then Plastic Surgery. It means they’ve spent 108 months or more in a state of perpetual exhaustion, learning how not to kill someone. But in the marketing world? It might mean they are certified in Internal Medicine and then paid for a membership in a non-recognized cosmetic group.
The Shortcut Fails
The result of trying to hide structural flaws.
Understanding deep fascial layers.
We are obsessed with the shortcut. I am guilty of it too. I once tried to fix a perspective error in a sketch by just shading over it, hoping the darkness would hide the structural flaw. It didn’t. It just made the face look bruised. Medicine is no different. You cannot shade over a lack of residency training with a gold seal.
The Price of Convenience
I once saw a doctor’s office that boasted 888 successful procedures on their website, yet the ‘Board’ they belonged to was headquartered in a strip mall in a state that doesn’t even require medical licenses for such designations. It’s a shell game. We are betting our skin, our nerves, and our literal expressions on the hope that the person holding the needle isn’t just a very good decorator.
She didn’t know that the ABMS recognizes only 24 member boards. If the board on that wall isn’t one of those 24, it’s essentially a social club with high dues.
At Anara Medspa & Cosmetic Laser Center, the distinction isn’t just a marketing bullet point; it’s the foundational logic of the practice. You want a physician who has been scrutinized by their peers for a decade, not someone who spent 88 hours watching YouTube videos before buying a laser.
“We wouldn’t let a plumber fix our electrical wiring just because he’s ‘Board Certified in Home Flow,’ yet we let family practitioners perform liposuction because they have a certificate in ‘Body Sculpting.'”
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There is a peculiar arrogance in the way we treat our faces. It’s the same lie, just a different font. I feel a certain kinship with the surgeons who do it right. When I’m sketching, I have to understand the attachment points of the orbicularis oculi. If I miss it by a millimeter, the person looks like a stranger. A real surgeon… has spent 48 months or more specifically studying that millimeter. They’ve failed, they’ve been corrected, and they’ve been tested by a board that actually has the power to take their credentials away. These fake boards? They don’t have teeth. They are the spiders of the medical world-scuttling in the corners, looking for a way to capitalize on your desire to look better for less.
Fame vs. Proof
I find myself getting angry about it, which is rare for me. Usually, I’m a passive observer. But after the spider incident this morning, I realized that some things deserve to be crushed. The obfuscation of medical credentials is one of them. We live in an era where ‘expertise’ is a brand rather than a burden of proof.
We see a doctor with
18,008
followers on Instagram and we assume they must be the best. But fame isn’t a board. A blue checkmark isn’t a medical license. The real work happens in the
388-page textbooks and the
28-hour shifts where a resident learns the specific path of the facial nerve so they don’t accidentally paralyze your smile.
Expertise is a Burden, Not a Brand
[The cost of a cheap credential is always paid in flesh.]
I often wonder why we don’t ask more questions. Maybe we’re afraid of the answer. Maybe we want the
$878 discount more than we want the safety of a board-certified expert. But as someone who stares at faces for 8 hours a day, I can tell you that regret has a very specific texture. It looks like asymmetry. It looks like chronic inflammation. It looks like a person who can no longer recognize themselves in the mirror because they trusted a frame instead of a pedigree.
The Lineage of Trust
If you’re considering a procedure, don’t just look for the words. Look for the lineage. Ask which board. Ask if it’s an ABMS board. If they get defensive, walk out. Your face is the only one you get. It’s the map of your life, the record of every laugh and every grief. Don’t let someone draw on it if they haven’t spent the years required to understand the paper.
The Decade of Dedication
4 Years
Undergraduate/Pre-Med
+ 10+ Years
Board-Specific Training & Testing
I’ve made 288 sketches this month, and not one of them is perfect, but they are all honest. That’s more than I can say for some of the certificates I’ve seen in high-end offices. I still have the smudge on my thumb from earlier. It’s a reminder that even a small mistake, like a misread credential or a poorly aimed shoe, leaves a mark that is hard to wash away.