At 39, Michelle Roniak underwent cosmetic surgery—in secrecy.
She hated her torso and had spent a lifetime chasing the hourglass figure. Liposuction felt like the final solution. Her surgeon suggested a small gap at the top of her thighs—it was trendy. Why not?
A mommy makeover—minus the baby.
Her artillery. Her high.
There wasn’t a flicker of doubt that anything could go wrong. She’d had Botox, fillers, even a boob job. All successful. All with top professionals—this one included.
Botches were for back-alley surgeons.
Right? Wrong.
What followed was catastrophic. Her body ballooned instead of shrinking. Morphed. Possessed. Grief hit like a terminal diagnosis, and self-blame moved in, savage and unrelenting. Shame swallowed her whole.
She couldn’t find a single book, forum, or guide for women like her.
So she wrote one.
Through that sticky, suffocating grief, a deeper truth surfaced:
She had been living with Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD)—a relentless, unspoken battle where perceived flaws became an obsession, and self-acceptance always felt out of reach.
Undone: Healing from Botched Cosmetic Surgery is a raw, unflinching memoir about body dysmorphia, plastic surgery gone wrong, and the silent shame women carry. It is for anyone who has battled body image, endured the trauma of a cosmetic surgery nightmare, or is searching for a story of resilience and healing.
This is not just a story about what went wrong.
It’s about what it takes to come back.
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