“So Sad”: Woman Who Spent Over $120k To Become Barbie Reveals What She Looked Like Before

Alicia Almira, once a fresh-faced, natural-looking woman, has completed her transformation in what she referred to as a “custom made plastic doll,” spending over $120,000 on surgeries and other cosmetic procedures.

The Sweden-born 32-year-old has spent the last decades going under the knife, getting multiple interventions not to become beautiful in a natural way, but to purposely look as artificial as possible.

Before-and-after photos from 10 years ago show a stunning contrast. Netizens have described the comparison as “sad,” arguing that Alicia ruined her “healthy appearance” in her quest to become a real-life doll.

What at one point appeared to be B-cup breasts have ballooned to a J-cup, with Alicia stating that she wants to go even further beyond.

Despite having a relatively modest social media following with 94,000 followers on Instagram, Alicia makes the brunt of her money via her OF account, where she promotes herself as a “Bimbo,” bringing the look of famous cartoon characters such as Jessica Rabbit to life.

In particular, Alicia says she was inspired by characters from a Danish TV show called King’s Girls that she watched as a child and has been fascinated with the “bimbo look” ever since. 

“I’ve always been attracted to the extreme and wanted to look like a bimbo,” she explained. “Some people think I’m mad, but I don’t regret having the surgeries.”

She began experimenting with tattoos at 18 and started saving money for her first major procedure—breast implants—by the age of 25.Her extreme appearance has garnered no shortage of detractors, with many taking issue not only with what her look means for her, but for the message that it sends.

Having made her mission to become an icon for the “bimbo look,” Alicia actively seeks to influence girls to go down the same path as her, going as far as to motivate any future children she has to alter their appearance.

“If my daughter really wants big boobs and everything else, then I would take her to the surgeon,” she said.

She views her transformation not just as a personal journey, but as a lifestyle she hopes to normalize and pass on. In interviews, Alicia has emphasized that her desire to be “as plastic as possible” is something she’s proud of.

“I’ve erased who I used to be,” she wrote on social media, assuring her viewers that she’s likely to get more and more interventions as time passes on. 

“Bimbos don’t age—we just get more and more plastic.”

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