Eight months ago, at my annual check-up, I mentioned my frustration to my doctor — half joking, half venting.
She got serious.
"Jessica, did you know that creams physically cannot reach what's causing your cellulite?"
Here's what she explained — and what nobody in the beauty industry wants you to know:
Cellulite is not a skin problem. It's a structural problem.
Under your skin are fibrous bands called septae. During and after pregnancy, hormonal changes cause these bands to tighten and pull the skin downward in an uneven pattern.
That creates the dimpled "orange peel" look.
No cream can reach these bands. Creams sit on the surface. They moisturize. They might temporarily plump the outer layer. But they cannot penetrate deep enough to affect the structural tissue underneath.
That's why every cream you've ever tried hasn't worked. Not because you chose the wrong one. But because no cream can work — by design.
It's like trying to fix a broken pipe with paint. The paint looks nice. But it's not touching the real problem.
I felt angry. And relieved. And angry again.
Three years of trying and spending money and blaming myself. And the answer was: I was using the wrong type of solution entirely.
📊 Up to 89% of postpartum cellulite is caused by fibrous septae — structural bands that no topical product can reach.
📊 Vacuum suction therapy directly targets and releases these bands — reducing cellulite appearance by up to 67% in clinical studies.
📊 When combined with thermal and red light technology, results appear up to 3x faster than suction alone.