Drew Sidora revealed on Instagram that she underwent a Lipo 360 procedure and posted on June 7 that she was one week post-op, writing, "Still swollen, but these are my results just one week post-op with my shaper on." The Real Housewives of Atlanta cast member framed the post as an early look at a recovery she intends to share in real time.
The numbers and the timeline matter: Sidora said the change is visible after "one week" and promised followers more updates and a full reveal. She wrote, "The transformation is already taking shape, and I’m excited to see how everything settles over the next few months," and added, "This is only the beginning!" In the same post she told fans, "I can’t wait to take you all along on this journey and share the real experience — the highs, the healing process, the tips, and everything in between."
Sidora positioned the Lipo 360 as a corrective step, saying she wanted to address areas that had changed after having children. She is the mother of three — Josiah, her oldest son from a previous relationship, and Machai and Aniya, her two younger children with estranged husband Ralph Pittman — and she also carries recognition as The Game actress on top of her reality-TV profile.
The reveal comes after a recent video in which Sidora said a previous mommy makeover did not give her the shape she had hoped for. That remark introduces a clear through-line: even after earlier cosmetic work, she felt the need for additional surgery to reach her aesthetic goals. Sidora put that dissatisfaction into plain words in the weeks leading up to the June 7 post.
There is friction between the promise of quick, visible change and the mechanics of surgical recovery. Sidora acknowledged that directly, warning followers she remained swollen and that results would continue to shift as swelling subsides. Her repeated emphasis on process — posting early, promising tips and a final body reveal — signals an interest not only in the outcome but in demystifying the stages between scalpel and final result.
That promise is also the functional news hook: Sidora is not closing the story at one week. She has announced a series of updates and a fuller reveal, writing, "Body reveal coming soon, along with content showing you all the ins and outs of my recovery and results." For viewers who follow celebrity procedures for immediate before-and-after scenes, Sidora’s decision to slow the narrative and chronicle the middle acts is notable.
What matters today is the timeline Sidora set: a one-week post-op snapshot posted June 7 and an explicit pledge to continue documenting the healing. The measurable part of the story — the 360 in Lipo 360, the one-week mark, and a multi-month settling window she mentioned — gives followers a concrete calendar for when expectations should change from swollen to settled.
Sidora’s account leaves one practical question answered before it becomes a mystery: she will show more. The unresolved question is cosmetic rather than procedural — how the reshaping will read once swelling resolves. Her closing note to followers was unequivocal: "This is only the beginning!" The clear next step she offered her audience is a staged sequence of updates culminating in a body reveal that will determine whether this round delivers the look she said earlier surgeries did not.



