
Honestly? My First Impression Was Terrible.
Let me set the scene. I was stress-eating salt and vinegar chips after a long day, scrolling through my phone, and feeling a certain type of way about my post-30 body. You know the feeling. I saw this West&Month cream and, in a moment of late-night weakness, I clicked buy. The promise of “bee venom” and “papaya extract” sounded vaguely scientific and fancy. A week later, the package arrives.
I was THIS close to returning it right then. The box looked like it had been on a world tour with a particularly reckless backpacker. One corner was completely crushed. I opened it, and the little jar was just… rolling around in there. No bubble wrap, no padding, nothing. It’s a miracle it wasn’t shattered. I’m talking about a cream that’s supposed to be a delicate formula for a delicate area, and it was packed with the care of a brick. Not a great start.
Then I opened the jar. And I recoiled. It didn’t smell like papayas or flowers or anything nice. It had this sharp, almost medicinal, slightly bitter herbal smell. Like someone mashed up old tea leaves and a hint of rubbing alcohol. I checked the ingredients again—motherwort extract, bee venom. Okay, fine, maybe it’s supposed to smell like a witch’s apothecary. But slathering this weird-smelling goop on my chest felt like a very dubious choice. I texted my best friend a photo of it with the caption, “I think I just bought snake oil.”
The First Week Was a Total Bust
I followed the instructions. Clean, dry skin, apply, massage. The texture was okay, I guess. It absorbed fine. But for the first five, six, seven days? Absolutely nothing. Zero. Zilch. Nada. My skin felt moisturized, sure. But so would any basic lotion from the drugstore. I wasn’t seeing any “enhanced elasticity” or “improved contour.” I wasn’t feeling any firmer. I was just a person who smelled faintly of bitter herbs for no reason. I’d put it on at night and my partner would sniff the air and ask if I was using a new muscle rub.
I got the return label ready on my computer. It was sitting there, tab open, taunting me. Thirty bucks down the drain for a weird-smelling moisturizer. I felt silly. My friend told me to just send it back and buy a nice scented body butter instead. And I was fully prepared to do that. I honestly don’t know why I gave it one more week. Maybe it was the sunk cost fallacy. Maybe I was just too lazy to go to the post office. Or maybe, deep down, I was hoping the witch’s brew would actually work.
But that’s the thing. I did.
The Turning Point (Or, When I Stopped Expecting Magic)
I decided to stop checking for results every morning. I stopped scrutinizing myself in the mirror. I just made it part of my routine, like brushing my teeth. Shower, cream, get dressed, forget about it. I think that was key. I wasn’t massaging it in with desperate, magical-thinking energy anymore. It was just a thing I did. And somewhere in the middle of the second week, I was getting dressed and I noticed something. Not a dramatic, life-altering change. But my skin on my chest and décolletage just looked… better. Softer. Less crepey. There was a subtle plumpness there that hadn’t been before. It wasn’t a size change. It was a skin quality change. And it wasn’t my imagination.
The Redemption: I Hate to Admit It, But…
Okay, fine. I’ll say it. This weird-smelling, poorly-packaged cream does something. It’s not a miracle worker. It will not give you a whole new silhouette. If you’re expecting that, you will be disappointed and you should save your money. But if what you want is genuinely improved skin texture and hydration in an area that often gets neglected? It’s kind of great.
The firming is subtle. It’s not like things are suddenly perky and lifted. It’s more that the skin feels denser, more resilient. Like a slightly deflated balloon that’s been gently re-inflated. The moisturizing part is no joke—my skin there is now softer than the skin on my arms. I ran out of my regular body lotion a while back and was using this on my elbows, and even my chronically dry elbows were like, “Hey, thanks for the five-star treatment.” I’m not sure about the “hip contouring” claims because I haven’t used it there, but for the chest area? Yeah. It delivers on the core promise of firming and moisturizing.
And that smell? You totally get used to it. It fades pretty quickly after application. Now it just smells like “my weird cream” and I don’t even think about it. I was watching a true crime documentary last night, applying it, and barely noticed the scent. It just becomes part of the process.
The Final, Grudging Verdict
So, would I repurchase?
Yeah. I would.
With caveats, obviously. Don’t buy it if you’re looking for instant, dramatic enlargement. That’s not what this is. Don’t buy it if you’re sensitive to strong herbal scents right out of the jar. And maybe email the company and beg them to use some bubble wrap.
But if you want a serious, no-nonsense treatment cream for the skin on your chest and bust area—something that tackles dryness, fine lines, and loss of elasticity with a formula that feels more potent than your average body lotion—then this is a solid bet. It’s a workhorse, not a show pony. It grew on me. Like a weird, helpful fungus.
I’m on my second jar now. The packaging was just as bad, by the way. Some things never change. But the results are consistent. My skin looks and feels cared for. And in the end, that’s what I actually wanted.
If you want to try it yourself, here’s where I got mine.
Just maybe be home when it delivers so it doesn’t sit on your doorstep looking like it lost a fight.
Nina Patel, Beauty Editor
Award-winning beauty editor covering skincare and wellness trends.

