Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Surgery Doubts


Guest Sascha

Recommended Posts

I wonder if any of you post-ops had any doubts before surgery? I as pre-op have some doubts from time to time, and still do sometimes. Is this common? I do feel the need about being complete, because I like males and I really want my body to be complete. But sometimes, at the same time there is a bit of fear. Is this a process of accepting that grows over the years? Or just getting used to the idea?

I'm interested in your answers to this. :)

Link to comment
Guest ~Brenda~

Hi Hon :)

I am not post-op, but I felt that you needed some answer. Hopefully, some post-op people will reply to your post.

All I can say is that your question is specifically the type of question that you must discuss with your therapist. It is very natural to feel anxious about any surgery (especially SRS). My only suggestion is that if you are unsure... then wait.

You must be sure. While I am on the subject. Each step in transitioning demands that you must be sure.

Walk slowly and carefully. You will find your path as you take each step deliberately.

Love

Brenda

Link to comment
  • Admin

Sascha, I had similar doubts and fears about starting HRT. They persisted even after making the decision to go forward. I called it "buyers remorse" when discussing it with my G.T.

She gave me this advice, which I think goes along with what Brenda said, and is apt in your case as well. She told me she was very glad I was having doubts and fears, because it showed that I was taking the decision very seriously, and considering every angle, pro and con.

If I had rushed headlong into it, she would have been concerned, because that's when mistakes are made. She considered my anxiety a sign of maturity, and it put her at ease.

I don't know if having pre-op fears and doubts is common or not, but it seems to me they are a good sign, not a bad one. Take your time,

hon, make the right choice. What you take off, after all, can't (easily) be put back.

HUGS

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment

I imagine buyers remorse after SRS would be just a wee bit different than with HRT as it is an entirely different level of commitment.

Sascha, I guess I am wondering if you have SRS scheduled or is it just something you are contemplating? Your question has a very different significance depending on just how close surgery may be.

Looks around for any post-ops....

Hopefully some others join me here with their experiences.

Doubts? I don't know that would be the right word, I certainly had questions, concerns, worries, etc that I might make a mistake if I were to have SRS. I think most everyone would experience such as some point in the process, but I have known many who say they have no doubt about having SRS, but most of those have not had SRS yet though a few have.

My personal difficulty was knowing that I couldn't make an "informed decision". I recognized that I could put off the decision, but that I could never ever say no to SRS. That if someone were force me to decide now or never, the only answer I could possibly give would be yes. Thus, if that is the only answer I could ever give, how could I possibly make such a decision?

What is very important to keep in mind however is where in the process I was feeling this. At the time I scheduled SRS this was something on my mind, but the surgery date was going to be so far in advance this worry was something I accepted and knew I would have to resolve. I knew when scheduling I could back out anytime without any problem up until the last minute. The wait time was such that I felt a need to lock in a date as it was so it wouldn't always be so far away. My therapist also thought it might help me having that bit of security.

Several months before my scheduled date, I resolved this issue and gotted past those fears. I went into surgery having what I consdier "normal" fears one would have undergoing anestesia and surgery. I also did not know how I would feel after surgery. It was just something I knew I had to do.

I will not explain how I resolved that issue. I will say that such things are something that needs to be sorted out individually and the process is best fostered by not having ones mind too full of outside ideas. Besides, the root of your concerns may be entirely different.

Though the years I have often observed many looking for the answers to help them with such concerns. Keep in mind that the answers for you can only come from inside. Seeking out the experiences of others can be helpful to know that your not the only one having such feelings. Be careful however not to take the experience of someone else, their decision or comment that such feelings are "normal" and thus a reason to not explore those feelings and resolving them before surgery. I was in therapy through the entire period and that helped me to sort out what I needed.

Good luck

Link to comment

Thank you for the warn and kind replies.

I'm on HRT 1 year now, but that step took a bit of courage as well. Not really doubts, but more fear of the unknown. Now that I am on it, it settled and it's normal for me. i wondered if that would happen with surgery as well.

Link to comment

I am almost a month post-op. I can't say I ever had a single doubt. Worries? yes. LOTS of worries, but no doubts. Feel free to PM me if you have any specific questions or concerns regarding SRS.

Link to comment

Sascha dear,

I am pre-op but my surgery is scheduled 6 months from now, i had some doubts early on, i even expressed them here some time ago, i no longer doubt that surgery is the right thing for me, though as the date gets closer the more anxious i get, like others i have worries, do i have enough to pay for surgery, turns out barring something unforeseen i have enough to cover the cost plus some extra, i worry if my blood work will be normal, in July i was severely anemic, took some actions to correct it and i am almost back to normal, i worry if my stress test will turn out ok as well as my chest x-ray.

Paula

Link to comment
  • 3 weeks later...

I am just over 2 years post op now. I did a LOT of research before deciding which surgeon to use and knew exactly what the risks were for me. I talked extensively with many friends who were post-op at that time and understood all of the difficulties they had before and after their surgeries. My RLT was >Years< longer than required because I was cautious and took my time. So in all that time, research, and socialization did I have doubts? Yes. There was no way I could not have doubts when I spoke to the women who had complications after surgery. There is no way I could not have doubts when discovering the extremely undesirable results of a woman who had chosen the wrong surgeon for a cheeper price. Last of all there is no way I could not have had doubts when I signed the legal document authorizing my chosen surgeon to perform GRS on me after after she painstakingly informed me of all the realistic risks with the procedure. Yes. I had doubts. I had fear. I had worry. And I had well founded concern. But I also had GID.

Then I considered what I would feel like if I never took the chance to become the woman I knew I was in spirit. The greater risk for me was NOT to move forward.

And so here I am 2 years later. The only real regret that I have is this, Why the hell did I wait so long?!?!? I wish I had done it many years ago. Now I couldn't be happier.

Hugs

Aleah

"Courage isn't the absence of fear. Courage is doing what you have to do in spite of the fear."

Link to comment
Guest sarah f

Sascha great post. I liked reading the answers given by the 3 post-op women. I too have a fear of the unknown but I will get it done eventually. There is no doubt in my mind about that.

Link to comment

Mind you, my worries were never about making a mistake. I worried that I wouldn't wake up from the table, that I'd get some infection( <_< ), all medical in nature. Never once have I ever thought or worried that I would think "Maybe I should've kept that thing?" Because deep down I knew even if I had ended up with Barbi-doll style flatness, I would still be happier with THAT than I was with that thing.

Link to comment
  • 3 months later...
Guest DésiréeG

it took me over 12 years to get from going FT/RLT and having GRS. In that amount of time I was able to become very certain that surgery was not only the right option, but the only one. By the time the date rolled around I had no doubts and few worries (I tend to be an optimist so I wasn't going to worry myself with thoughts of complications and what not. nothing I could do about them anyway right?) Doubts early on are fine and normal. As others have said, it's indicative of you taking this very seriously. But by the time you are getting ready to go under the knife, you should be 100% certain this is what you need. If you are, then all is well. If you still have doubts (not worries, or concerns, but actual doubts as to whether you should permanently alter your genitals) then it is probably best to wait until those are resolved. In my opinion anyway.

Link to comment
  • 1 month later...
Guest Julie90210

I've bought cars, houses, clothes, electronic gear that I had doubts about. I had them about SRS, too. It's perfectly normal.

What isn't normal is talking yourself into SRS. If you feel like you're talking yourself into SRS, RUN. Do not walk. RUN, in the other direction.

Link to comment
  • 5 months later...
Guest Sascha

Thank you all for the great replies. It's good to hear that I'm not in an awkward position when it comes to doubts. I have them less each day. My main doubts we're merely in a practical sense. Meaning, I can get down quite often when I anticipate the stumbling blocks I currently and am going to encounter. I'm one of those people that thinks ahead into the extreme and foresees all the trouble and misery. So it's not a fork in the road issue. I think I read too many post-op blogs, stories, personals, and other anecdotal experiences.

Link to comment
Guest Lacey Lynne

Sascha:

Marvelous thread, girl! Amazing that several who originally commented upon it are now, themselves, postops! Just amazing!

Really, I have nothing to add that has not already been said above and quite wonderfully so. My point is, as above, all of us should gauge our own feelings and comfortable levels at all times along the transition journey. Some people seemingly just sail and glide through it all as if by divine providence. Then, there are those rare few, like me, for whom the whole transition ordeal is excruciating. Mind you, this is just me, so you need not worry about this happening to you.

In a day or two, I'm 1 year and 10 months into HRT, and I feel like I'm climbing Mount Everest and am doggoned tired of the climb. How do YOU feel at the point YOU are in in YOUR transition? Honestly, now? Yes, by all means use your head like you are doing by having fears about "The Big Surgery" and also use your heart to guide you with your feelings about every issue in transition.

If "Going The Distance" resonates in your heart and soul, then THAT is most likely what you should do, I would say. Of course, really think this through too, as it's an irreversible procedure. Honestly, though, biased sources notwithstanding, I've rarely read or heard about very many postops who've regretted the procedure ... unless they've had suboptimal results or sad circumstances surrounding their surgery.

Me? Most likely nonop for the duration. Heck, my destiny may be permanent androgyny, because my physical and mental hurdles are well-neigh insurmountable. However, I COULD stay on lifelong HRT and do androgyny and be reasonably happy, and that would be okay.

You? Well, what do YOU say at this point? SRS? I'm guessing so for you; however, it's, of course, YOU call, babes.

All of us here wish you our best.

:friends: Lacey

Link to comment

Sascha, since i first replied, i have been post-op for 5 months, though i was anxious about some things leading up to my GCS, i had no doubts what so ever that surgery was the right thing for me, the anxiety about the test results were real and there were issues, but they got resolved fairly quickly, anxiety about complications were in the back of my mind too, other than some granulation tissue, which is fairly common and has been taken care of, my recovery has been pretty normal.

Paula

Link to comment

Hi Lacey!

Thank you for the kind reply. My answer would be yes, based on feeling. However, I'm the analytical type and sometimes that little voice of reason creeps in my mind and starts discussing it, like: "Should you really do it?" or: "You've had bad experience with Men, and they will treat you bad after your SRS" or "No man will ever want you!". ...Yeah that tireless inner voice, you know, who basically says you are worthless and that you can't do something. I think I confuse it with "doubts".

Hi Paula! congratulations! good to hear everything went fine, another success story! :lol:

Link to comment

I think you should explore what causes this inner voice to be so negative towards you, instead of supportive. Perhaps something to discuss with your therapist. I used to have a negative inner voice, before I transitioned, who would say things like "You deserve to die", and "you're living a lie!". Then, I can't exactly pinpoint when, but sometime during my transition, the voice started saying things like, "Now you've got it!' and "Way to go!", which from what I understand is a far healthier place to be:)

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   1 Member, 0 Anonymous, 103 Guests (See full list)

    • Kait
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.8k
    • Total Posts
      769.8k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,080
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Nonexistent
    Newest Member
    Nonexistent
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Ben1868
      Ben1868
      (22 years old)
    2. Charity
      Charity
      (41 years old)
    3. EagerBeaver
      EagerBeaver
    4. Nagato
      Nagato
      (33 years old)
    5. Star
      Star
      (44 years old)
  • Posts

    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Dump that doctor!   A doctor is a HIRED SERVICE PROFESSIONAL.  No more "holy" than a mechanic, a plumber, or anybody else in the trades.  Just like anybody else you hire, if they have a bad attitude or do crap quality work, get rid of them ASAP.  It amazes me how in the USA we don't have clear prices related to medical services, and how people will put up with crap from a doctor that they wouldn't from anybody else.  And it seems that doctors give bad service at approximately the same rate as other tradespeople.  Good help is hard to find!   Your body is more important than your car or your bathtub. Don't be afraid to assert yourself.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      I can't do that for myself...my partners do that for me. I guess I'm damaged goods.  I think part of me never totally grew up, because I'm not able to do adulting on my own.  There's no "wise parent" part of me because I didn't get here on my own.    I was stuck in my parents' house until GF rescued me.  Before age 26, my parents made all my decisions.  After age 26, I maybe decide some things, but mostly GF or my husband take care of it.  I need my partners around to remember even the basic stuff, like sleeping and eating at reasonable times.  Solo, I'm totally lost.
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Now that I think about it, part of why I enjoy my noisy family so much is because I don't have to have much of an inner life.  I don't really like being left to my own thoughts....all that mess in my brain.  Maybe better to have an active outer life than an inner one?
    • missyjo
      love the red heels
    • Abigail Genevieve
      Sometimes we are faced with situations where the only response possible is grief.  Things will never be as we want them; people die, we lose things we cherish, we do not obtain what we earnestly desire.  I see some of those situations here; there are tools available to help you through the grieving process.  It's not easy.
    • Ashley0616
      I would be happy to just have 4 disabilities. I take 27 different medications and it does little. I tried working when I got out of the military but couldn't maintain one. I have a lot of mental disorders myself. It would be neat to learn about each other's background. I do understand just wanting to be normal. My job is a stay-at-home parent which is exactly tougher than a regular job especially being a single parent. 
    • VickySGV
      It is 5 posts for PM's from Members, but you can receive and respond to PM's from Moderators or Administrators before then.  This one is post #3 for you.
    • Ashley0616
      Rich as in happy? Far from it. I'm happy about my kids but I shouldn't put all my happiness on them. I take care of myself and do the best I can. I'm happy and content that I have a house and car but nothing that can't be taken away from me like in an instant. I completely lack motivation and don't even want to do my walks anymore. I can't get a membership somewhere because I have kids that are mostly with me. I put myself out there for hoping something to come up and be good, but it's has always been like getting hit in the back of the head. 
    • Ashley0616
      Oh I'm wearing a blessed girl t shirt and blue capris. Nothing special today. It was just doing nothing day and feel guilty about it.
    • Nonexistent
      Hi, I don't think I have enough posts to PM yet I don't think (I think it's 5?). I'm poor myself since I can't work, but my parents are luckily helping me get surgery covered by insurance since I am still on their insurance and they have flexible spending each year. I live far away from them, halfway across the country, but I'm glad I have their support.   On the day to day... having a disability sucks. I wish I could just work like everyone else and have a normal life, but my mental disorders prevent me from doing most things.   I'm glad someone else understands at least.
    • Adrianna Danielle
      It has been 5 months into my transition.Going well in my progress and should of done this when I was 24 years old.Started living and dressing as female.My estrogen levels look great so far.I have a great support system as well from family members,my son and good friends.My son has said I have become a much happier person.Friends,do say that I have my life back which is true.I also have a great boyfriend for support and he has been learning very well about my transition.Plus he is the first guy that has loved and accepted me for I am.Also did his  research first before we started dating.In September,I have my FFS and he will be there for support
    • Ashley0616
      Very pretty y'all. 4" heels is the max I can handle and not for long period of time. I don't see how women wear 5" and above. I love my feet. I sure don't want to punish them. 
    • Ashley0616
      Well just been doing a lot of self reflection and a lot of gender dysphoria that has caused me to break down. The realization has been that I'm a trial period for men and women don't even consider me. It's getting dim. I have put myself out there by force even when I didn't want to. I have one friend but still haven't seen her IRL yet. We talk on Sundays and it's always me that starts it. Another person only talks to me when they want something. It's never been hey how are you doing. It's almost a month to my birthday and it's all just my mom, sister, nephew that are coming. So much for a 40th birthday party. I hate these posts. I want to be optimistic, positive and cheerful but I haven't seen anything go my way. I'm making it by the skin of my teeth. I wished I could just go into a coma for a year or just not wake up. 
    • Ashley0616
      Sorry I have been absent a lot but I do read your posts though. 
    • Ashley0616
      @Michelle_S lol it took a year to get that many. It's nice to have a large number but having the thoughts of helping someone far outweigh the number of posts. I have been absent a lot lately. Back at it tomorrow though lol. 
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...