Quote from: Jenna Marie on July 05, 2014, 09:11:16 PM
I would definitely send pictures to Brassard and get the expert opinion. (I did that and they were very reassuring.) I will say that for a good *year* I couldn't see my clit without poking around and separating things more deeply than I was comfortable with, thanks to swelling and the healing pattern. However, it was possible to press on the general area and see if there was a spot of heightened feeling; this may not help if you don't have much sensitivity yet, I suppose.
(I also used Brassard, and your description sounds more or less like what I could see for months and months when I parted my outer labia pretty firmly - visible urethral mucosa lining the inner labia, a bit at the top where it was closed [hooded], and nothing else visible.)
Quote from: Vicky on July 05, 2014, 08:17:07 PM
Zoe -- Different surgeon here, but I had stuff come out that looked horrid and like I was some kind of rotting carcass for about 6 months or so. I am at 18 months now and everything looks clean and normal. My surgeon used a very similar technique to the one Dr. Brassard uses, and I also threw in a Gynecologist at my HMO who did a couple of post-op checks for me and showed me the real parts that I had and to her they looked like normal healthy, healing tissue that was about where it should be early in the game. Boy was I glad to have all of my sutures finally get the hell out of Dodge though!!
As always you 2 are spot on.
I kinda have a little inside information so my short notes to Zoe are based on that. I understand her concerns and they are warranted.
What i wish to say to anyone out there. Nothing is silly or a bad question to ask.
When you go home you do not get a book. Just basic information to help you with aftercare. We learn everything through the process, what is normal or what is not. Me i have a few mentors i could ask questions and also a great GP that kept a close eye on things. She is new to dealing with GD patients and asked if she could see the progress so she could help others.
Not everyone has that kinda of help but these girls who post have a very strong grasp of what it takes to get through all the good and bad of GCS surgery and aftercare.
As we keep saying this is surgery and just say it is nothing very pretty to look at for months.
Things get sore, and everything is swollen and to get the map of the land is hard. Things grow or seem to and things fall off. There is lots of mess, smell etc.
These are all things that go with the healing process. Then on top you have the dilation. Trust me it is not a pleasant thing to do and it gets old real fast.
So anyone ASK any question you have, there is a good chance that someone here has had the same issue.
Post op girls are truly a caring Sisterhood. Thanks to all who have helped and still do there best to calm fears.
Isabell