I don't remember if I've posted in this thread before or not, but considering I happen to be a person who regrets a gender transition surgery (ftm mastectomy) perhaps I have an opinion on this discussion in general. Or at least, I have my personal story and conclusions of it.
For me it was because of underlying psychological issues that I was not aware of before the op. Or rather, not fully aware of what they actually meant, but I was aware of their existence. I started being vaguely aware of the impact of my decision to have surgery already one month before my op though. But I was so certain that I actually wanted the surgery and that my struggle was only because of normal nervousness of getting invasive surgery for the first time ever, as well as a reaction from my nicotine withdrawal from me quitting smoking.
But in retrospect that was not normal surgery woes or just withdrawal woes, but a full on rampant panic that kept going 24/7 for 5 weeks. My gut feeling tried to scream sense to me, but I didn't listen to it. I recognised that feeling for what it was because then 4 years later the same thing happened with my mind when I was planning to get bottom surgery, but then I finally learned my lesson, listened to my body and cancelled that planned op before it could take place.
By the time I got my mastectomy I had been living "RLE" and binding my chest, and been in gender therapy, for 5 years.
After the op I had trouble adjusting to the result and I was in some sort of shock about it, but I couldn't understand why. I reasoned back then that I wished I had chosen a different method for my mastectomy, cause I was insecure about my scars. But I was very uncomfortable showing my chest to anyone, even after it had healed up. The result in and of itself as good, so it wasn't that that bothered me, but I was still in emotional distress about it.
In retrospect I now get that I was probably having a huge internal fight with myself that I simply "should" have been satisfied and beat myself up for feeling what actually was regret. About a year after the op I started getting used to it and was less bothered, even found some things I liked about it, but I was still very uncomfortable with being flat-chested. It felt unnatural and alien to me. That feeling never went away. I very much deflected and ignored that I did miss having breasts.
It's now been 4 years since the op when I finally faced my fears and stopped running from my true feelings. They hit me hard. At first I made a last desperate attempt to reject my feelings, but then let them come to me. Eventually feelings of a heavy sadness, regret, feeling broken and a huge disconnect to my body revealed themselves to me. Now I know getting a mastectomy was a big mistake for me. It essentially created a gender dysphoria I didn't have previously, but thought I did, and that caused a very confusing distress in my mind.
From my own perspective of my own situation in regards to gender reassignment surgery regret:
- The gender clinic I initially went to was iffy but ultimately it was not their responsibility to make me tell them the truth that I refused to tell them; that was on me.
- The second gender clinic I went to (for second opinion, kinda) only did all they could to help me with the information they had about my case; the therapists were great there.
- The surgeon who did my op was also great and did a good job, he offered me a revision that I didn't take, I had no complications, I healed well, the result was objectively good. He's largely unknown and was new to ftm mastectomies at the time which makes his performance even more amazing to me; so I have zero reasons to blame him.
- There was nothing no one could have done to prevent me from getting the surgery that I then regretted, I was determined to get it, so to the point I was willing to lie for it.
- I have no one to blame but myself.
- Forgiving myself for having effed up my body is a lot harder than throwing blame on others, but it is the mature and wise thing to do, and I'm trying to.
- It hurts but literally the only actually good things I can do from here on is to be honest and stop with the lying, to look into what I can do to reduce my emotional pain of regret and the disconnect I have to my body that arose from having had that surgery (as in look into reconstructive breast augmentation surgery), get therapy on my underlying issues, and for once just listen to my own body and mind. Move forward, and try not to drown in my grief and throwing blame around.
My opinions on this topic in general:
Regret happens and it cannot be 100% prevented. And sometimes it's not the docs fault even though they obviously have some responsibility and ofc in some cases malpractice happens. But I don't think they have full responsibility. If they're honest and clear about what it all entails and leave the decision up to the patients, the patient also has a part of that responsibility. Care and support should be given to those who experience regret, especially therapeutic help but ofc also surgical help if necessary and/or requested by the patient.
Also, good link you shared, Michelle_P