Quote from: Julie Marie on November 08, 2008, 04:46:54 PM
Were we alone in our pain and suffering or did the other girls we know prefer not to talk about it? Or was it something else all together?
The things I heard never prepared me for the things I experienced.
Julie
Hi Julie,
I had full FFS (except scalp advance) in July. I did not know what to expect other than pain and a long adjustment period. Honestly, I don't really remember the two days before or the first seven days after surgery at all. The morphine, vicodin, percocet and valium in addition to 13 1/2 hours of anesthesia the day of the operation kept me way, way out of it. I had my Mom and Laci there to help me and that really helped a lot. I am eternally grateful to the for being there for me when I really, really needed it.
I massage my chin and forehead and scalp every day. My scalp and forehead are still numb. My bottom lip and chin are slowly regaining feeling as is the tip of my nose. When people ask me if FFS was painful I say "OF COURSE!!!!" but I also tell them that I was so out of it I don't remember the pain much. I remember waking up and feeling like someone was ripping my skull apart for the first few weeks. I remember the feeling of not being able to breathe, coughing up blood clots and thinking I was dying, the bruising all over and the facial hair coming back and NOT being able to get electrolysis (I thought I was pretty much done at 150 hours). I also remember crying in the shower after like the third week when I realized that I had shadow and felt ugly.
I had a really bad few days of depression like 10 - 12 days after surgery and it gradually tapered off to mild blues then like a month later I was so focused on other stuff I just kind of worked my way out of it. I can tell you that I was probably more concerned with finding a job (my company went under) than I was transition in the three months after surgery. I've documented a lot of this stuff in my blog in excruciating (lol for my readers who read the first paragraph and don't go any further because it's wayyy too long) detail.
I feel like I was and am prepared for a tough transition. I did not go into this expecting anything to be easy. I think I got most of that thinking and foundation from reading forums posts, meeting TS in real life and talking to people I knew. I think the best thing for me was thinking I'd have it REALLY ROUGH and then kind of like adapting from there. It is tough at times, I definitely have my days. It's different now than before. Every day is met with new challenges and I feel a little more comfortable each day. I just went full-time (I wasn't even part-time or whatever) in August. I have a long road in front of me but I can tell you that will meet each day with a positive energy, I will not let transition break me of who I am fundamentally and I will move forward each day. As hard as some days might be, I need to move forward, even if it is really painful. I truly believe that we have one chance to get it right and I want to make sure I live each day like it's my last

Oh, and I've read your posts since I came here a year and a half ago and I don't think I've ever read anything negative or complaining or anything. You totally need to vent sometimes and get it out. Hey, start a blog! I'm sure many of us would just love to read what's going on it your life and it would probably be pretty therapeutic for you too

Take care, k? Meghan