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Anyone have mixed feelings?

Started by suzifrommd, January 08, 2014, 08:53:33 AM

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suzifrommd

I confess I have mixed feelings about losing the parts of my body that SRS is going to eliminate. They're a part of me, they are intricately involved in keeping my body working properly, they produced two kids, and I still enjoy using them on a regular basis.

It's not that I have any doubt that this is right for me. I'm gladly making the change to have my body shaped the way I've always wanted it to be. But there are definitely mixed feelings about what I'll be giving up.

Has anyone else had mixed feelings about this?
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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LordKAT

Sometimes. I think it is more to do with if I will be OK with possible complications. I don't think I will really miss what I have. Partly cause I don't really have anything.
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Jenna Marie

A bit. More when it was *really* close - like days away from surgery. Like you, I never thought I'd regret moving on (and I didn't), but there was a weird sort of nostalgia for what was there. Not enough to want to keep it, just a vague sense of guilt almost that I was destroying something that never did anything to me and that I'd once had many happy times with. :)

Oddly enough, that vanished the minute I woke up from the anesthesia; it's like I *thought* I'd miss my "old friend," but then didn't actually.
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Lana P

I have mixed feelings all the time. I got my orchiectomy because that was removing T from my body. But as far as going all the wait I'm not 100% sure it is for me. I have always been like that though. Complications freak me out. If something happens and messes me up the only person to blame is myself I did it to myself. I allowed it to happen.

Also why can't women have penises? Because society says so well f$%k society. Do you know in Ontario, Canada you can now have your birth certificate and health card and passport changed to female if your trans Without having gender surgery?. How freaking cool is that. I have never not liked my penis. I don't think I need to have a virgina to be female. My soul is female and that should be just enough for me.

I mean I give props to people who get srs done but for me its such a scary thing that I just am on the fence about it.
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Emo

I actually dont have mixed feelings. I know i want my "thang" off so ill be doing it asap. Id prefer to wait until im passable as i find that i can fall for anyone. Surprises are fun. :p
Also if i do, ill probably try spermbanking just in case.
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Tristan

Quote from: Lana P on January 08, 2014, 11:55:19 AM
I have mixed feelings all the time. I got my orchiectomy because that was removing T from my body. But as far as going all the wait I'm not 100% sure it is for me. I have always been like that though. Complications freak me out. If something happens and messes me up the only person to blame is myself I did it to myself. I allowed it to happen.

Also why can't women have penises? Because society says so well f$%k society. Do you know in Ontario, Canada you can now have your birth certificate and health card and passport changed to female if your trans Without having gender surgery?. How freaking cool is that. I have never not liked my penis. I don't think I need to have a virgina to be female. My soul is female and that should be just enough for me.

I mean I give props to people who get srs done but for me its such a scary thing that I just am on the fence about it.
i know i am going to get in trouble for saying this but "why cant woman have a penis?" thats a loaded question and society unfortunately does decide what things/people are classified  as.its like i have spoken to some college kids and adults on the trans issue before and time and time again i get the , "until he has a vagina im calling her a he and i dont want him in the woman's room." argument. so many cis people have asked me that why if you identify as male or female would you not want the correct anatomy. they question  us and our validity because of it. i tell them i cant speak for everyone but for me the srs was a very big deal. have had some problems trying to stick up for pre ops in FL,GA,AL,MS,TN  that pass but because they are not post op they cant use the proper bathroom. im not saying this is right. but they are asking basic questions and dont understand the complex answers to them. and these voters are the majority that sadly do decide some things for us like being legally seen in the eyes of the state or law as male or female.
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Jill F

Hmm,

I'd rather be packing a vag in a perfect world, but I know the world is far from.  I don't want to have sex with the guy junk ever again (I can't anyway), I never really cared for BJs much, and I definitely don't want the nuts.  I love the new orgasm though and would hate to never have another one.  I also don't have enough colon left for a do-over, so if that rectovaginal fistula happens I'm probably screwed.

That being said, trading the wrong junk that works for the right junk that doesn't work is a wash for me.

I think I'm going to try the orchi on for size, and if the guy junk still really irks me, I'll just roll the dice and have the rest of the surgery.
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GendrKweer

May I point out that most of the penis and scrotum is not removed but repurposed... so don't look at it as though things are being lost. :)
Blessings,

D

Born: Aug 2, 2012, one of Dr Suporn's grrls.
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Ltl89

Suzi,

If I were in your shoes, I would really make sure I investigate these mixed feelings before doing one thing or another.  SRS can always be done, but it can't be undone.  Therefore, I would really sure you have fully dealt with these feelings before going forward.  That way you can feel total confidence and inner peace with the decision you make. 
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Vicky

I and a few girls I know, did not have any serious or "hold the horses" doubts, but in the 24 hours coming out of our surgery, we did feel an element of grief for the removed testicle tissue, and kind of a "what did I really do??"  A good cry and sniffle session for about half an hour took care of the thing. 

The big deal post op for me was that it took quite a few months to feel my tissue in its new location and not where it used to be.  Feeling like I had caught my scrotal skin in my old pants fly zipper when I was dilating at four month was a bit of an eye opener!!  Not really nostalgia or anything, butttttttt


If you have any degree of doubt that does not resolve itself though in a short period, is I agree, a reason to hold things in waiting until you and GT get it straightened out. 
I refuse to have a war of wits with a half armed opponent!!

Wiser now about Post Op reality!!
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peky

Tomorrow is not too soon to get rid of it....yeah, despite the jolly times and the kids...

and to paraphrase GendrKweer, we are just turning it into a "velvet purse"...LOL
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Miss_Bungle1991

Quote from: Lana P on January 08, 2014, 11:55:19 AM
I have mixed feelings all the time. I got my orchiectomy because that was removing T from my body. But as far as going all the wait I'm not 100% sure it is for me. I have always been like that though. Complications freak me out. If something happens and messes me up the only person to blame is myself I did it to myself. I allowed it to happen.

Also why can't women have penises? Because society says so well f--k society. Do you know in Ontario, Canada you can now have your birth certificate and health card and passport changed to female if your trans Without having gender surgery?. How freaking cool is that. I have never not liked my penis. I don't think I need to have a vagina to be female. My soul is female and that should be just enough for me.

I mean I give props to people who get srs done but for me its such a scary thing that I just am on the fence about it.

I agree with this. I had an orchi done since I could never save up for GRS and there were many things about it that put me off (like having to dilate for the rest of your life). So, I had the orchi done and that was that.
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izzy

I always had a part of me that says I cant do GRS even though at times i would like to. The daily dilation, and upkeep as well as it not working properly if the surgery doesnt really seem like something i could commit even though I would like GRS.
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Joan

This is a. Good topic and something that really does need a lot of careful reflection.

GRS is a long way off for me, but I think I want to to do it when I have the money and everything else is in place. That said, three things put me off. 

The first is the pain.

The second is the constant maintenance and the pain that that involves.

The third is the 'what if something goes wrong?' fear.

I never loved my stick, but I'm hating it more and more as time passes, and I wish everything was out of the way and tidy.

I guess I will have to work my way through these things.
Only a dark cocoon before I get my gorgeous wings and fly away
Only a phase, these dark cafe days
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anjaq

Quote from: Jill F on January 08, 2014, 01:42:02 PM
  I also don't have enough colon left for a do-over, so if that rectovaginal fistula happens I'm probably screwed.
Why would you need that? I had a fistula like that but I still have a colon. They closed the fistula and repaired the damage, so I guess i lost a little bit of it, but that was not that much material I think. i would not know though, they never told me what they did exactly.

Generally I think in a good reconstructive genital correction there should not that much be lost - well at least not in sensate tissues. I had a PI so I miss my inner labia which is actually feeling like a loss - but other than that there is no feeling of loss. The only thing that really made me sad for a while shortly pre-op and some time afterwards is that i never will have kids. That part of me that would somehow have been able to do this is lost. But then again, others are born and live without ever being fertile, I dont even know if that maybe was the case with me too. So I can get over that feeling. 

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amber1964

At one time I thought definetly no. But feelings change and now im going soon and cant wait. In the end its a sticking point for me, I just dont like how it looks and I dont feel authentic and genuine. But its a big decision and I totally understand why some dont want to or are afraid. I do think it makes a difference though, I want to experience my female life as completely as possible and I cant do that with a penis. So for me, no doubts at all, not anymore.
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suzifrommd

Quote from: learningtolive on January 08, 2014, 03:16:06 PM
Suzi,

If I were in your shoes, I would really make sure I investigate these mixed feelings before doing one thing or another.  SRS can always be done, but it can't be undone.  Therefore, I would really sure you have fully dealt with these feelings before going forward.  That way you can feel total confidence and inner peace with the decision you make.

Thanks for your concern, dear. I'm pretty comfortable with the amount of soul searching I've done about SRS. I'm convinced that further contemplation won't produce any insight that I don't already have. I don't think (after months of examination) that the mixed feelings are an indication of whether surgery is or isn't for me, just about the complicated relationship I have with my body. There is no way I can "know" for sure. I can only rely on the accounts of others and my own imagination, since without the surgery, there's no way for me to tell what it will feel like.
Have you read my short story The Eve of Triumph?
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Jill F

Quote from: anjaq on January 08, 2014, 07:10:09 PM
Why would you need that? I had a fistula like that but I still have a colon. They closed the fistula and repaired the damage, so I guess i lost a little bit of it, but that was not that much material I think. i would not know though, they never told me what they did exactly.

Generally I think in a good reconstructive genital correction there should not that much be lost - well at least not in sensate tissues. I had a PI so I miss my inner labia which is actually feeling like a loss - but other than that there is no feeling of loss. The only thing that really made me sad for a while shortly pre-op and some time afterwards is that i never will have kids. That part of me that would somehow have been able to do this is lost. But then again, others are born and live without ever being fertile, I dont even know if that maybe was the case with me too. So I can get over that feeling.

I had severe diverticulitis with a colovesical fistula and had to have 2 feet of colon removed with an end-to-end anastomosis and bladder repair performed in December 2011.  If I had to have a do-over, any less colon would impact the rest of my life negatively.  My aunt has a bit less than I do, and she has issues every day.  Plus I never want to have to recover from that same surgery ever again.  Once was enough.
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mrs izzy

Suzi,

There is no rush to anything. If at anytime you feel it is something that will make your life happier then work that path. If you have any ideas that it is not 100% right for you then just stay the path you are on now. There is no rule that everyone must has GRS to be happy. Happiness comes from within and only you know what true inner peace is.

For me i have a hard time trying to understand the sure not sure thing. For me the dysphoria was been so strong that i walked the path to GCS. Anything in life carries risks. I stood on the edge of hell and i knew what i had to do. I did all my research finished up my path. Now my mind is quiet, no more dysphoria. I have my inner peace.

Hugs and never regreat anything.
Izzy
Mrs. Izzy
Trans lifeline US 877-565-8860 CAD 877-330-6366 http://www.translifeline.org/
"Those who matter will never judge, this is my given path to walk in life and you have no right to judge"

I used to be grounded but now I can fly.
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calico

for me when I went I honestly had no doubts as the dysphoria had finally gotten to a level that...well it was at a point that death probably would of been the next step in my journey had I not went through. I looked at it in a way that I question myself with this one question "am I ready to live my life?" the screaming answer was a yes, an in the brief moment before I went into the operating theatre I said my prayer to god ,took a deep breath, and said "here we go". I wish I had of done the surgery sooner, but for me I guess I didn't have everything worked out as I should have and my priorities well they weren't were they should have been. however by waiting like I did and thinking, contemplating it prepared me and left me with no doubt when I finally made the choice. My life has been better now, and more complete than I could have ever imagined. I never felt so complete than after the surgery.
so no no doubts, no regrets just a happy whole now girl :)
"To be one's self, and unafraid whether right or wrong, is more admirable than the easy cowardice of surrender to conformity."― Irving Wallace  "Before you can be anything, you have to be yourself. That's the hardest thing to find." -  E.L. Konigsburg
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