1. Im definitely biased on that, but I would recommend FFS to every trans woman
2. Yes.
forehead numbness - gone after 2 weeks.
top of scalp (behind incision) - 2 month numbness, 6 more months before it returned to fully normal like before surgery
chin and nose, not really numbness, but tingling sensation, chin 1 month, nose around 3 months.
3. First 5 days wasnt easy, but it was manageable with strong painkillers. After that ibuprofen for another week, and no need for anything after that.
4. Depends what you mean by that. In terms of most swelling and actual recovery stuff, I could say 2 months. In terms of being able to exercise normally again, and run and jump etc... 5 months (mostly due to cheek implants)
5. I didnt have aggressive bone work, except for forehead reconstruction, so I cant say much about that. By far most painful were cheek implants.
6. Not really. Everything was well coordinated and agreed upon into most detailed aspects. But surgeon took initiative during surgery and advanced hairline little too much (for my taste), which wasnt exactly what we agreed, but he believed it would be for better result (his personal taste). I prefered and still prefer higher forehead and upper facial third, and I planned to use little hair transplant to cover the scar (which Im not able to do now, as it would make forehead even lower). Im planning to have that fixed someday in future, Im not yet fully sure how exactly. There is only so much that endoscopic or coronal forehead lift can achieve, and the only other option is tissue expander. Which isnt the fun option.