Quote from: Rhonda Lynn on August 20, 2016, 01:17:39 AM
Thank you for your honest opinion. It is really helpful. Your observations on specifics are also helpful. I'm expecting surgeons to recommend different procedures and I'll rely on that heavily, but it's good to have other opinions on what does and does not stand out.
Since studying the feminine scale M5 - GN - F5 scale and http://www.virtualffs.co.uk/My_Facial_Feminisation_Thesis_Part_8_How_Feminine_is_Feminine_Enough.html that Ruby posted in her thread, I think that I'm somewhere in the gender neutral plus or minus a point. Before I studied it I was thinking "I look like a boy without my make-up."
However, oddly enough, even if I'm already GN, my resolve to go for some changes is actually getting stronger. What it's doing is making me feel more optimistic that I might expect a better end result. If before I was thinking that I was going to go from having a masculine bone structure to getting to neutral (which, of course I would have done), now I'm hoping to go from neutral to decidedly feminine ~F2 or so. That is exciting for me to think about because that would feel so much more like a match to how think of myself. I'm not an androgynous person, I'm a girl and I want my face to unambiguously reflect that.
Perhaps it's like, I'm running a marathon and I thought I was 10 miles from the goal, but it's only 5 miles away! Now I want to run faster, not to slow down!
You know, I think people see what they expect to see. If you tell them that you got a facelift, they'll probably think, "Wow, she looks good! That is is the best facelift I have ever seen in my entire life!" I mean, I didn't know about FFS until a few years ago, but we're not the general public. People can't guess at an explanation if they have little knowledge or experience of it.
You might be asked who your surgeon is because they will be ready for a facelift of their own!
OTOH, I do sympathize and understand that the last thing that you want is one more deception that always leads to another. So, there is a trade-off there and I don't want to dismiss that.
No love is possible without self-love. Whatever you decide, I hope that you will choose what makes you the most happy.
Good luck on your consultation. If you decide to share your experience I hope that you'll let me know so that I can follow it. However, if you decide to keep it private, I completely understand.
Hugs,
Rhonda
I'm going to see what the experts at Facial Team say, but I'm quite stubborn, and so am not easily swayed from my intentions.
I know that there is literally no one in my life who would condone my decision to have FFS, that also weighs on my mind, and will act as a brake against getting too much 'done'.
I had never seen that M5-GN-F5 scale before, but after passing completely on my very first outing outside amongst strangers 'en-femme' and pre-everything, I realised that it's so much more than just my facial features at work that helps with passing. I also realised that I must look more feminine when 'dolled up' than I ever thought, and that others were seeing something (female) that I was not. Hence I began at that point to actually think that transition might be possible. I think I'm GN on that scale, but how does one really know when we are often our harshest critics? I definitely worry about how I look without makeup, and one day a good few years ago, I went to work without any on at all, and got a fair few comments from people who thought I looked ill or very tired, so definitely something looked 'wrong' to them. So ever since then I've become one of those women who won't go out without at least some 'basic' makeup on.
Maybe you're right in that folks won't suspect I'm trans due to any 'facial work' because it's so far off the general radar. Instead, just that I'm trying to improve my looks, or battle age, or having a mid-life crisis, or maybe they might think I'm just vain.
Hopefully no one will ask who my surgeon was though!

I hope that if I really do go ahead with it, it brings me some peace, and maybe enough satisfaction for me to live with other imperfections that I can't or don't want to tackle.
I'll post about my experience after I've been to Marbella, after all, it's just a consultation. I just hope it doesn't cause a rift between me and my partner.
Quote from: Rhonda Lynn on August 20, 2016, 09:06:01 PM
Have received quotes back from PAI (Bangkok) and Dr. Rossi (Buenos Aires).
Quote from PAI came back very rapidly, but it did not have a lot of detail.
With Dr. Rossi's office, a few emails have gone back and forth with Amanda - who is a gem. The communication is really quite incredible. I very much like how they asked me what I'm trying to accomplish, etc. When I received the quote and description back from Dr. Rossi's office, my input was very much incorporated into their proposal. For example, I mentioned that I wanted to "... avoid the look of Beverly Hills women that have had too much plastic surgery..." yes, I say things like that.. 
They used my phrase back at me and said that Dr. Rossi strives for a natural look. So I am getting a very good feeling that I was really listened to. That I am being treated as a person, not just a body. This is feeling like a really good fit for me.
I also liked the detail in the proposal. Every procedure was described along with an explanation as to why each procedure was recommended. As expected, there were a set of main recommendations and a few options. I have not heard back from Dr. Cardenas yet, but at this point, to be honest, I think I have decided. I am feeling really good about Dr. Rossi.
I don't want to unfairly say anything negative about PAI because they are surely top surgeons, I will only say why I didn't choose them. For one, the cost was very close to the same. Both PAI and Dr. Rossi are what I consider affordable. All told I will be just over $20k after travel and even including some $$ for hair transplants.
The big difference for me was communication. Being in opposite time zones makes Thailand difficult. Neither me nor they made a big effort to bridge the communication gap. Perhaps if I had been able to converse with the PAI surgeons it would have been equal.
Dr. Rossi proposes to do the following
• Forehead reconstruction (type III)
• Hairline correction
• Brow lift
• Secondary rhinoplasty (see below)
• Upper lip lift (to make it vertically shorter and get more exposition of the upper teeth) (*)
• Chin reduction in height and width
• Jaw feminization (tapering from chin to rear corners)
Optional, which I'm doing is fat injection to the lips and
blepharoplasty if needed when he looks at me
They explained in great detail that they need to move my glabella (the forehead area between the eyebrows) about 8-10 mm back! Which is a lot. I'm still in a bit of shock about that. I keep saying to myself that they are going to take my head apart and put it back together.
They said that my nose looks very feminine, but after they move my forehead back, they will have to adjust the nose or else the nose will appear too long.
The most complex option is the facelift/necklift which they did recommend. They explained in very great detail that I should do it, but that I could do it at the time of FFS or a few months later. Since they are removing a lot of bone, it is likely that I am going to end up with some loose skin, so a facelift would be good. It would be cheaper to do it at the same time as the FFS. However, if I wait a few months and do it on a second trip after I've healed, I should expect a better result.
More effort but a better result is what I've decided on. Also, I'm thinking that if there is anything else that needs to be done, I could take care of it in 6-12 months. It just seems unwise to pull my older skin over swollen features before they've healed. I could end up with additional lines and wrinkles.
Took this selfie this morning before we went out for breakfast.

-Rhonda
There is definitely an issue of looking like a celeb who's had too much plastic surgery, there are definite cues on the face that can give away the fact that someone has had 'work done'. I want to try and avoid that look as much as possible. I also don't want to lose any facial expression ability, and that is a definite risk and a big concern of mine.
Can I speak candidly?
That is a lot of surgery you are considering, especially if you go for the options and the second set of procedures. For someone who passes very well already, I'm surprised you want to have that much done. I'm sure you will look great when it's all healed and complete, but you will certainly look quite different. If that's what you are expecting and are after, then that's fine, but you certainly don't need it all to pass. But I'm sure you already know that.
It's my central forehead area (glabella) that concerns me too, and is something I want Facial Team to look at. But I am quite happy with my nose, so if they say I'll need a rhinoplasty as well, for similar reasons to you, then I'll most likely just drop the idea of forehead modifications because that would be too much for me to handle. Maybe it's possible to have the eyebrow lift and blepharoplasty without any aggressive bone reconstruction? Then I'd have to have a conventional hair transplant like I did before at DHI, i.e. without the scalp strip removal.
I am also happy with my chin and jawline as they are. It's very much like my mother's (a family trait). Maybe the surgeon might suggest making those areas less prominent, and I suppose they do have a slight masculine edge to them, but hrt and fat distribution have helped enough in that area that I don't feel I need surgery there, rightly or wrongly.
My dad always says that when I look at him, it's like my mom is looking at him.
I am lucky in that I look younger than my age, so that helps too.
One thing I am surprised about is the price, $20k sounds very good to me.
I will definitely compare this to any quotes I get from Facial Team, it's really good to have such information to hand when going for a consultation, thanks for posting it.
I'm glad your sister is supportive, good luck when telling your mother, I won't tell mine until afterwards.
I hope it all works out for you.