Welcome to Susan's, Colleen. Nice to have you here.
Quote from: rena colleen bender on June 12, 2009, 09:44:57 AM
...
1st pargraph sounds very familiar. Same story for most of us in some fashion or another.
Quote...
That second paragraph "ditto" with the first.
QuoteIm certain that I have no anxiety about getting an orchiectomy, and I'm also certain that if I could never be on the thrusting side of sex again it would not bother me one bit.
The "thrusting side" and not particularly being interested in that is also rather typical. Although, be warned, with a penile-inversion one can still thrust herself.

It's even a lot of fun!
QuoteWhat I am uncertain of is what it will feel like after the srs. Another reason that I want it (and this is a big one) is to increase the chances of finding a man I am compatible with before I reach middle age who isn't interested in me for being a chick with a you know what, because i have no interest whatsoever in those kinds of guys.
This is also a rather typical response. I doubt that anyone is much interested in "being" a body-part rather than being a human being full and complete and being "wanted" for that.
Which fact makes a lot of the banter around here and elsewhere by those who feel that they need to defend "straight, post-op women" at the expense of deciding that anyone who doesn't fit their definition (usually quite personally, in fact) of "being just like me" is anathema and not real as I am.
All "post-ops" keep the penis. The differences are involved with where that penis is now.

It is what it is and doesn't really bother me. Everyone's comfort is her own and I can live with people as they are. You are obviously not like someone who chooses to stop at an orchi and that's also a great way to feel about one's self. All of it is what it is and doesn't affect anyone's "realness" or "womanhood."
Although it could well affect how someone approaches an open same-sex shower or an open nude-beach. But those are also personal things that people work out pretty well without my judgement coming into play at all.
QuoteAlso, i hate how my favorite clothing doesn't fit right at all and it causes me a lot of anxiety when i go out and the wind blows and outlines my my body and you can see that something is not quite right.
Learning to "tuck" well or using a "gaff" properly can alleviate that problem prior to SRS. If the penis and testicles shrink, as many do, on HRT the problem may well be solved through a simple pair of panties. Even larger sizes can be tucked or "gaffed" and not show one's incongruency in clothing.
QuoteI'm scared about if i will still be able to feel the kind of pleasure that the nerves send to my brain when i orgasm, because although i hate using it, i do like the way its nerves feel. I feel like any kind of moment of intense physical pleasure is like a gift from the source of creation, so I don't want to like eliminate my ability to orgasm. I have read a lot into it and it seems like some people are totally happy with it and say they can orgasm and others who say that they can't.
No surgeon will write you a guarantee that you will be fully orgasmic after SRS. Although the general consensus appears to be that most will be capable of orgasm provided they don't have a psychosomatic or other physical condition that would prevent it. (The psychosomatic conditions are usually, but not limited to, sexual abuse, often severe, in childhood, adolescence or young adulthood, sometimes even in later adulthood. Depends on trauma severity in the individual.)
Physical conditions could be a "botched" surgery or a problem that was pre-existing in the nervous system. Yep, not every surgery "completes" perfectly. Sometimes scar tissue and fissures and necrotic tissue can affect orgasmic abilities post-SRS.
Most recommended for post-op orgasmic capacity is prolly Brassard in Montreal who was a neuro-surgeon in a former professional life prior to his juncture with Dr. Menard in Montreal. Drs. Bowers, Meltzer, McGinn, Suporn are also noted among post-ops for providing good post-SRS orgasmic capacity.
There are prolly others, but that lists those most commonly noted by post-ops I read and know.
QuoteSo in conclusion, I am pretty certain that I want to get SRS, but I'm not certain if my reasons for wanting it are the kinds of reasons people have it and are totally happy about it once they are post op. Could you ladies please give me your insight to my concerns? I would very much appreciate it! Thanks for reading this and I hope you are all having a wonderful week! <333
Colleen, most of us are going to tell you that we get the SRS to personally feel complete. Many of us will tell you that part of that is being able to continue sexual relationships effectively and with pleasure. And most will tell you that that is exactly what occurs.
Many of us will say that even prior to SRS we were able to have satisfying sexual relationships without the surgery and continue to do so afterwards. But, as I said above there are no guarantees.
I'd also point out to you that SRS is not a marker for ongoing happiness. Life continues to be life and we all have problems after SRS just as we did before SRS. That's a normal thing with people, operations do not provide in and of themselves either the "sense" of congruity or the basis for ongoing "happiness." But they do effect changes that may well lead one to feeling "totally" conguent and toward a better possibility of "happiness" without having the ongoing problems with "how one feels about herself."
It's just that the op itself isn't going to be able to handle that for you, me or anyone else.
Your reasons seem quite as valid as do anyone else's for having or not having SRS. Like everything else it's a choice we make and that we make for normally personal reasons that have to do with our own sense of who we should be physically. The same thing is true for BAS, FFS and HRT. They do NOT "make the woman" obviously. There are far too many trans and genetic women who don't have any or all of those surgeries and are every bit as "womanly" as any other women.
You'll never, with current technology, be able to bear your own "conceived" children. But that is also NOT a marker for womanhood. Some females are born every year with a "closed" vagina. They don't have one at all. They are no less female than any of the rest of us. Women are consistently born with severely damaged or missing ovaries. Not all women have ueteruses or unblocked or existing Fallopian tubes.
So, for happiness I'd suggest that the op or lack of it is an ingredient one uses to work herself toward her own contentment. Your reasons are important to you and that is EXACTLY what you should look at. "What will I be satisfied with for me." The rest of us are totally unable to speak for or against your comfort and how you choose to go about your life.
But, I believe we are all willing to support how ever you attempt and hopefully succeed in getting there.
Nichole