Personally, the thing about FFS is surgeons of all types seem to not take care of their patients equally. There are Dr. O stories out there that horrify me and bring me back to my my traumatic surgical days, and yet there are Dr. O results that look so extremely natural; same with Dr. S IMO. I experienced that with a revision rhinoplasty surgeon; he had literally hundreds of pristine results but gave me a jagged, collapsed, bulbous nose that looked ran over by a truck. My personal belief, after tons of research, is that sometimes, surgeons just come into surgery completely uninterested, unprepared, and drunk. There's no laws that prevent it.
http://www.facialfeminizationsurgery.net/facialfeminizationsurgery.htmlhttp://www.facialfeminizationsurgery.net/myffs.htmIt's really unfair, especially because of the amount of money
every patient pays. I doubt there is discrimination going on with a doctor who operates on Trans, so my personal belief is that when these types of results happen, it's because of intoxication (a study once proved that if a doctor has just one glass of wine the night before, his success rate and accuracy with a knife lowers by %50), or simply, the surgeon not planning the surgery properly (the patient above's jaw fell apart because Dr. O did not have enough screws for the jaw and had to use spare ones that did not fit; she also said he came into the surgery verbally admitting he was ill-prepared.)
So, coming back to the main point, yes, the amazing Dr. O result showcased in many posts above (Megan's) shows that surgeons can give you something almost identical to the morph as long as the morph isn't too drastic, and that a morph should totally be the thing that convey's the goal and idea. But really, I think the outcome boils down more to you have to make sure the surgeon you go with just isn't drunk, high, tired, ill-prepared, or has a history of those things being said online. Whatever Dr. O did the day of Megan's surgery, he did it right, and looking at Trinity's result, I'll just say that it doesn't look like the standard carried over. I don't think it was anything to do with Trinity's healing or body, and I think when bad results happen, it's not a limitation, but a fault of the surgeon. We can't let bad results trick us into thinking great results aren't possible; we just have to do the impossible and find a surgeon who seems to rise above the rest.