Megathread SRS and GRS surgeons and associated horrors - the medical community of experimental surgeons, the secret community of home butchers

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Since having a dick she has adapted her actions to be more careful around that spot because now even her subconscious knows I have a dick.
Lmao she thinks her wife worries about accidentally kneeing her Real Manly Balls.
She’s being cautious with your crotch area because you underwent a massively complicated and fragile urinary surgery, dipshit.
No more worrying about the harness smelling like ass
New pooner meme incoming…
 
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I have bad news for you little pooner....
What’s numb for the most part 3-6 months after surgery usually stays, all the surgeons can do is place the nerves back together and hope they grow back, but the more invasive surgeries…
That’s nerve damage in both the genitals *and* arm and leg.

Tbh being numb though is a blessing, the alternative being constant unending crippling nerve pain.
She should be thankful.
 
Oh my god, i don't know where to post what happenned to me, so i will post here.

I think i should take a break from all trans stuff, before i begin i should precise that i am a man and i am of course against the trans idiology, men are men, and women are women. and i live in Morocco which means i am a muslim, and as you know it's completely and definitly prohibbited by islam to be trans, and if you don't go back to reason, your fate is death, and not normal death, we must throw the trans guy fr.......
Apology for bad English

Where were you when @mounavri realized he trans?

I was at work and Kiwi Farms said new post

"@mounavri is trans"

"No"
 
They believe that thinking like this is normal. 🙄

TBH not thinking 24/7 about your genitals is pretty normal. Pity she didn’t come to that conclusion before major surgery. But it’s OK, she’s found another part of her body to obsess over

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link | archive

ALT Scar is lower than expected, as stealth how can I own my scar without being paranoid about someone clocking me?Advice (self.phallo)

submitted 14 days ago by RedRockWulf

My scar is about 4 inches above my knee and overall visible when sitting down in shorts. I could go for longer shorts, but I’m already short and not trying to look shorter.

I’d like to own my scar if it comes up in conversation, I’m just not sure how. Things aren’t really visible until I’m sitting down then my STG graft / drain hole peaks out and if my shorts go any higher then my donor site is visible. My donor site is a year old so it’s pretty pink, while my STG are more obvious and will be only 4 months old when I go to this school so not quite faded.

I’m going to an all boys school abroad in a few months where no one will know I’m trans and I’ll be living with 2-3 other guys. I’m sure my scar will at some point become a talking point and I don’t want to give them the none of your business thing since I’ll be trying to make friends and don’t wanna shut them out.

I can’t think of anything other than how I recently went on a trip where I rode motorcycles out of the country and have thought about saying “it was a motorcycle accident that happened recently and don’t wanna talk about it.” I get paranoid about being asked about it though, possibly by someone well verse in the medical field asking where my donor site went to / what hospital I went to out of the country, etc. I know that’s just paranoia, but I’d really love some advice on interacting with other people my age who may asked about it

I find myself always checking the scar to make sure it’s not visible / pulling down my shorts after sitting incase I’m around people I know. I’ll wear pants if I want it to be a 0% risk even if it’s hot

I did have one old stranger ask me and after I said skin graft, he didn’t ask any further. I just feel like if I make friends it’s gonna come up at some point and I wanna be completely prepared. I also don’t want to care about people seeing my scar or getting OCD about my shorts riding high.

I was recently on a tour where the topic of scars came up and the group leader encouraged everyone to show each other their scars and it became a competition for the coolest stories / biggest scars. So badly I wanted to show my thigh, but I got so anxious and felt like I was gonna puke. It felt like I’d be outing myself which is the last thing I want, but at the same time I do think the scar is bad ass, but also hesitate that it’s not a “normal” scar and will freak people out who see it

I’m already short and not trying to look shorter... I’m going to an all boys school abroad in a few months where no one will know I’m trans

:story:
 
What’s numb for the most part 3-6 months after surgery usually stays, all the surgeons can do is place the nerves back together and hope they grow back, but the more invasive surgeries…
That’s nerve damage in both the genitals *and* arm and leg.

Tbh being numb though is a blessing, the alternative being constant unending crippling nerve pain.
She should be thankful.

PL:

I had knee surgery about a decade ago. A nerve on the outer aspect of my knee was severed/damaged. I have no sensation on that area.

It was most noticeable for the first few months after surgery. I was aware of the numbness all the time.

Since then, I haven’t regained any sensation. I am just not as aware of it. Unless I specifically do something (like bang my leg on the desk, reach down and touch or scratch the area etc.) I don’t even notice it.

My surgeon basically told me that whatever sensation I had by the time my staples were removed was going to be it.

These people are delusional if they think there’s any chance of nerve growth.
 
My surgeon basically told me that whatever sensation I had by the time my staples were removed was going to be it.

These people are delusional if they think there’s any chance of nerve growth.
I'd maybe believe that the groin has a better chance of regaining some sensation compared to nerves in the limbs, but troons who think that someday their amholes will have the same sensory capability they did pre-surgery are still expecting WAY too much. The kind of neural recovery where people re-learn how to walk after having a stroke is all central nervous system anyway; troons have the opposite problem (CNS is fine, PNS to groin is uh, FUBAR.)
 
Here is a question. I knew a man who had hernia repair surgery. During the surgery, some nerves were harmed but weren't severed. At least that's what I understood happened from what he told me. Apparently that's a small risk every such surgery has. So since that surgery he suffers pain in his side, and has to receive some treatments to ease the pain (painkillers, some particularly strong painkiller he gets via infusion once a week, medical cannabis). So here is the actual question: could that happen with SRS? Because if you think numbness is bad, trust me, this is far worse... Imagine consistent acute pain in your groin for the rest of your life. Or perhaps we (as in, the farms) already know of such case?

(Edited for grammar)
 
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So trooning is the male equivalent of political lesbianism?

Interesting, I'd need to read up on this more, though some of this does resonate. The fact that so many 4chan incels and the like do seem to have trooned out is one of those things that really speaks towards the underlying motivations here. I've noticed that many men seem to resent the power that women have over them, in the literal sense that a woman can by her simply ignoring them make these men feel inferior and worthless. That seems to be a lot of the incel mentality, an inability to treat not being fawned over by women as anything other than a direct repudiation of their worth as an individual, as a man. I'm not sure I buy the idea that it's for revenge though, it seems more like a way to secure the object of fixation and desire in a way so that the man can never be refused. It would still be motivated by fear and resentment though.

E: I still think AGP probably comes about through multiple pathways, but this definitely seems like part of the equation
 
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I’m going to an all boys school abroad in a few months where no one will know I’m trans and I’ll be living with 2-3 other guys. I’m sure my scar will at some point become a talking point and I don’t want to give them the none of your business thing since I’ll be trying to make friends and don’t wanna shut them out.
High grade lunacy there.

That's one to watch. I bet she's back home by Xmas.
 
Nerve rehabilitation timelines can vary between patients but the general consensus seems to be that there's little hope left after one year ("little hope" being optimistic choice of words here). And while there are things that can be done to aid sensory rehabilitation after a surgery, the evidence for their efficacy is quite limited. The methods used tend to be same as with neurological (ie stroke) patients but they don't seem to be as effective with surgical patients as with those who have experienced a stroke. And even with stroke patients the outlook is often quite grim in cases where there's little to no spontaneous sensory recovery in the first few weeks following the stroke. It's not a hopeless situation but still a situation where I'd encourage you to pick a god an pray tbh.

I've been meaning to write a post on a nerve rehab guide for phalloplasty patiens that I came across some time ago on r/phallo but unfortunetaly I haven't had the time. I'll attach the pdf here if anyone is interested or wants to write about it. The guide is based on this article (archive) which is free to read. I'll caveat this by saying that I have no experience with post-surgical sensory rehabilitation/retraining but it looks like basic sensory retraining techniques tailored for coom & piss obsessed pooners. (And it its very well tailored, I give them that.) Will it work? Who knows but we all know that phallos themselves don't work so who cares really.

I'm kind of sad that the guide doesn't mention electric stimulation though. It's obviously for the best but seeing retarded pooners accidentally electrocuting themselves would be kino.

Please don't undergo these surgeries. Instead of visualizing how your phallus will look during sex/urination etc., I'd focus more on imagining how it would feel for urine (for example) to flow through and exit your phallus. Focus on imagining concrete sensations - would you feel warmth, stinging sensation etc.? And while the guide tells you to not feel guilty if you don't follow it, you need to take an active role on your rehabilitation and commit to those exercises, preferably daily or even twice or thrice a day. You could also try to imagine the position of your phallus without looking at it the same way you know the position of your hands etc without visual feedback. You might not be able to do it but it's worth a shot.

There's also this free article (archive) on perceived and measurable sensation on phallos. You need to understand that evaluating sensation in a reliable way is very difficult and it's impossible to asses how much/what a person can feel based on objective assessment tools alone. You need both subjective and objective data as sensation is highly subjective experience. That being said, this figure from the study is still quite telling and funny:

On y-axis: 5 means patients reported always feeling sensation on their phallo and 1 meaning they reported never feeling any sensation.
On x-axis: 5 means no measurable sensation whatsoever/only deep pressure sensation and 1 means normal measurable sensation (can feel light touch). 4 means there's no protective sensation which explains why these people don't kill themselves when their phallos rot off. 3 would indicate some loss of protective sensation and 2 normal protective sensation + some but not perfect/normal touch sensation.

As you can see, there's little to no correlation between objective and subjective sensation, lol. It's almost as if it was a cope.

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