Culture ‘My scars aren’t a finish line’: three trans and non-binary people on how top surgery changed their lives - The number of gender-affirming procedures rose in the US, followed by an onslaught of anti-trans laws. For many, the scars can be a symbol of pride and resilience

Article / Archive (Archive's name for this image was 9uBPD, very transphobic of them)

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Ezra Michel got top surgery in 2017 and had to petition Medi-Cal five times to get a revision covered. ‘I felt like I could breathe for the first time.’ Photograph: Ricardo Nagaoka/The Guardian

For many trans and non-binary people, top surgery – the process of removing breast tissue to get a flatter or masculinized chest – is not an elective procedure. It’s essential to them feeling at home in their bodies.

Top surgery is a form of gender-affirming healthcare that can be used to treat dysphoria, the sense of deep unease one feels when their identity or appearance doesn’t match up with the gender they were assigned at birth. It’s also a complicated, intense and invasive process that requires navigating a maze of insurance paperwork, and from which it can take years to heal. This means that the road to achieving one’s “dream” chest can be a long, complex and fluid journey.

The number of gender-affirming surgeries rose steeply in the US between 2016 and 2019. Since then, more trans and non-binary people have publicly documented how their bodies – and their relationships to their bodies – have changed, even as anti-trans legislation has ramped up across the country.

“Everybody’s skin is different, and healing can look so different,” says Dulcinea Pitagora, a psychotherapist and founder of the LGBTQ+-affirmative practice Manhattan Alternative.

Pitagora has worked with some clients who are anxious about their scars showing because they are “worried about being outed, or someone hurting them for being trans”. That fear is exacerbated by the fact that Donald Trump, who has threatened to roll back LGBTQ+ rights, has won a second term. “We see increases in mental health symptoms caused by even hearing about [anti-trans] legislation in other states,” Pitagora says. “It creates more risk for clients, and it could affect whether a provider is willing to give gender-affirming care.”

Despite the baggage that can come with one’s scars, they can also become symbols of pride and resilience. The Guardian spoke with three trans and non-binary people across the US about their top surgeries.

Lazarus Letcher (they/them), 32, New Mexico​

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Lazarus Letcher at their home in New Mexico on 30 October 2024. They got top surgery in 2017 on Barack Obama’s last day in office. ‘I still feel euphoria every time I slip a T-shirt over my head.’ Photograph: Sofie Hecht/The Guardian

I got top surgery in January 2017 on Obama’s last day in office. I felt the need to get it done before Trump took over. It was not common for non-binary folks to get it, and I was also probably the darkest person my surgeon had operated on. I couldn’t find a lot of results online of people of color who’d gotten top surgery.

I had to get a revision because I had quite a bit of breast tissue left under one of my nipples. It was done while I was awake, which was awful. They put a towel over my face, and I could feel the surgeon cutting and yanking my nipple. I eventually got him fired for saying sexually inappropriate things during that session. Thankfully there are now amazing, competent top surgeons in my town who show other ways of supporting our community – like hiring trans people – besides just taking our money.

About two years after surgery, and a year after the revision, I got a huge chest tattoo of a moth. It felt like a reclamation because I didn’t want my scars to be tied to the surgeon who had harmed me and my community. This had been such a battleground throughout my life – first with the breasts and my gender, and then with a terrible surgery experience. I still feel euphoria every time I slip a T-shirt over my head. It never gets old.

There’s something about losing your image that gives me pause. I’ve been a part of a few trans photo series, and there always comes a point where they’re like “pop your shirt off”, and part of it feels almost like it’s the world’s fair. There is a fetishization of transmasculine people.

If I ever get clocked for being trans, it’s not because of my scars, it’s because of my nipples. I was surprised that the melanin never came back to my nipples. That’s pretty common for Black dudes, to have way pinker nipples post-surgery. I used to be self-conscious about that, but now, whatever. My boobs are gone, that’s all I care about.

As a Black trans person, I grew up with “passing” meaning passing as white. Once I met others in the trans community, I realized there’s a whole other conversation around passing, safety and going stealth [when a trans person chooses to not be out as trans]. But I like that my custom nipples might flag to those in the know that I’m trans.

Jenevieve Ting (they/them), 31, New York, New York​

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Jenevieve Ting, a week and a half after their operation in February. ‘I’ve found a lot of hope and curiosity in the fact that my body doesn’t align or adhere perfectly to standards.’ Photograph: Jenevieve Ting

It was a years-long process of thinking about getting top surgery before I got it done in February. I kept thinking about life without my chest, like: “What is it going to feel like to drive a car with the windows down and not have a shirt on? What is it going to feel like to swim in the ocean and not worry about my chest?”

On the car ride back from surgery, I cried. In the days leading up to the procedure, I developed a deepened, intense appreciation for my chest, and felt sad for having to undergo this very invasive procedure. I wished that I didn’t live in a world that has these very binaristic standards of what kinds of bodies are masculine. It wasn’t regret, but I felt this all-encompassing grief.

At first I thought: “Does my chest align with my dream pictures on my reference board?” With time, I’ve experienced my scars less as a finish line, or a point where the journey ends, and more as another texture of my transness.

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Jenevieve Ting (right) and their partner, Sheenie Yip, in the days after their top surgery operation. Photograph: Courtesy of Jenevieve Ting

I was anxious about applying oil every night and massaging my scars in just the right way. But my grip on that has loosened, and I’ve gained comfort in knowing my scars will change as I change. There are moments where I’ve been shirtless in public and it’s felt like a communal marker, because it’s a way for queer people to identify me and vice versa.

I don’t think your chest ever ends up looking the way that you dreamed it would look. There are people on trans forums who find that after they get top surgery, they realize their dysphoria has traveled to other parts of their body. As strange as it sounds, I never want to be fully satisfied with my appearance, because my transness is an evolutionary project. I’ve found a lot of hope and curiosity in the fact that my body doesn’t align or adhere perfectly to standards. It makes me wonder: “How else can I adorn myself?”

Ezra Michel (he/him), 29, Los Angeles, California​


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Ezra Michel at home in Los Angeles on 7 November 2024. ‘When [my scars] started fading, I realized that I never wanted to pass as cis.’ Photograph: Ricardo Nagaoka/The Guardian

When I was around 16, I wasn’t out as trans, but I was out as a lesbian. I came across a YouTube video of a trans guy talking about his top surgery scars. I was mesmerized looking at this guy who was born in a body like mine, who was now legally allowed to post a video of himself shirtless. The video didn’t turn me trans. I was already so uncomfortable with my chest, and seeing that person take charge of their life and their body – despite all the controversy and pain that top surgery could bring – gave me hope.

My top surgery in 2017 was botched. I wanted that moment of taking off my bandages and looking in the mirror and having the big reveal – I had seen that so much online. Instead, it was like a nightmare. My nipples were underneath my pec muscle on my rib cage. They were long and thin with scars shooting upwards. I had never seen anything like it.

I eventually went to a different surgeon to get a revision. When he said: “We can fix this,” I felt like I could breathe for the first time in six months. It’s not that I was missing my boobs; I had no regret about that whatsoever. It was just not what I wanted to look like. I had to petition Medi-Cal to get the revision covered – which I finally got after five appeals – because I had to argue that it met the criteria for dysphoria and that it wasn’t just a cosmetic procedure.

About two years after the second operation, I thought that it would be cool to tattoo my scars. When they started fading, I realized that I never wanted to pass as cis. Since age 16, all the chests that I had admired were those of trans men who had top surgery. None of my friends supported the tattoo idea. But after I did it, I got comments online saying: “This is such a power move.” There were other comments like “you’re sitting in your privilege a little too much”, meaning if I had the privilege of having scars fade and feeling safe, then I should never want to give that up. I have compassion and empathy for that point of view, but I can’t imagine projecting that onto someone else.
 
Of the three women they chose for this article, two had a horrific surgical botch requiring a traumatic revision, one felt deep grief and says she's unhappy with it but prefers it that way.

Yes, this supporting evidence definitely convinces me of the author's thesis that "Top surgery is not an elective procedure. It's essential to them feeling at home in their bodies."
 
"Top surgery" is just a flowery-sounding euphemism for the elective and unnecessary amputation of normal, healthy tissue to enable mental illness.

Likewise, "bottom surgery" is just cuddle-speak for the elective and unnecessary mutilation (resulting in complete loss of function) of normal, healthy tissue to enable mental illness.
 
This article makes me sad. It’s so incredibly obvious that it’s the same demographic that was hit by anorexia and cutting fads in the past.

Being a young woman sucks. Men stare at your boobs and are sometimes obnoxious. Instagram and TV and magazines tell you that you’re ugly for xyz imperfections and no one will love you. It’s easy to fall into the trap of hating your body and self harming.

Do the really radical thing: love yourself and tell the rest of the world to get fucked because their opinion doesn’t matter.
 
This article makes me sad. It’s so incredibly obvious that it’s the same demographic that was hit by anorexia and cutting fads in the past.
"Sad."

That means you're still letting them get under your skin.

These are shark-eyed cold-blooded manipulators who will say or do anything to get their next hit. Think of them as fent zombies with a different drug of choice. Mourn the human baby that someone used to love, but don't give the person-shaped con job crying to you about "dysphoria" the time of day because you'll soon find yourself missing a watch and your kid getting mysterious messages on Roblox.
 
"Sad."

That means you're still letting them get under your skin.

These are shark-eyed cold-blooded manipulators who will say or do anything to get their next hit. Think of them as fent zombies with a different drug of choice. Mourn the human baby that someone used to love, but don't give the person-shaped con job crying to you about "dysphoria" the time of day because you'll soon find yourself missing a watch and your kid getting mysterious messages on Roblox.

I admire your hardline stance and I think we definitely need more of it in the world. I should say my sadness would never for a minute stop me from telling a pooner chick to fuck off if she asked me to use her preferred pronouns…

… and yet, I find the current state of affair profoundly depressing. What is it about young women and girls that predisposes them to these self destructive social fads? How can we break this cycle?

Just like with teenage boys gooning and playing vidya 24/7, I feel that all of this shit is a symptom of society failing our children.
 
None of my friends supported the tattoo idea. But after I did it, I got comments online saying: “This is such a power move.” There were other comments like “you’re sitting in your privilege a little too much”, meaning if I had the privilege of having scars fade and feeling safe, then I should never want to give that up.
Were those friends the same as the people online? If they were, they were lying to you afterward. If they weren't, you're being groomed by the first one and the second is a virtue signaling dipshit more concerned with people's place on the totem pole than your well-being.

Enjoy your "trophy".
 
When I was around 16, I wasn’t out as trans, but I was out as a lesbian. I came across a YouTube video of a trans guy talking about his top surgery scars. I was mesmerized looking at this guy who was born in a body like mine, who was now legally allowed to post a video of himself shirtless. The video didn’t turn me trans. I was already so uncomfortable with my chest, and seeing that person take charge of their life and their body – despite all the controversy and pain that top surgery could bring – gave me hope.
And people keep insisting that social contagion is an myth...
 
Exhibitionist retards, not all men feel the need to go everywhere or be shirtless at all times., most DONT and it's often seen as trashy or lazy What California needs as much as sanity is a solid dumping of snow every year to make the pooners cover up.
 
@Diana Moon Glampers is there an increase in the proliferation of Troon articles since the election, or am I just noticing because I stepped out of the US Politics hug box now that the thread has slowed down?

What is it about young women and girls that predisposes them to these self destructive social fads? How can we break this cycle?
I think it's the weird combination of wanting to be/feel "special" and "unique" while also wanting to be surrounded and encouraged by numerous people who also want to be/feel "special" and "unique" at the same time in the same way. They feed off each other and that perpetuates the cycle. The instigators of the contagion know this and are happy to keep it going with fresh meat. And yeah, it's depressing, because a lot of these kids are neglected in some way and aren't getting love or nurturing or attention in a normal, healthy way and setting and are looking for an adulterated form of it in peer groups and on the internet.
 
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