Thursday, August 31, 2023

Vagiversary, or kind of in between - lol

 So it has been a year since I had surgery. My first surgical even for GCS happened 8/23/22. Many know what happened with that one. Surgery went well, as did my initial recovery in hospital – although I found that lying in a hospital bed for a full week was extremely difficult. With little to no movement allowed and most certainly no getting out of bed, well there is not much that you can do to alleviate discomfort. Boredom is another matter. I mean there was TV, movies, plus I made sure I had what I needed to do some writing. Had initially brought reading materials too, but well it was a saucy story so that turned out to be not a good thing.

 

So as I was saying, my first surgical event happened a year and 7 days ago. I think, although honestly can’t recall exactly, that I was released from hospital on the 30th of August, and as I write this on August 30th, this could be the anniversary of my getting home with my vag. Initially all that went well, dilation was happened, etc, yada yada, but then there was wound separation. As I shared last year, we know that I had to go back into hospital for a review about a week after getting home. That review turned into a major decision. The one thing I didn’t want to occur, happened. My skin graft failed and my canal was pretty much kapoot. So the decision – revise back to full depth, or shallow. Spent the night thinking about it. There was going to be a more complicated recovery for full depth – well actually even for shallow depth my recovery would be a bit more complicated due to the initial failure. Anyway long story short, too late, lol – I opted for revising to shallow. Spent another week in hospital, got home and then into regular recovery. Recovery from Shallow depth was a lot easier than even the week and a half I spent with full.

 

So now here we are, almost a year later. I mean we are a year later with my full depth, it’ll be another 8 days before it’ll be my shallow vagiversary.

 

Like I said – it has been a year, and even today I still have moments where the surgical area can get extremely tender, particularly when I’ve been sitting at a desk all day, or doing a lot of movement.

 

Recovery took way longer than I initially expected. Oh 6 weeks after the surgery I was definitely mobil, and feeling very little pain – there was discomfort, almost constant, but it wasn’t pain exactly. My movements were slow, but I was able to get around.

 

I had gained a bit of weight during my recovery – about 10lbs – took so many months to shed that gained weight, partly because my stamina had suffered.

 

Getting back to a regular routine was more difficult than expected. Prior to surgery I was exercising almost every day. Atleast 5 of the days I was getting 10k+ steps. That went to zero for a week in hospital, then a few hundred upon being released, then back to zero again after my second surgery and very few upon my release back home on the second one as the Doctor wanted me to take it easy at first. It took so long to get up to a place where I was over 1000 steps – and even after 6 weeks, well I was still walking slowly, gingerly and not nearly as much as I was used to – and it was only ever walking.

 

I think it was like 12 weeks before I could really begin to increase my activity and at that point I had to take it real easy and build up to it. My stamina, endurance, strength and speed had all suffered tremendously during that time. And it took such a long time for me to increase my activity to where I felt I was actually exercising, and that is one reason it took me months and months to shed even the 10lbs I had gained. And still a year later, I am not quite to where I thought I would be, getting there, but just shy of it. But I am finally feeling that I am almost as strong as I was before surgery. I write this not to dissuade anyone, but provide information. Everything you research and Doctors will tell you that initial recovery is 6-12 weeks – and that is pretty accurate. By 6 weeks you are not experiencing pain – well I wasn’t and you can start exploring, plus things are really starting to feel good during that exploration. But Doctors and research don’t often cover how long it will take you to get your strength back to pre-surgery levels. It can take a long time. After 6 weeks I was back at work, I managed to stay remote for a few extra weeks, then worked slowly into going back to the office – my work was 3 days in office at that point – I started out slowly, with one, then built up to two, then managed to get it back to 1 day again for a while. It wasn’t painful, but dang would it get uncomfortable. Yes you are moving around ok and all, but you need to sit down gingerly for a good long time. And by the end of the day you are getting tired and uncomfortable. Most people could tell when I was starting to feel that discomfort as I’d sit down even more gingerly – I guess my walking was about the same at the end of the day. So with all of that, all the soft, delicate movements, having to ease into things – it can take a good long time to get all your strength back.

 

 

One thing I noticed is that even when things started to feel good and movements were easier and all – there were still times when it felt just plain weird down there. I mean, it is understandable, major configuration change, takes a bit of getting used to. But walking faster feels weird, sitting down on the toilet can feel strange, running, yeah that just feels completely strange. But I also practiced Karate, Taekwondo and a few others. So the most weird thing is a side kick. As soon as you lift your leg up, and kick out to the side. You feel those lips part and wow, it is just the strangest feeling. Even up to almost a year later it still feels odd. Kinda feels the same if you move into a kneeling position without underwear and all. It’s pretty much just a matter of adjusting to things moving that never did before, lol. But it is so very interesting, as well as strange.

 

Some things I did not expect – well didn’t really expect that strange sensation when I sat down, or did a side kick. Surprised me at first. And it takes a while for your parts to get used to that, particularly if those parts were fully covered pre-surgery. How it felt to explore surprised me. And yes I am just gonna say it playing felt so good, surprisingly good. I think what really surprised me the most was how much fluid I still produced. If I spend time getting myself going, well I still produce quite a bit of fluid, far more than I thought. And the end result – well that is just way, way more than I thought, better than I imagined, but still more. Another surprise, after I had fully recovered an could explore is that I still have a slight cavity where the canal would be. It’s about an inch deeper than the rest of the cavity, so there is still something there, more than I thought I’d have after the Doctor said it would just heal up. And then another surprise was hair growth – after so much electrolysis I did not expect as much hair to return. But I suppose it kinda makes sense as what I am seeing now is mostly outside of the area she concentrated on before surgery, and it’s just more visible, cause ya know, nothing sticking out from it anymore, lol. But during my initial recovery I avoided any kind of grooming, just to make sure I didn’t cut myself, or damage myself in any way. And yeah it got quite busy, lol. Fortunately I don’t really mind that.

 

So a year on and how do I feel?

 

Back when I had to choose between my revision to full or shallow, I was worried that I’d regret whatever choice I made. And yes there may always be an element of that no matter what you do. At the time it was a basic cost benefit analysis that did not add up. And for this year I have been extremely content, happy with the results. The way it looks beneath underwear, leggings, jeans or pants is all I could have asked for. That smooth shape, the thing I wanted more than anything in this life, I now have and it is even more amazing to see than I ever thought. When I look in the mirror my body does not disgust me anymore – well ok I still want to lose some more weight, lol – but the rest of it doesn’t disgust me. I really like to see it. And yes I have spent quite a bit of time looking at the vag in a mirror – it is awesome. I love the way it looks. I have enjoyed all the sensations and exploration this past year, and I continue to be so happy and so glad that I went for surgery.

 

Do I have regrets? Sure, anytime you do something big there is going to be regrets. I regret that the first surgery fell apart. And I do regret, a little, that I lost my canal and did not revise to full depth. There are times when I wish that I’d just went ahead and done that. But I really didn’t want to use skin from my stomach area, that would just complicate my recovery and didn’t appeal to me at all. At the time I figured it might be better to weight, they will improve these surgeries over time and I might be able to revise back to full depth in the future. So yes I have some regrets about not going to full depth. Honestly that it still in the cards and something I may consider in a the future. I miss not having a canal. I miss not being able to explore that. But all that being said I am still so far beyond happy with what I have.

 

Now my biggest regret – NOT DOING THIS DECADES AGO – Oh how I wish I’d transitioned years ago, and I really wish I’d had surgery all those years ago. Waiting so long, well it sucks on many levels. Made the recovery a bit more arduous for one thing. But also shortened the amount of time I really have with the body I know that I should have been born with.

 

So all other regrets aside – for those can be overcome, changed and I can still fix that – the biggest and longest lasting regret, the one that will never change is waiting so damn long to do this. So for all those doubters out there – although I doubt they’d read this anyway – but for all those who think being Trans is a phase – well it’s a hell of a long phase and I certainly do not regret surgery. I in know way mutilated my body – it was born mutilated and now its corrected as best as medical science can accomplish. Well almost, minus a canal – which like I said is still an option in the future.

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