Post operative reactions
When the surgeon was marking me up for breast surgery with his felt-tip pen and a little plastic ruler he apologized for the time he was taking.
“That’s fine,” I said. “As my father would say, ‘Measure twice and cut once’!”
“Your father was a surgeon?”
“No. He was a carpenter.”
He laughed and told me that his grandfather had been a timber-cutter (lumberjack). His own best and favorite subjects at High School were maths and sciences, and woodwork and technical drawing. The first cluster, of course, put him in the “A stream”: scientists and doctors. The second were the students who became carpenters and plumbers. I admired the creativity with which he had resolved this dilemma. Now he could draw, cut, and practice medical science all on the same day.
The guy who did my sex change surgery was not as approachable. But he, too, was a great technician and the vagina he built me is a biotechnological marvel.
I chose a third surgeon to do my face and I chose with extreme care. I found him in Thailand. A great technician, a fine sculptor, and a wonderful human being.
Yet not one of these fine technicians showed any real understanding or appreciation of the hardest part of these procedures for the recipient of their skills. Pain relief, physical healing…all fine. But not the mental trauma, the psychic stress and shock. The Thai came closest. He insisted his patients remain in his care for 3 weeks daily post-op. nursing. But he was genuinely puzzled by my obvious mental distress after 10 hours of bone removal, cutting and slicing. My sex-change surgeon gave me a brochure that cheerfully informed me I could, “resume sexual activity within 12 weeks…”
My partner had left me because of my decision. I had not attempted to have sex as a woman before in my life. My only memories of penetration had to do with childhood sexual abuse. At 12 weeks I was alone, in pain, confused and suffering (without knowing it) a PTSD that really encompassed all of my life.
I had those three surgeries within a two-year period. I wanted them. I never regretted them. But in those two years I have had to relearn how to live my life. I’ve had to grieve the rejection of all my family, loss of my partner, and now the added difficulty of trying to find work as a woman.
Anyhow, point of the story. A few weeks before the second anniversary of my sex-change surgery I began manifesting a very profound depression. It reached its culmination on that second anniversary. Only then did I realize that I was in the midst of a major “anniversary reaction”. I regularly see a counsellor and she was able to keep me on track. I also saw a sex therapist who trained me in how a vagina works. (Believe it or not it is different to a penis!)
I discovered a significant online library of “anniversary reactions” to all sorts of events (but not to sex-change surgery). The searches helped me resolve the depression/anxiety/insomnia/suicidality. I cried as I read stories of young women’s reactions to the loss of a baby; older women and hysterectomy; the shock of divorce; a loved one’s death; veterans talking about the seemingly inexplicable revisiting of battle-stress years after the event.
And I came back to remembering being discharged from those various biotechnological institutes with my brand-new body parts, some pills, a brochure and a set of plastic dildos.
This is both a warning and a plea. A warning to those of us who have any life-changing/life-saving surgery. Be prepared for post-op. depression and take it very seriously. You lost more than you may have acknowledged in that surgery.
The plea? Let us work to ensure that proper psychological/life care is part of any major surgical intervention. Let us redefine successful surgery as a surgery that is successfully integrated into the recipient’s whole of life and insist that the post-op. care plan include ongoing and meaningful support: not just a brochure and the pills.
November 8, 2009 at 9:33 am
Josie, Thankyou for being so completely honest with us about this journey. The courage you have shown in choosing to live your truth will get you through. For anyone who hasn’t been through your experience, understanding how you must feel and how day to day matters affect you is difficult. But your incredible ability to write about it, and strength to share your experience, gives all of us knowledge that we are all capable of achieving and living through the most impossible challenges. I applaud you. I would hire you in an instant. You were a very good sort as a man and an even better sort as a woman so just go for it!! Louxx
November 19, 2009 at 10:43 am
We really appreciate this post , because we have gone through this here too. And yes, depression is very real after the surgery. The cause is an entire combination of things, mainly being that your body is cut on. Your body has a mind too, the cells in your body and the organs have consciousness and awareness.
Add to that the stress of having nonsupportive family and lots of mind altering drugs (morphine, demerol, pethidine, all pain killers) and you can end up having an anxiety attack or depression.
After surgery , psychological care should be provided, but very few clinics and doctors even think about it once they are done working on you.
March 31, 2010 at 1:04 am
Many thnks for writing such a fascinating post. All too often you see the same thing over and over so this makes a refreshing change.