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Nadia Bolz-Weber's avatar

Yeah I got rid of the guilty and innocent boobs at the same time. I have implants and a revision coming up in August. Likely needing a hysterectomy soon too. So, for me, having implants is emotionally better than going flat. Even without any nipples, at least it feels closer to normal after losing so much.

Your Doctor KLOVER's avatar

This is such a compassionate, high-utility piece because reconstruction gets framed as either a “bounce back” project or a purely cosmetic choice, when for many people it’s really about identity, safety, sensation, and control after something that took control away.

What I appreciate most is how you normalize the emotional complexity: wanting reconstruction doesn’t mean you’re vain, and not wanting it doesn’t mean you’re “stronger” or “more enlightened.” It’s a personal decision that sits at the intersection of body image, sexuality, trauma, risk tolerance, time, finances, and how much more medical life someone can tolerate after treatment. That deserves respect, not a template.

I also loved that you grounded it in practical reality. People hear “implant vs flap” like it’s a simple menu choice, but the lived differences matter: number of surgeries, recovery time, complication profiles, long-term maintenance, sensation changes, radiation effects, and the way decisions interact with staging and adjuvant plans. That’s the part patients need before they consent, because the “right” choice is often the one that fits their life and nervous system, not the one that looks best on a brochure.

Thank you for making space for the grief too, including the grief of scars, altered sensation, asymmetry, and the fact that even the best reconstruction doesn’t restore the pre-cancer body. Naming that isn’t pessimism; it’s honesty that helps people make choices without later feeling blindsided.

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