That’s when I started having more full-body orgasms. They were different even before my surgery after I started hormone replacement therapy. But it’s still there and it can still be stimulated. In fact, I still have a prostate, even though it’s much smaller than it was because of hormone replacement therapy. Jessica said she has a G-spot and that she has had orgasms - but they are 'very different' to what she experienced before surgery.
She said she has shown her new sexual organs to cisgender females who have told her the surgeon 'did a great job'. It took a lot of adjusting and it was pretty weird at first.' 'Basically, my clit was telling me that it was still the head of my penis, that the most sensitive part of it was still there. She said: 'There were times early on when I felt like I could feel my penis. In the early days after the operation, Jessica said there were occasions when she thought she still had male genitalia. 'Your clitoris, which used to be the head of your penis, is positioned in a completely different way,' she said. Healing: She said she had anticipated her vagina looking 'like Frankenp***y' after surgery, pictured in diagram, but said it was much worse than she expected (medical diagram shown) Because you’re already dealing with so many changes, working with so many geographic changes on your body. 'It’s something doctors should tell patients beforehand. She said doctors should better prepare patients for what will happen following the surgery. I’m dying." But it turns out that it is perfectly normal.'
'And it’s gross and it’s funky and it’s awful and you think, "Oh my god, What is happening? My p***y is melting. It’s hard to believe because when you lose a limb or a toe it doesn’t grow back. 'So you might have a chunk of your inner labia just die off, just fall off, and it’ll just grow right back. 'What you don’t expect is this yellow-y, clumpy, almost mucus-y, looks-like-someone-sneezed-on-your-p***y kind of residue. 'It’s red, there’s stitches and it’s swollen, you can see the stitch lines. Warning: Jessica, who was born male, said: 'There are going to be parts of you that melt off' after surgery (medical diagram shown)Īlthough Jessica said she was expecting her vagina to 'look like Frankenp***y' after surgery, it was much worse that she could have imagined.Īt one point she claims she thought she was 'dying'. 'That’s when the surface tissue tends to die off - which is as gross as it sounds. 'When that’s done, some of the tissues might not get as much blood flow as they did before, so they get starved of nutrients and oxygen.
'So vaginoplasty consists of a re-positioning and folding of all these tissues using the existing tissues. They’re arranged differently, but the individual parts are really similar. 'Basically the furniture down there gets rearranged during the surgery. One of the many things I learned along this journey is that male genitalia and female genitalia aren’t that different. But it’s also perfectly normal and most people recover from that completely as if nothing has happened. She said: 'There are going to be parts of you that are going to melt off.It is really scary. Jessica, whose partner was also born male and had already had the surgery, said there were elements of her recovery that she was not warned about by doctors, adding that it was 'really scary'.