I have new nipples. I can’t believe it, I better type it again – I have new nipples! And how fitting that I got them almost one year after my mastectomies. My how time flies.
I went in on Wednesday for the “in office procedure” to have my nipples installed by Dr. Paige, and little did I know how involved this procedure would be. My girlfriend, Kiko, picked me up very early to take me down to Federal Way (about 30 minutes south of Seattle) for my 7:30 check-in time. Immediately upon my arrival, I went through full surgery prep with the nurses, stripping down to my underwear and socks and putting on a hospital gown. Dr. Paige came in to greet me and mark where my new nipples were to be installed. He then escorted me to a mirror and asked me if I agreed with the marks. It’s been so long since I’ve had nipples, I had a hard time envisioning nipples where these two sharpie pen marks were on my chest. I exited the bathroom and told Dr. Paige that the marks “looked fine.” Inside I prayed that he really did mark them in appropriate locations.
I was transported to an operating room where the nurses situated me on the operating table and strapped my arms down (at my request so that I’d keep my arms in place). As I lay on the operating table, I noted how cold the room was and realized that I would have to withstand the whole hour-long procedure with my bare chest exposed to the cold. I was thankful that they didn’t hook me up to a heart monitor, as I could feel my anxiety level rise.
Dr. Paige entered the room and explained that he was going to give me the local anesthetic to numb the area. As he started injecting Lidocaine into the area of my left breast where the nipple was to be installed, my gut twitched with every other stab of the needle. I realized that I could feel a lot of what was going on in that area. Dr. Paige noticed that I was in discomfort and apologized. I looked at him and said that I was very grateful to feel some of the needle work, as it is a sign that some my nerve endings are rejuvenating. Dr. Paige smiled and commended me on my positive outlook.
As he injected a bunch more Lidocaine in my right breast, I realized that I have been in this exact situation before. You may recall that before my mastectomies the radiologist performed a lymphoscintigraphy to identify the sentinel lymph node (the first node to receive lymph from a tumor) in each breast. This procedure involved him injecting a bunch of Lidocaine in each nipple before injecting dye that would ultimately drain into the sentinel lymph node of each breast, allowing him to identify the nodes for my breast surgeon to remove for biopsy. I cried on the radiologist’s examination table while he injected me with the Lidocaine in each nipple. The procedure was fucking painful. I sobbed, knowing that this would be the last sensation I would remember of my nipples. By the end of that day, I no longer had breasts or nipples. So as I lay on Dr. Paige’s operating table this past Wednesday, I realized how fitting this whole procedure was — this is the way I lost my nipples, and this was going to be the way I got them back.
After Dr. Paige completed injecting all the Lidocaine, he left to give the Lidocaine some time to take effect and to allow the nurses to prep my chest for surgery. The nurses sanitized my chest area, put rolled up towels around my chest area, and then put up a blue sheet to block my face. I suspect this blue sheet had two goals: (1) prevent me from breathing on and contaminating the surgery area; and (2) prevent me from passing out or otherwise freaking out by being able to see what Dr. Paige was doing.
Dr. Paige returned to the room within 10-15 minutes, checked the areas to make sure they were numb, and then proceeded to make the incision that would serve as the basis for my nipple on my left breast. It was surreal to lay there and feel him poke, prod, and tug on me without feeling any pain. I experienced a lot of cognitive dissonance in that moment — Dr. Paige was cutting, pulling, and stitching in an area that has always been a very sensitive area for me. Although I have not had nipples or very much sensation in that area for almost one year to the day, not being able to see what was going on or feel any actual pain was making me anxious. I felt like I should have been feeling pain, and with each stitch that Dr. Paige made (I could make out some of his movements based on sensation I felt in other areas of my chest), I was deathly afraid that I would feel the needle go in.
One of the nurses sensed my anxiety and started talking to me to distract me from what Dr. Paige was doing. I was grateful for the distraction. By the time Dr. Paige was done with my right nipple, he had spent less than 45 minutes doing the whole procedure. The nurses cleaned up my chest area, put on these dome protectors for my nipples that look like Slurpee cup tops, and brought me to the recovery area.
Dr. Paige warned me that the nipples would look huge right after the procedure, but they would soon heal down to nubs that would be more reasonable in size. When the nurses brought down the blue sheet covering my face, I saw what he was talking about. They have a bunch of stitches in them and they look Frankensteinish, but I can totally see how these will heal into attractive nipples. I pray that I don’t experience any complications.
The nurse in the recovery area helped me get dressed, went over my post-op instructions, and immediately released me. My girlfriend Eza picked me up, we had brunch, and then she took me to work, where I proceeded to work a full work day. Dr. Paige prescribed some pain killers for me, but I haven’t picked up the prescription and I don’t think I will, because I don’t need them. As long as I don’t stretch my chest area, I’m not in any pain.
I have one more step in this process – areola tattooing. Dr. Paige tells me that he wants to wait a couple months to allow me to fully heal from the nipple installation before starting the tattooing. I can’t wait.
For today’s soundtrack, I heard this on one of my favorite online radio stations, KCRW.com, and immediately got into a great mood. The title of the song became my battle cry after my new nipples were installed: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sVzvRsl4rEM.