Ape101, 2 Years Later — Trimax + Jaw Angle Implants: Results, Scans & What Nobody Warns You About

Ape101

Ape101

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TL;DR: Worth the painstakingly long wait. OBO + periorbital implants healed into an ideal ICD and near-ideal IPD; bimax overdelivered. Two minor issues; mild strabismus, and one jaw angle implant a few % off. Both scheduled for one revision surgery in summer 2027. Full breakdown, scans, remaining surgery roadmap and warnings regarding the process below.

Link to Original Post>>


06 or receipt 2 hand on jaw


Hello again, it's been a minute. Two years, actually. You've been asking for an update the whole time, half of you assuming I got botched. The truth is less dramatic: I was waiting. I didn't switch surgeons just to get the design sooner, and I ignored an immense amount of ragebait fishing for my results. Now I've finally been redeemed, and as hard as it is to admit after what those two years cost me: it was worth the wait.

The Waiting Period: Read This If You Are Not A NEET​


Everyone asks about the surgery. Only few ask about the two years before it, which were genuinely the hardest part. My life was completely on hold, because the surgery always felt two weeks away. When you think you're flying out "soon,"™ ™ you commit to nothing: no plans, no trips, no career moves, nothing that can't be dropped on short notice. I lived in that limbo month after month, and I won't lie, it made me genuinely depressed. The waiting hurt a lot more than the actual surgery.

Japierdole ja pierdole


So, a warning for anyone with an important schedule (studies, career, etc):

  • Do not put your life on hold around an estimated date. Live completely normally until the design is finished and the surgery is actually booked. Treat every date as tentative until you're holding flight tickets.
  • To be fair: I believe Liam has overcome his phase in Thailand. From everything I can see he's healthy and very productive now, and he has an assistant helping him increase throughput and grow the business. I genuinely hope it stays that way, but you should still plan cautiously.
  • Even in the best case, the line is long. Countless people want these surgeries and there is exactly one designer.



OBO Recovery: Honest Breakdown​


  • Yes, I got a bit of strabismus. When I turn my eyes as far right as they can go, they lose alignment. In daily life it almost never gets triggered, it's only annoying when I check my blind spot driving, or when I'm seated far to the right of a board.
  • Yes, I'll address the strabismus with surgery regardless.
  • Overall I'm happy with the result: ICD is now ideal, IPD almost ideal (it gets fine-tuned in my next surgery).
  • The periorbital implants came out ideal. I wouldn't change a thing.
  • Understand: I was a borderline case. OBO was never supposed to be the highest-ROI surgery in my plan. Its job was to create the right foundation so my face could be expanded laterally in the following surgeries without restriction.
  • Many people fall for the fallacy that more invasive = bigger increase in attractiveness. Not true, that's cognitive dissonance trying to justify the trauma.
  • OBO/LF2 are not for the faint of heart. Genuinely make sure you're prepared. Giant is good at vetting patients usually, so you'll likely get accepted only if you have the right profile to withstand it.

(Slide 6)

01DCF6E8 AFC8 454F 86A7 57B0F5BA6281 2

D3E2ECF6 EEDD 41FD 8AAA 5EF77BAB4E32 2




The Hospital Stay: Get a Private Caretaker​


Nobody warns you about this part either, so here it is. The pain is somewhat intense, but not in the way typical trauma hurts, at least in my experience. The best description I have is painfully uncomfortable. You can't sleep without choking, you have a tube up your nose, you can't close your mouth, and you feel completely dehydrated the entire time.

And the nurses make it worse. I was choking on my own blood at night trying to sleep, and they would either straight up ignore me or mumble swear words in Turkish while doing the bare minimum. They barely feed you unless you spam the call button. The painkillers gave me a fever-like sensation through my whole body, it genuinely felt like being boiled alive, and they wouldn't let me take the blanket or pants off because they were too uncomfortable seeing a patient "naked" (religious modesty, supposedly, filthy towelheads). Some nights they left the lights on on purpose just to fuck with me.
Images


07 hospital bed eyeblur


If you can arrange a private caretaker, do it. It will make your life a lot easier. The surgery is one day; the nights after it are where you actually suffer, and nobody in that building is coming to save you.


Bimax Update​






07 ar overlay intraop



I think the results speak for themselves. The lower third was always going to be the heavy hitter in my case, and it exceeded my expectations. The hard tissue work is essentialy done, what's left now is polish. Once the soft tissue is refined, I think that this will be undeniably one of the best surgical transformations of all time.

The One Complication​


The jaw angle implants ended up close to the planned position, but not exact: one sits slightly too high, the other slightly too low. Giant's read on the post-op CT: either error on its own would be imperceptible, a ~5% placement error is expected, that's real-world surgery. But because the two errors go in opposite directions, they stack and read as a ~10% asymmetry when you directly compare my side profiles. IRL the difference is small, and the front profile is essentially perfect.

05 extra overlay profile left
05 extra overlay profile right34


03b overlay front clean


Giant Implants said:
Fortunately it's a much lower error than I was anticipating so I think after swelling goes down it will still look nice. Unfortunately this low of an error can't be reliably repositioned and optimized until bone healing... to get from 5% to 1-2% error needs a new implant over the healed bone surface to definitively lock in the right place. The bimax and everything else looks good.

So per Giant, I'm letting everything settle, and I'll fold the revision into my next surgery, scheduled for summer 2027.

Surgeries Left​


Face: correcting minor complications​

  • Medial orbital wall bone graft to push the eyeballs outward (shifting my Monroe classification ( the eyeball's position within the orbit)).
  • Strabismus correction (possibly resolved just by releasing the eye from the current medial orbital implant).
  • Lateral orbital decompression to compensate for the reduced orbital volume (make space for the eyeball laterally).
  • Jaw angle implant revision. The left side, which sat a bit lower, actually looks great, once everything is healed and stable, I'll likely just request a design and print a new implant to match it precisely on the right.

Face: mostly unrelated improvements​

  • Lateral (and maybe medial) canthopexies. My canthal tilt is slightly negative and my medial canthi slightly rounded. Medial canthal work is complex and rare, but I think I'll have the right plan by summer.
  • Fat grafting over the implants (and temples, the coronal incision released the muscles in a way that hollowed them). This is a common follow-up: implants displace and resorb the fat pads, leading to an over-skeletonized look. The fat smooths the contours and makes the result read as natural.
  • Possibly a small upper blepharoplasty (there's a bit of excess skin).
  • Rhinoplasty: refine the tip and raise my droopy columella. Width and projection are fine as-is.
  • Maybe shaving down the mandibular midline for a more curved front-profile appearance.
  • Earlobe reduction: not strictly necessary, but I noticed it improves the perceived height of the ramus.
  • Laser eye depigmentation.

Body​

  • Gyno removal: not that obvious, but why not; one less thing to think about when pinning.
  • PMMA girth injections.
  • Pubic fat pad removal.
  • Possibly circumcision to join clavicular's cabal (jk no jew is touching my tip, thanks)
    IMG 7829
  • Possibly LL. If I go through with it, it's definitely quadrilateral, landing at 6'3"–6'5".

The Grouping Plan​


I know this sounds like a lot, but most of it groups into a few long surgeries. Drafted plan (very likely to change based on surgeon estimates):
IMG 6268

Surgery 1: craniofacial + ophthalmic specialists, ideally combined (split into two if too long):
  • Eyes: orbital work, strabismus, canthopexies, possibly upper bleph
  • Jaw: jaw angle implant revision, possibly the mandible midline shave
  • Misc: possibly the fat graft
  • (I'll try to bring in an oculoplastic specialist for the canthal work, craniofacial and general plastic surgeons in Turkey don't reliably produce good soft-tissue results.)

Surgery 2: rhinoplasty specialist:
  • Rhinoplasty. It's a delicate, relatively long soft-tissue procedure, so I'd rather isolate it and I don't want to be bleeding from my mouth and nose at the same time.
  • Gyno removal (easy add-on).
  • Earlobe reduction.

Surgery 3: Dick specialist:
  • PMMA + fat pad removal.

Surgery 4: maybe, and if so, my last:
  • Quadrilateral LL.

Misc: eye depigmentation starts in September, should be at goal by next summer. Invisalign for the tooth gap runs in parallel.

View attachment 5383187

Verdict​

  • Ascension beyond a normie's perception is possible. But it's an exchange of equal value: you pay in years, pain, and money, and you get exactly what you paid for. Most people would rather cope by talking shit than put in the work. So the question isn't whether it's possible anymore, it's whether you can handle it.
  • Liam is the undisputed goat, even if you dislike him the reality is that there is no competition that comes even close.
  • I might go a lot more in depth on this whole journey: the planning, the waiting, the recoveries in an interview with a popular creator soon. Nothing confirmed yet, but if you want the full story, stay in touch.
  • Thanks for the support and to everyone who wished me well. The most invasive part is over, now I can rest and polish everything.

Thanks for reading

C9a7638c 0a83 4800 b1ed bcaa4383fc41

IMG 3194


05 extra plan front
05 extra plan maxilla side
05 extra plan profile left
05 extra plan three quarter
06 or receipt 1 intubated
06 or receipt 3 side tube
06 or receipt 4 postop mouth
07 ar overlay intraop
6CA71DC5 9727 4EC1 8552 C423288E96C0 2
 

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MIRIN’
 
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most legendary gray OAT
 
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TL;DR: Worth the painstakingly long wait. OBO + periorbital implants healed into an ideal ICD and near-ideal IPD; bimax overdelivered. Two minor issues; mild strabismus, and one jaw angle implant a few % off. Both scheduled for one revision surgery in summer 2027. Full breakdown, scans, remaining surgery roadmap and warnings regarding the process below.

Link to Original Post>>


View attachment 5383350

Hello again, it's been a minute. Two years, actually. You've been asking for an update the whole time, half of you assuming I got botched. The truth is less dramatic: I was waiting. I didn't switch surgeons just to get the design sooner, and I ignored an immense amount of ragebait fishing for my results. Now I've finally been redeemed, and as hard as it is to admit after what those two years cost me: it was worth the wait.

The Waiting Period: Read This If You Are Not A NEET​


Everyone asks about the surgery. Only few ask about the two years before it, which were genuinely the hardest part. My life was completely on hold, because the surgery always felt two weeks away. When you think you're flying out "soon,"™ ™ you commit to nothing: no plans, no trips, no career moves, nothing that can't be dropped on short notice. I lived in that limbo month after month, and I won't lie, it made me genuinely depressed. The waiting hurt a lot more than the actual surgery.

View attachment 5384761

So, a warning for anyone with an important schedule (studies, career, etc):

  • Do not put your life on hold around an estimated date. Live completely normally until the design is finished and the surgery is actually booked. Treat every date as tentative until you're holding flight tickets.
  • To be fair: I believe Liam has overcome his phase in Thailand. From everything I can see he's healthy and very productive now, and he has an assistant helping him increase throughput and grow the business. I genuinely hope it stays that way, but you should still plan cautiously.
  • Even in the best case, the line is long. Countless people want these surgeries and there is exactly one designer.



OBO Recovery: Honest Breakdown​


  • Yes, I got a bit of strabismus. When I turn my eyes as far right as they can go, they lose alignment. In daily life it almost never gets triggered, it's only annoying when I check my blind spot driving, or when I'm seated far to the right of a board.
  • Yes, I'll address the strabismus with surgery regardless.
  • Overall I'm happy with the result: ICD is now ideal, IPD almost ideal (it gets fine-tuned in my next surgery).
  • The periorbital implants came out ideal. I wouldn't change a thing.
  • Understand: I was a borderline case. OBO was never supposed to be the highest-ROI surgery in my plan. Its job was to create the right foundation so my face could be expanded laterally in the following surgeries without restriction.
  • Many people fall for the fallacy that more invasive = bigger increase in attractiveness. Not true, that's cognitive dissonance trying to justify the trauma.
  • OBO/LF2 are not for the faint of heart. Genuinely make sure you're prepared. Giant is good at vetting patients usually, so you'll likely get accepted only if you have the right profile to withstand it.

(Slide 6)

View attachment 5383367
View attachment 5384764



The Hospital Stay: Get a Private Caretaker​


Nobody warns you about this part either, so here it is. The pain is somewhat intense, but not in the way typical trauma hurts, at least in my experience. The best description I have is painfully uncomfortable. You can't sleep without choking, you have a tube up your nose, you can't close your mouth, and you feel completely dehydrated the entire time.

And the nurses make it worse. I was choking on my own blood at night trying to sleep, and they would either straight up ignore me or mumble swear words in Turkish while doing the bare minimum. They barely feed you unless you spam the call button. The painkillers gave me a fever-like sensation through my whole body, it genuinely felt like being boiled alive, and they wouldn't let me take the blanket or pants off because they were too uncomfortable seeing a patient "naked" (religious modesty, supposedly, filthy towelheads). Some nights they left the lights on on purpose just to fuck with me.


View attachment 5383354

If you can arrange a private caretaker, do it. It will make your life a lot easier. The surgery is one day; the nights after it are where you actually suffer, and nobody in that building is coming to save you.


Bimax Update​






View attachment 5383353


I think the results speak for themselves. The lower third was always going to be the heavy hitter in my case, and it exceeded my expectations. The hard tissue work is essentialy done, what's left now is polish. Once the soft tissue is refined, I think that this will be undeniably one of the best surgical transformations of all time.

The One Complication​


The jaw angle implants ended up close to the planned position, but not exact: one sits slightly too high, the other slightly too low. Giant's read on the post-op CT: either error on its own would be imperceptible, a ~5% placement error is expected, that's real-world surgery. But because the two errors go in opposite directions, they stack and read as a ~10% asymmetry when you directly compare my side profiles. IRL the difference is small, and the front profile is essentially perfect.

View attachment 5383338View attachment 5383340

View attachment 5383333



So per Giant, I'm letting everything settle, and I'll fold the revision into my next surgery, scheduled for summer 2027.

Surgeries Left​


Face: correcting minor complications​

  • Medial orbital wall bone graft to push the eyeballs outward (shifting my Monroe classification ( the eyeball's position within the orbit)).
  • Strabismus correction (possibly resolved just by releasing the eye from the current medial orbital implant).
  • Lateral orbital decompression to compensate for the reduced orbital volume (make space for the eyeball laterally).
  • Jaw angle implant revision. The left side, which sat a bit lower, actually looks great, once everything is healed and stable, I'll likely just request a design and print a new implant to match it precisely on the right.

Face: mostly unrelated improvements​

  • Lateral (and maybe medial) canthopexies. My canthal tilt is slightly negative and my medial canthi slightly rounded. Medial canthal work is complex and rare, but I think I'll have the right plan by summer.
  • Fat grafting over the implants (and temples, the coronal incision released the muscles in a way that hollowed them). This is a common follow-up: implants displace and resorb the fat pads, leading to an over-skeletonized look. The fat smooths the contours and makes the result read as natural.
  • Possibly a small upper blepharoplasty (there's a bit of excess skin).
  • Rhinoplasty: refine the tip and raise my droopy columella. Width and projection are fine as-is.
  • Maybe shaving down the mandibular midline for a more curved front-profile appearance.
  • Earlobe reduction: not strictly necessary, but I noticed it improves the perceived height of the ramus.
  • Laser eye depigmentation.

Body​

  • Gyno removal: not that obvious, but why not; one less thing to think about when pinning.
  • PMMA girth injections.
  • Pubic fat pad removal.
  • Possibly circumcision to join clavicular's cabal (jk no jew is touching my tip, thanks)
    View attachment 5384762
  • Possibly LL. If I go through with it, it's definitely quadrilateral, landing at 6'3"–6'5".

The Grouping Plan​


I know this sounds like a lot, but most of it groups into a few long surgeries. Drafted plan (very likely to change based on surgeon estimates):
View attachment 5384780
Surgery 1: craniofacial + ophthalmic specialists, ideally combined (split into two if too long):
  • Eyes: orbital work, strabismus, canthopexies, possibly upper bleph
  • Jaw: jaw angle implant revision, possibly the mandible midline shave
  • Misc: possibly the fat graft
  • (I'll try to bring in an oculoplastic specialist for the canthal work, craniofacial and general plastic surgeons in Turkey don't reliably produce good soft-tissue results.)

Surgery 2: rhinoplasty specialist:
  • Rhinoplasty. It's a delicate, relatively long soft-tissue procedure, so I'd rather isolate it and I don't want to be bleeding from my mouth and nose at the same time.
  • Gyno removal (easy add-on).
  • Earlobe reduction.

Surgery 3: Dick specialist:
  • PMMA + fat pad removal.

Surgery 4: maybe, and if so, my last:
  • Quadrilateral LL.

Misc: eye depigmentation starts in September, should be at goal by next summer. Invisalign for the tooth gap runs in parallel.

View attachment 5383187

Verdict​

  • Ascension beyond a normie's perception is possible. But it's an exchange of equal value: you pay in years, pain, and money, and you get exactly what you paid for. Most people would rather cope by talking shit than put in the work. So the question isn't whether it's possible anymore, it's whether you can handle it.
  • Liam is the undisputed goat, even if you dislike him the reality is that there is no competition that comes even close.
  • I might go a lot more in depth on this whole journey: the planning, the waiting, the recoveries in an interview with a popular creator soon. Nothing confirmed yet, but if you want the full story, stay in touch.
  • Thanks for the support and to everyone who wished me well. The most invasive part is over, now I can rest and polish everything.

Thanks for reading

View attachment 5384776
View attachment 5384814


Mirin experiment
 
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2 years and still no before after of the OBO Jfl
 
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2 years and still no before after of the OBO Jfl
The OBO result costs my anonymity, and you're offering nothing. And that's exactly the bait I called out in the verdict. Liam shares the result with patients who are serious about getting OBO and you are clearly not one.
 
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The OBO result costs my anonymity, and you're offering nothing. And that's exactly the bait I called out in the verdict. Liam shares the result with patients who are serious about getting OBO and you are clearly not one.

You are the one offering nothing with that wall of text and cherry picked angles while licking giants ass. Just post honest results.
 
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You are the one offering nothing with that wall of text and cherry picked angles. Just post honest results.
Entitled faggot, you deserve nothing and you will get nothing
 
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Can we get a front profile before and after?

Happy to hear your pleased with youre results :feelsgood:
 
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Did u get a downgraft with the LF2?
 
Here I was thinking that this was going to be an ordinary Sunday.


6606889_06_or_receipt_3_side_tube.jpg

6606890_06_or_receipt_4_postop_mouth.jpg

Cat Omg GIF

Holy shit. Your new jaw is literally slayer. That is going to make your jawline so standout. Unbelievable, really. Your new brow is icing on the cake.

About the private caretaker. Is this because of the Lefort II? How much is that going to cost do you reckon? Also just lol @ female nurses.

Medial orbital wall bone graft to push the eyeballs outward (shifting my Monroe classification ( the eyeball's position within the orbit)).
@thecel if you were still wondering what the opposite of orbital decompression is, here is your answer.

mandible midline shave
What's this? Nobody ever heard of it.

eye depigmentation starts in September, should be at goal by next summer.
Really, the Stroma stuff? If your jaw and brow are so good now, what makes you want to do that? I've tried to see before-and-afters of that stuff and I think it's underwhelming.

I might go a lot more in depth on this whole journey: the planning, the waiting, the recoveries in an interview with a popular creator soon. Nothing confirmed yet, but if you want the full story, stay in touch.
I would pay to see it. Who's the guy?

@Acquiescence
Ape, your experience is equally hopefuel and suifuel. But I will remember your jaw when I go to bed tonight. Thank you for telling us so much. You're an icon.
 
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Mirin. Did you get a carteker for bimax or is it only really useful after OBO. What recovery was worse?
 
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Wtf... not a single word. Where's before and after pictures in exact same position and light to actually assess your results?
 
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Entitled faggot, you deserve nothing and you will get nothing
Well don't put "results" in the title then, we can't see shit. Why would I be invested in that huge wall of text when you might've been Bogdanoffed? I don't care about your backstory if your results are uncanny or look shit in reality.

Soy virgin spamming essays of his worthless surgery with barely anything to show

VS

Chad who got a surgery, posted only a few short sentences alongside his before/after of front, side profile and his body transformation

 
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Mi
TL;DR: Worth the painstakingly long wait. OBO + periorbital implants healed into an ideal ICD and near-ideal IPD; bimax overdelivered. Two minor issues; mild strabismus, and one jaw angle implant a few % off. Both scheduled for one revision surgery in summer 2027. Full breakdown, scans, remaining surgery roadmap and warnings regarding the process below.

Link to Original Post>>


View attachment 5383350

Hello again, it's been a minute. Two years, actually. You've been asking for an update the whole time, half of you assuming I got botched. The truth is less dramatic: I was waiting. I didn't switch surgeons just to get the design sooner, and I ignored an immense amount of ragebait fishing for my results. Now I've finally been redeemed, and as hard as it is to admit after what those two years cost me: it was worth the wait.

The Waiting Period: Read This If You Are Not A NEET​


Everyone asks about the surgery. Only few ask about the two years before it, which were genuinely the hardest part. My life was completely on hold, because the surgery always felt two weeks away. When you think you're flying out "soon,"™ ™ you commit to nothing: no plans, no trips, no career moves, nothing that can't be dropped on short notice. I lived in that limbo month after month, and I won't lie, it made me genuinely depressed. The waiting hurt a lot more than the actual surgery.

View attachment 5384761

So, a warning for anyone with an important schedule (studies, career, etc):

  • Do not put your life on hold around an estimated date. Live completely normally until the design is finished and the surgery is actually booked. Treat every date as tentative until you're holding flight tickets.
  • To be fair: I believe Liam has overcome his phase in Thailand. From everything I can see he's healthy and very productive now, and he has an assistant helping him increase throughput and grow the business. I genuinely hope it stays that way, but you should still plan cautiously.
  • Even in the best case, the line is long. Countless people want these surgeries and there is exactly one designer.



OBO Recovery: Honest Breakdown​


  • Yes, I got a bit of strabismus. When I turn my eyes as far right as they can go, they lose alignment. In daily life it almost never gets triggered, it's only annoying when I check my blind spot driving, or when I'm seated far to the right of a board.
  • Yes, I'll address the strabismus with surgery regardless.
  • Overall I'm happy with the result: ICD is now ideal, IPD almost ideal (it gets fine-tuned in my next surgery).
  • The periorbital implants came out ideal. I wouldn't change a thing.
  • Understand: I was a borderline case. OBO was never supposed to be the highest-ROI surgery in my plan. Its job was to create the right foundation so my face could be expanded laterally in the following surgeries without restriction.
  • Many people fall for the fallacy that more invasive = bigger increase in attractiveness. Not true, that's cognitive dissonance trying to justify the trauma.
  • OBO/LF2 are not for the faint of heart. Genuinely make sure you're prepared. Giant is good at vetting patients usually, so you'll likely get accepted only if you have the right profile to withstand it.

(Slide 6)

View attachment 5383367
View attachment 5384764



The Hospital Stay: Get a Private Caretaker​


Nobody warns you about this part either, so here it is. The pain is somewhat intense, but not in the way typical trauma hurts, at least in my experience. The best description I have is painfully uncomfortable. You can't sleep without choking, you have a tube up your nose, you can't close your mouth, and you feel completely dehydrated the entire time.

And the nurses make it worse. I was choking on my own blood at night trying to sleep, and they would either straight up ignore me or mumble swear words in Turkish while doing the bare minimum. They barely feed you unless you spam the call button. The painkillers gave me a fever-like sensation through my whole body, it genuinely felt like being boiled alive, and they wouldn't let me take the blanket or pants off because they were too uncomfortable seeing a patient "naked" (religious modesty, supposedly, filthy towelheads). Some nights they left the lights on on purpose just to fuck with me.


View attachment 5383354

If you can arrange a private caretaker, do it. It will make your life a lot easier. The surgery is one day; the nights after it are where you actually suffer, and nobody in that building is coming to save you.


Bimax Update​






View attachment 5383353


I think the results speak for themselves. The lower third was always going to be the heavy hitter in my case, and it exceeded my expectations. The hard tissue work is essentialy done, what's left now is polish. Once the soft tissue is refined, I think that this will be undeniably one of the best surgical transformations of all time.

The One Complication​


The jaw angle implants ended up close to the planned position, but not exact: one sits slightly too high, the other slightly too low. Giant's read on the post-op CT: either error on its own would be imperceptible, a ~5% placement error is expected, that's real-world surgery. But because the two errors go in opposite directions, they stack and read as a ~10% asymmetry when you directly compare my side profiles. IRL the difference is small, and the front profile is essentially perfect.

View attachment 5383338View attachment 5383340

View attachment 5383333



So per Giant, I'm letting everything settle, and I'll fold the revision into my next surgery, scheduled for summer 2027.

Surgeries Left​


Face: correcting minor complications​

  • Medial orbital wall bone graft to push the eyeballs outward (shifting my Monroe classification ( the eyeball's position within the orbit)).
  • Strabismus correction (possibly resolved just by releasing the eye from the current medial orbital implant).
  • Lateral orbital decompression to compensate for the reduced orbital volume (make space for the eyeball laterally).
  • Jaw angle implant revision. The left side, which sat a bit lower, actually looks great, once everything is healed and stable, I'll likely just request a design and print a new implant to match it precisely on the right.

Face: mostly unrelated improvements​

  • Lateral (and maybe medial) canthopexies. My canthal tilt is slightly negative and my medial canthi slightly rounded. Medial canthal work is complex and rare, but I think I'll have the right plan by summer.
  • Fat grafting over the implants (and temples, the coronal incision released the muscles in a way that hollowed them). This is a common follow-up: implants displace and resorb the fat pads, leading to an over-skeletonized look. The fat smooths the contours and makes the result read as natural.
  • Possibly a small upper blepharoplasty (there's a bit of excess skin).
  • Rhinoplasty: refine the tip and raise my droopy columella. Width and projection are fine as-is.
  • Maybe shaving down the mandibular midline for a more curved front-profile appearance.
  • Earlobe reduction: not strictly necessary, but I noticed it improves the perceived height of the ramus.
  • Laser eye depigmentation.

Body​

  • Gyno removal: not that obvious, but why not; one less thing to think about when pinning.
  • PMMA girth injections.
  • Pubic fat pad removal.
  • Possibly circumcision to join clavicular's cabal (jk no jew is touching my tip, thanks)
    View attachment 5384762
  • Possibly LL. If I go through with it, it's definitely quadrilateral, landing at 6'3"–6'5".

The Grouping Plan​


I know this sounds like a lot, but most of it groups into a few long surgeries. Drafted plan (very likely to change based on surgeon estimates):
View attachment 5384780
Surgery 1: craniofacial + ophthalmic specialists, ideally combined (split into two if too long):
  • Eyes: orbital work, strabismus, canthopexies, possibly upper bleph
  • Jaw: jaw angle implant revision, possibly the mandible midline shave
  • Misc: possibly the fat graft
  • (I'll try to bring in an oculoplastic specialist for the canthal work, craniofacial and general plastic surgeons in Turkey don't reliably produce good soft-tissue results.)

Surgery 2: rhinoplasty specialist:
  • Rhinoplasty. It's a delicate, relatively long soft-tissue procedure, so I'd rather isolate it and I don't want to be bleeding from my mouth and nose at the same time.
  • Gyno removal (easy add-on).
  • Earlobe reduction.

Surgery 3: Dick specialist:
  • PMMA + fat pad removal.

Surgery 4: maybe, and if so, my last:
  • Quadrilateral LL.

Misc: eye depigmentation starts in September, should be at goal by next summer. Invisalign for the tooth gap runs in parallel.

View attachment 5383187

Verdict​

  • Ascension beyond a normie's perception is possible. But it's an exchange of equal value: you pay in years, pain, and money, and you get exactly what you paid for. Most people would rather cope by talking shit than put in the work. So the question isn't whether it's possible anymore, it's whether you can handle it.
  • Liam is the undisputed goat, even if you dislike him the reality is that there is no competition that comes even close.
  • I might go a lot more in depth on this whole journey: the planning, the waiting, the recoveries in an interview with a popular creator soon. Nothing confirmed yet, but if you want the full story, stay in touch.
  • Thanks for the support and to everyone who wished me well. The most invasive part is over, now I can rest and polish everything.

Thanks for reading

View attachment 5384776
View attachment 5384814


TL;DR: Worth the painstakingly long wait. OBO + periorbital implants healed into an ideal ICD and near-ideal IPD; bimax overdelivered. Two minor issues; mild strabismus, and one jaw angle implant a few % off. Both scheduled for one revision surgery in summer 2027. Full breakdown, scans, remaining surgery roadmap and warnings regarding the process below.

Link to Original Post>>


View attachment 5383350

Hello again, it's been a minute. Two years, actually. You've been asking for an update the whole time, half of you assuming I got botched. The truth is less dramatic: I was waiting. I didn't switch surgeons just to get the design sooner, and I ignored an immense amount of ragebait fishing for my results. Now I've finally been redeemed, and as hard as it is to admit after what those two years cost me: it was worth the wait.

The Waiting Period: Read This If You Are Not A NEET​


Everyone asks about the surgery. Only few ask about the two years before it, which were genuinely the hardest part. My life was completely on hold, because the surgery always felt two weeks away. When you think you're flying out "soon,"™ ™ you commit to nothing: no plans, no trips, no career moves, nothing that can't be dropped on short notice. I lived in that limbo month after month, and I won't lie, it made me genuinely depressed. The waiting hurt a lot more than the actual surgery.

View attachment 5384761

So, a warning for anyone with an important schedule (studies, career, etc):

  • Do not put your life on hold around an estimated date. Live completely normally until the design is finished and the surgery is actually booked. Treat every date as tentative until you're holding flight tickets.
  • To be fair: I believe Liam has overcome his phase in Thailand. From everything I can see he's healthy and very productive now, and he has an assistant helping him increase throughput and grow the business. I genuinely hope it stays that way, but you should still plan cautiously.
  • Even in the best case, the line is long. Countless people want these surgeries and there is exactly one designer.



OBO Recovery: Honest Breakdown​


  • Yes, I got a bit of strabismus. When I turn my eyes as far right as they can go, they lose alignment. In daily life it almost never gets triggered, it's only annoying when I check my blind spot driving, or when I'm seated far to the right of a board.
  • Yes, I'll address the strabismus with surgery regardless.
  • Overall I'm happy with the result: ICD is now ideal, IPD almost ideal (it gets fine-tuned in my next surgery).
  • The periorbital implants came out ideal. I wouldn't change a thing.
  • Understand: I was a borderline case. OBO was never supposed to be the highest-ROI surgery in my plan. Its job was to create the right foundation so my face could be expanded laterally in the following surgeries without restriction.
  • Many people fall for the fallacy that more invasive = bigger increase in attractiveness. Not true, that's cognitive dissonance trying to justify the trauma.
  • OBO/LF2 are not for the faint of heart. Genuinely make sure you're prepared. Giant is good at vetting patients usually, so you'll likely get accepted only if you have the right profile to withstand it.

(Slide 6)

View attachment 5383367
View attachment 5384764



The Hospital Stay: Get a Private Caretaker​


Nobody warns you about this part either, so here it is. The pain is somewhat intense, but not in the way typical trauma hurts, at least in my experience. The best description I have is painfully uncomfortable. You can't sleep without choking, you have a tube up your nose, you can't close your mouth, and you feel completely dehydrated the entire time.

And the nurses make it worse. I was choking on my own blood at night trying to sleep, and they would either straight up ignore me or mumble swear words in Turkish while doing the bare minimum. They barely feed you unless you spam the call button. The painkillers gave me a fever-like sensation through my whole body, it genuinely felt like being boiled alive, and they wouldn't let me take the blanket or pants off because they were too uncomfortable seeing a patient "naked" (religious modesty, supposedly, filthy towelheads). Some nights they left the lights on on purpose just to fuck with me.


View attachment 5383354

If you can arrange a private caretaker, do it. It will make your life a lot easier. The surgery is one day; the nights after it are where you actually suffer, and nobody in that building is coming to save you.


Bimax Update​






View attachment 5383353


I think the results speak for themselves. The lower third was always going to be the heavy hitter in my case, and it exceeded my expectations. The hard tissue work is essentialy done, what's left now is polish. Once the soft tissue is refined, I think that this will be undeniably one of the best surgical transformations of all time.

The One Complication​


The jaw angle implants ended up close to the planned position, but not exact: one sits slightly too high, the other slightly too low. Giant's read on the post-op CT: either error on its own would be imperceptible, a ~5% placement error is expected, that's real-world surgery. But because the two errors go in opposite directions, they stack and read as a ~10% asymmetry when you directly compare my side profiles. IRL the difference is small, and the front profile is essentially perfect.

View attachment 5383338View attachment 5383340

View attachment 5383333



So per Giant, I'm letting everything settle, and I'll fold the revision into my next surgery, scheduled for summer 2027.

Surgeries Left​


Face: correcting minor complications​

  • Medial orbital wall bone graft to push the eyeballs outward (shifting my Monroe classification ( the eyeball's position within the orbit)).
  • Strabismus correction (possibly resolved just by releasing the eye from the current medial orbital implant).
  • Lateral orbital decompression to compensate for the reduced orbital volume (make space for the eyeball laterally).
  • Jaw angle implant revision. The left side, which sat a bit lower, actually looks great, once everything is healed and stable, I'll likely just request a design and print a new implant to match it precisely on the right.

Face: mostly unrelated improvements​

  • Lateral (and maybe medial) canthopexies. My canthal tilt is slightly negative and my medial canthi slightly rounded. Medial canthal work is complex and rare, but I think I'll have the right plan by summer.
  • Fat grafting over the implants (and temples, the coronal incision released the muscles in a way that hollowed them). This is a common follow-up: implants displace and resorb the fat pads, leading to an over-skeletonized look. The fat smooths the contours and makes the result read as natural.
  • Possibly a small upper blepharoplasty (there's a bit of excess skin).
  • Rhinoplasty: refine the tip and raise my droopy columella. Width and projection are fine as-is.
  • Maybe shaving down the mandibular midline for a more curved front-profile appearance.
  • Earlobe reduction: not strictly necessary, but I noticed it improves the perceived height of the ramus.
  • Laser eye depigmentation.

Body​

  • Gyno removal: not that obvious, but why not; one less thing to think about when pinning.
  • PMMA girth injections.
  • Pubic fat pad removal.
  • Possibly circumcision to join clavicular's cabal (jk no jew is touching my tip, thanks)
    View attachment 5384762
  • Possibly LL. If I go through with it, it's definitely quadrilateral, landing at 6'3"–6'5".

The Grouping Plan​


I know this sounds like a lot, but most of it groups into a few long surgeries. Drafted plan (very likely to change based on surgeon estimates):
View attachment 5384780
Surgery 1: craniofacial + ophthalmic specialists, ideally combined (split into two if too long):
  • Eyes: orbital work, strabismus, canthopexies, possibly upper bleph
  • Jaw: jaw angle implant revision, possibly the mandible midline shave
  • Misc: possibly the fat graft
  • (I'll try to bring in an oculoplastic specialist for the canthal work, craniofacial and general plastic surgeons in Turkey don't reliably produce good soft-tissue results.)

Surgery 2: rhinoplasty specialist:
  • Rhinoplasty. It's a delicate, relatively long soft-tissue procedure, so I'd rather isolate it and I don't want to be bleeding from my mouth and nose at the same time.
  • Gyno removal (easy add-on).
  • Earlobe reduction.

Surgery 3: Dick specialist:
  • PMMA + fat pad removal.

Surgery 4: maybe, and if so, my last:
  • Quadrilateral LL.

Misc: eye depigmentation starts in September, should be at goal by next summer. Invisalign for the tooth gap runs in parallel.

View attachment 5383187

Verdict​

  • Ascension beyond a normie's perception is possible. But it's an exchange of equal value: you pay in years, pain, and money, and you get exactly what you paid for. Most people would rather cope by talking shit than put in the work. So the question isn't whether it's possible anymore, it's whether you can handle it.
  • Liam is the undisputed goat, even if you dislike him the reality is that there is no competition that comes even close.
  • I might go a lot more in depth on this whole journey: the planning, the waiting, the recoveries in an interview with a popular creator soon. Nothing confirmed yet, but if you want the full story, stay in touch.
  • Thanks for the support and to everyone who wished me well. The most invasive part is over, now I can rest and polish everything.

Thanks for reading

View attachment 5384776
View attachment 5384814


Mirin hard,if I can ask how long did the recovery take and how much did everything roughly cost if you don't mind me asking
 
  • +1
Reactions: Lookologist003 and thecel
9/10 thread!

10/10 only with a good after/before.



Mirin u brah.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Lookologist003
What do u do for work to have so much money
Well don't put "results" in the title then, we can't see shit. Why would I be invested in that huge wall of text when you might've been Bogdanoffed? I don't care about your backstory if your results are uncanny or look shit in reality.

Soy virgin spamming essays of his worthless surgery with barely anything to show

VS

Chad who got a surgery, posted only a few short sentences alongside his before/after of front, side profile and his body transformation

The guy had surgery like 2 weeks ago lol
 
  • Love it
Reactions: Lookologist003
Entitled faggot, you deserve nothing and you will get nothing
I mean it's pretty obvious you were botched, anyone could see this themselves from the Giant OBO results circulating around...

Originally you said you were going to share the results after completing your surgery journey, now it's all about anonymity which is a very convenient excuse. You just peddle a bunch of useless ratios nobody else besides yourself is able to verify, typical of incels coping with a botched result. Let's be honest: You were intending to share the results which is why you posted the entire "I got OBO" thread to begin with, to get validation from incels, even got pinned on BOTB, but now you yourself are not satisfied with the results. Muh "entitled" when YOU posted this entire OBO thread to begin with promising everyone that you would post the results.

I will say I am surprised you at least admitted there were complications. But to anyone with a double digit IQ, you are clearly trying to hide a botch job, dancing around it as much as you can. Everyone knows why there isn't any good available OBO results.
 
Last edited:
  • +1
Reactions: BM7, teno, surgeryplanning and 3 others
@Acquiescence
There’s a lot one could say to this. But grandpa is fucking tired and would rather spare the endless yap this time. So I will just say this:

I always appreciate and admire those willing to go the extra mile and document their journey and results. So congrats @Ape101

That being said, I will modify your verdict to reflect what I believe is closer to the truth:

Verdict​

  • Ascension beyond a normie's perception is possible. But it's an exchange of equal value: you pay in years, pain, and money, and you get exactly what you paid for a chance at ascension, or no perceptible change, or a botch, or any flavor in between. Most people would rather cope by talking shit than put in the work, which is perfectly understandable when you realize how entrapped by brutish external circumstances or internal unchangeable genetic failings most people are. So the question isn't exclusively whether it's possible anymore, it's also whether you can handle it. realistically afford to surgically gamble and deal with all the consequences leading up to, during, and thereafter.

Let’s hope as the years go on surgical ascension technology continues to improve and becomes more accessible to all. I am a morphological freedom proponent after all, broader potential sociological consequences be dammed (y)
 
Last edited:
  • Love it
  • +1
Reactions: vermicel and Lookologist003
Your new jaw is literally slayer.
Lol

You've heard of the 2% rule. But did you know the end goal of all jaw surgeries is to look like your jaw is a bicycle seat :chad::chad::chad:
@thecel

Bicycle seat jaw theorem magniumus remains undefeated :bigbrain::bigbrain::bigbrain::bigbrain:
 
  • +1
Reactions: Acquiescence
TL;DR: Worth the painstakingly long wait. OBO + periorbital implants healed into an ideal ICD and near-ideal IPD; bimax overdelivered. Two minor issues; mild strabismus, and one jaw angle implant a few % off. Both scheduled for one revision surgery in summer 2027. Full breakdown, scans, remaining surgery roadmap and warnings regarding the process below.

Link to Original Post>>


View attachment 5383350

Hello again, it's been a minute. Two years, actually. You've been asking for an update the whole time, half of you assuming I got botched. The truth is less dramatic: I was waiting. I didn't switch surgeons just to get the design sooner, and I ignored an immense amount of ragebait fishing for my results. Now I've finally been redeemed, and as hard as it is to admit after what those two years cost me: it was worth the wait.

The Waiting Period: Read This If You Are Not A NEET​


Everyone asks about the surgery. Only few ask about the two years before it, which were genuinely the hardest part. My life was completely on hold, because the surgery always felt two weeks away. When you think you're flying out "soon,"™ ™ you commit to nothing: no plans, no trips, no career moves, nothing that can't be dropped on short notice. I lived in that limbo month after month, and I won't lie, it made me genuinely depressed. The waiting hurt a lot more than the actual surgery.

View attachment 5384761

So, a warning for anyone with an important schedule (studies, career, etc):

  • Do not put your life on hold around an estimated date. Live completely normally until the design is finished and the surgery is actually booked. Treat every date as tentative until you're holding flight tickets.
  • To be fair: I believe Liam has overcome his phase in Thailand. From everything I can see he's healthy and very productive now, and he has an assistant helping him increase throughput and grow the business. I genuinely hope it stays that way, but you should still plan cautiously.
  • Even in the best case, the line is long. Countless people want these surgeries and there is exactly one designer.



OBO Recovery: Honest Breakdown​


  • Yes, I got a bit of strabismus. When I turn my eyes as far right as they can go, they lose alignment. In daily life it almost never gets triggered, it's only annoying when I check my blind spot driving, or when I'm seated far to the right of a board.
  • Yes, I'll address the strabismus with surgery regardless.
  • Overall I'm happy with the result: ICD is now ideal, IPD almost ideal (it gets fine-tuned in my next surgery).
  • The periorbital implants came out ideal. I wouldn't change a thing.
  • Understand: I was a borderline case. OBO was never supposed to be the highest-ROI surgery in my plan. Its job was to create the right foundation so my face could be expanded laterally in the following surgeries without restriction.
  • Many people fall for the fallacy that more invasive = bigger increase in attractiveness. Not true, that's cognitive dissonance trying to justify the trauma.
  • OBO/LF2 are not for the faint of heart. Genuinely make sure you're prepared. Giant is good at vetting patients usually, so you'll likely get accepted only if you have the right profile to withstand it.

(Slide 6)

View attachment 5383367
View attachment 5384764



The Hospital Stay: Get a Private Caretaker​


Nobody warns you about this part either, so here it is. The pain is somewhat intense, but not in the way typical trauma hurts, at least in my experience. The best description I have is painfully uncomfortable. You can't sleep without choking, you have a tube up your nose, you can't close your mouth, and you feel completely dehydrated the entire time.

And the nurses make it worse. I was choking on my own blood at night trying to sleep, and they would either straight up ignore me or mumble swear words in Turkish while doing the bare minimum. They barely feed you unless you spam the call button. The painkillers gave me a fever-like sensation through my whole body, it genuinely felt like being boiled alive, and they wouldn't let me take the blanket or pants off because they were too uncomfortable seeing a patient "naked" (religious modesty, supposedly, filthy towelheads). Some nights they left the lights on on purpose just to fuck with me.


View attachment 5383354

If you can arrange a private caretaker, do it. It will make your life a lot easier. The surgery is one day; the nights after it are where you actually suffer, and nobody in that building is coming to save you.


Bimax Update​






View attachment 5383353


I think the results speak for themselves. The lower third was always going to be the heavy hitter in my case, and it exceeded my expectations. The hard tissue work is essentialy done, what's left now is polish. Once the soft tissue is refined, I think that this will be undeniably one of the best surgical transformations of all time.

The One Complication​


The jaw angle implants ended up close to the planned position, but not exact: one sits slightly too high, the other slightly too low. Giant's read on the post-op CT: either error on its own would be imperceptible, a ~5% placement error is expected, that's real-world surgery. But because the two errors go in opposite directions, they stack and read as a ~10% asymmetry when you directly compare my side profiles. IRL the difference is small, and the front profile is essentially perfect.

View attachment 5383338View attachment 5383340

View attachment 5383333



So per Giant, I'm letting everything settle, and I'll fold the revision into my next surgery, scheduled for summer 2027.

Surgeries Left​


Face: correcting minor complications​

  • Medial orbital wall bone graft to push the eyeballs outward (shifting my Monroe classification ( the eyeball's position within the orbit)).
  • Strabismus correction (possibly resolved just by releasing the eye from the current medial orbital implant).
  • Lateral orbital decompression to compensate for the reduced orbital volume (make space for the eyeball laterally).
  • Jaw angle implant revision. The left side, which sat a bit lower, actually looks great, once everything is healed and stable, I'll likely just request a design and print a new implant to match it precisely on the right.

Face: mostly unrelated improvements​

  • Lateral (and maybe medial) canthopexies. My canthal tilt is slightly negative and my medial canthi slightly rounded. Medial canthal work is complex and rare, but I think I'll have the right plan by summer.
  • Fat grafting over the implants (and temples, the coronal incision released the muscles in a way that hollowed them). This is a common follow-up: implants displace and resorb the fat pads, leading to an over-skeletonized look. The fat smooths the contours and makes the result read as natural.
  • Possibly a small upper blepharoplasty (there's a bit of excess skin).
  • Rhinoplasty: refine the tip and raise my droopy columella. Width and projection are fine as-is.
  • Maybe shaving down the mandibular midline for a more curved front-profile appearance.
  • Earlobe reduction: not strictly necessary, but I noticed it improves the perceived height of the ramus.
  • Laser eye depigmentation.

Body​

  • Gyno removal: not that obvious, but why not; one less thing to think about when pinning.
  • PMMA girth injections.
  • Pubic fat pad removal.
  • Possibly circumcision to join clavicular's cabal (jk no jew is touching my tip, thanks)
    View attachment 5384762
  • Possibly LL. If I go through with it, it's definitely quadrilateral, landing at 6'3"–6'5".

The Grouping Plan​


I know this sounds like a lot, but most of it groups into a few long surgeries. Drafted plan (very likely to change based on surgeon estimates):
View attachment 5384780
Surgery 1: craniofacial + ophthalmic specialists, ideally combined (split into two if too long):
  • Eyes: orbital work, strabismus, canthopexies, possibly upper bleph
  • Jaw: jaw angle implant revision, possibly the mandible midline shave
  • Misc: possibly the fat graft
  • (I'll try to bring in an oculoplastic specialist for the canthal work, craniofacial and general plastic surgeons in Turkey don't reliably produce good soft-tissue results.)

Surgery 2: rhinoplasty specialist:
  • Rhinoplasty. It's a delicate, relatively long soft-tissue procedure, so I'd rather isolate it and I don't want to be bleeding from my mouth and nose at the same time.
  • Gyno removal (easy add-on).
  • Earlobe reduction.

Surgery 3: Dick specialist:
  • PMMA + fat pad removal.

Surgery 4: maybe, and if so, my last:
  • Quadrilateral LL.

Misc: eye depigmentation starts in September, should be at goal by next summer. Invisalign for the tooth gap runs in parallel.

View attachment 5383187

Verdict​

  • Ascension beyond a normie's perception is possible. But it's an exchange of equal value: you pay in years, pain, and money, and you get exactly what you paid for. Most people would rather cope by talking shit than put in the work. So the question isn't whether it's possible anymore, it's whether you can handle it.
  • Liam is the undisputed goat, even if you dislike him the reality is that there is no competition that comes even close.
  • I might go a lot more in depth on this whole journey: the planning, the waiting, the recoveries in an interview with a popular creator soon. Nothing confirmed yet, but if you want the full story, stay in touch.
  • Thanks for the support and to everyone who wished me well. The most invasive part is over, now I can rest and polish everything.

Thanks for reading

View attachment 5384776
View attachment 5384814



Good thread, just a question: do you think a genio + chin and jaw implant is enough for a regular lower third, or someone's definitely needs bimax to it? I'm a bit unsure on doing it, even if it depends on base.
 
Why did I wake up to freshly exposed orbits on a crisp Sunday
 
  • JFL
Reactions: monecel, lawenstn and Acquiescence
TL;DR: Worth the painstakingly long wait. OBO + periorbital implants healed into an ideal ICD and near-ideal IPD; bimax overdelivered. Two minor issues; mild strabismus, and one jaw angle implant a few % off. Both scheduled for one revision surgery in summer 2027. Full breakdown, scans, remaining surgery roadmap and warnings regarding the process below.

Link to Original Post>>


View attachment 5383350

Hello again, it's been a minute. Two years, actually. You've been asking for an update the whole time, half of you assuming I got botched. The truth is less dramatic: I was waiting. I didn't switch surgeons just to get the design sooner, and I ignored an immense amount of ragebait fishing for my results. Now I've finally been redeemed, and as hard as it is to admit after what those two years cost me: it was worth the wait.

The Waiting Period: Read This If You Are Not A NEET​


Everyone asks about the surgery. Only few ask about the two years before it, which were genuinely the hardest part. My life was completely on hold, because the surgery always felt two weeks away. When you think you're flying out "soon,"™ ™ you commit to nothing: no plans, no trips, no career moves, nothing that can't be dropped on short notice. I lived in that limbo month after month, and I won't lie, it made me genuinely depressed. The waiting hurt a lot more than the actual surgery.

View attachment 5384761

So, a warning for anyone with an important schedule (studies, career, etc):

  • Do not put your life on hold around an estimated date. Live completely normally until the design is finished and the surgery is actually booked. Treat every date as tentative until you're holding flight tickets.
  • To be fair: I believe Liam has overcome his phase in Thailand. From everything I can see he's healthy and very productive now, and he has an assistant helping him increase throughput and grow the business. I genuinely hope it stays that way, but you should still plan cautiously.
  • Even in the best case, the line is long. Countless people want these surgeries and there is exactly one designer.



OBO Recovery: Honest Breakdown​


  • Yes, I got a bit of strabismus. When I turn my eyes as far right as they can go, they lose alignment. In daily life it almost never gets triggered, it's only annoying when I check my blind spot driving, or when I'm seated far to the right of a board.
  • Yes, I'll address the strabismus with surgery regardless.
  • Overall I'm happy with the result: ICD is now ideal, IPD almost ideal (it gets fine-tuned in my next surgery).
  • The periorbital implants came out ideal. I wouldn't change a thing.
  • Understand: I was a borderline case. OBO was never supposed to be the highest-ROI surgery in my plan. Its job was to create the right foundation so my face could be expanded laterally in the following surgeries without restriction.
  • Many people fall for the fallacy that more invasive = bigger increase in attractiveness. Not true, that's cognitive dissonance trying to justify the trauma.
  • OBO/LF2 are not for the faint of heart. Genuinely make sure you're prepared. Giant is good at vetting patients usually, so you'll likely get accepted only if you have the right profile to withstand it.

(Slide 6)

View attachment 5383367
View attachment 5384764



The Hospital Stay: Get a Private Caretaker​


Nobody warns you about this part either, so here it is. The pain is somewhat intense, but not in the way typical trauma hurts, at least in my experience. The best description I have is painfully uncomfortable. You can't sleep without choking, you have a tube up your nose, you can't close your mouth, and you feel completely dehydrated the entire time.

And the nurses make it worse. I was choking on my own blood at night trying to sleep, and they would either straight up ignore me or mumble swear words in Turkish while doing the bare minimum. They barely feed you unless you spam the call button. The painkillers gave me a fever-like sensation through my whole body, it genuinely felt like being boiled alive, and they wouldn't let me take the blanket or pants off because they were too uncomfortable seeing a patient "naked" (religious modesty, supposedly, filthy towelheads). Some nights they left the lights on on purpose just to fuck with me.


View attachment 5383354

If you can arrange a private caretaker, do it. It will make your life a lot easier. The surgery is one day; the nights after it are where you actually suffer, and nobody in that building is coming to save you.


Bimax Update​






View attachment 5383353


I think the results speak for themselves. The lower third was always going to be the heavy hitter in my case, and it exceeded my expectations. The hard tissue work is essentialy done, what's left now is polish. Once the soft tissue is refined, I think that this will be undeniably one of the best surgical transformations of all time.

The One Complication​


The jaw angle implants ended up close to the planned position, but not exact: one sits slightly too high, the other slightly too low. Giant's read on the post-op CT: either error on its own would be imperceptible, a ~5% placement error is expected, that's real-world surgery. But because the two errors go in opposite directions, they stack and read as a ~10% asymmetry when you directly compare my side profiles. IRL the difference is small, and the front profile is essentially perfect.

View attachment 5383338View attachment 5383340

View attachment 5383333



So per Giant, I'm letting everything settle, and I'll fold the revision into my next surgery, scheduled for summer 2027.

Surgeries Left​


Face: correcting minor complications​

  • Medial orbital wall bone graft to push the eyeballs outward (shifting my Monroe classification ( the eyeball's position within the orbit)).
  • Strabismus correction (possibly resolved just by releasing the eye from the current medial orbital implant).
  • Lateral orbital decompression to compensate for the reduced orbital volume (make space for the eyeball laterally).
  • Jaw angle implant revision. The left side, which sat a bit lower, actually looks great, once everything is healed and stable, I'll likely just request a design and print a new implant to match it precisely on the right.

Face: mostly unrelated improvements​

  • Lateral (and maybe medial) canthopexies. My canthal tilt is slightly negative and my medial canthi slightly rounded. Medial canthal work is complex and rare, but I think I'll have the right plan by summer.
  • Fat grafting over the implants (and temples, the coronal incision released the muscles in a way that hollowed them). This is a common follow-up: implants displace and resorb the fat pads, leading to an over-skeletonized look. The fat smooths the contours and makes the result read as natural.
  • Possibly a small upper blepharoplasty (there's a bit of excess skin).
  • Rhinoplasty: refine the tip and raise my droopy columella. Width and projection are fine as-is.
  • Maybe shaving down the mandibular midline for a more curved front-profile appearance.
  • Earlobe reduction: not strictly necessary, but I noticed it improves the perceived height of the ramus.
  • Laser eye depigmentation.

Body​

  • Gyno removal: not that obvious, but why not; one less thing to think about when pinning.
  • PMMA girth injections.
  • Pubic fat pad removal.
  • Possibly circumcision to join clavicular's cabal (jk no jew is touching my tip, thanks)
    View attachment 5384762
  • Possibly LL. If I go through with it, it's definitely quadrilateral, landing at 6'3"–6'5".

The Grouping Plan​


I know this sounds like a lot, but most of it groups into a few long surgeries. Drafted plan (very likely to change based on surgeon estimates):
View attachment 5384780
Surgery 1: craniofacial + ophthalmic specialists, ideally combined (split into two if too long):
  • Eyes: orbital work, strabismus, canthopexies, possibly upper bleph
  • Jaw: jaw angle implant revision, possibly the mandible midline shave
  • Misc: possibly the fat graft
  • (I'll try to bring in an oculoplastic specialist for the canthal work, craniofacial and general plastic surgeons in Turkey don't reliably produce good soft-tissue results.)

Surgery 2: rhinoplasty specialist:
  • Rhinoplasty. It's a delicate, relatively long soft-tissue procedure, so I'd rather isolate it and I don't want to be bleeding from my mouth and nose at the same time.
  • Gyno removal (easy add-on).
  • Earlobe reduction.

Surgery 3: Dick specialist:
  • PMMA + fat pad removal.

Surgery 4: maybe, and if so, my last:
  • Quadrilateral LL.

Misc: eye depigmentation starts in September, should be at goal by next summer. Invisalign for the tooth gap runs in parallel.

View attachment 5383187

Verdict​

  • Ascension beyond a normie's perception is possible. But it's an exchange of equal value: you pay in years, pain, and money, and you get exactly what you paid for. Most people would rather cope by talking shit than put in the work. So the question isn't whether it's possible anymore, it's whether you can handle it.
  • Liam is the undisputed goat, even if you dislike him the reality is that there is no competition that comes even close.
  • I might go a lot more in depth on this whole journey: the planning, the waiting, the recoveries in an interview with a popular creator soon. Nothing confirmed yet, but if you want the full story, stay in touch.
  • Thanks for the support and to everyone who wished me well. The most invasive part is over, now I can rest and polish everything.

Thanks for reading

View attachment 5384776
View attachment 5384814


dnr, this should be in blogdelnarco.com instead
 
  • +1
  • JFL
Reactions: Acquiescence and surgeryplanning
I mean it's pretty obvious you were botched, anyone could see this themselves from the Giant OBO results circulating around...

Originally you said you were going to share the results after completing your surgery journey, now it's all about anonymity which is a very convenient excuse. You just peddle a bunch of useless ratios nobody else besides yourself is able to verify, typical of incels coping with a botched result. Let's be honest: You were intending to share the results which is why you posted the entire "I got OBO" thread to begin with, to get validation from incels, even got pinned on BOTB, but now you yourself are not satisfied with the results. Muh "entitled" when YOU posted this entire OBO thread to begin with promising everyone that you would post the results.

I will say I am surprised you at least admitted there were complications. But to anyone with a double digit IQ, you are clearly trying to hide a botch job, dancing around it as much as you can. Everyone knows why there isn't any good available OBO results.
i think the same.
 
  • +1
Reactions: yussimania, zemult and surgeryplanning
I mean it's pretty obvious you were botched, anyone could see this themselves from the Giant OBO results circulating around...

Originally you said you were going to share the results after completing your surgery journey, now it's all about anonymity which is a very convenient excuse. You just peddle a bunch of useless ratios nobody else besides yourself is able to verify, typical of incels coping with a botched result. Let's be honest: You were intending to share the results which is why you posted the entire "I got OBO" thread to begin with, to get validation from incels, even got pinned on BOTB, but now you yourself are not satisfied with the results. Muh "entitled" when YOU posted this entire OBO thread to begin with promising everyone that you would post the results.

I will say I am surprised you at least admitted there were complications. But to anyone with a double digit IQ, you are clearly trying to hide a botch job, dancing around it as much as you can. Everyone knows why there isn't any good available OBO results.
I saw one result and the medial canthuses were fucked, like went from existing to not existing
 

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