Author Topic: 30+ year olds, how would you have reacted if you found out about this stuff...  (Read 14478 times)

x

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 604
  • Karma: 16
10 years earlier?

cause ignorance is bliss and all that, but I want to hear what you guys think. how different would your 20's have been? do you think you'd be able to 'get over' knowing about it?

Lazlo

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3004
  • Karma: 175
you mean about the possibility of this surgery? it's actually tough to say, cause in a sense 10 years ago the internet didn't have all these resources etc.. so i might have ended up with some s**tty surgery and i wouldn't have known about the top surgeons or techniques currently available to me.

that said, if i could be dealing with this 10 years younger, i'd have more prime years to enjoy the results so all things being equal, i wish i had known about this ages ago, and acted on it.

x

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 604
  • Karma: 16
you mean about the possibility of this surgery? it's actually tough to say, cause in a sense 10 years ago the internet didn't have all these resources etc.. so i might have ended up with some s**tty surgery and i wouldn't have known about the top surgeons or techniques currently available to me.

that said, if i could be dealing with this 10 years younger, i'd have more prime years to enjoy the results so all things being equal, i wish i had known about this ages ago, and acted on it.
see my edit: "how different would your 20's have been? do you think you'd be able to 'get over' knowing about it?"

basically I want to know if your life would've taken a different course?


I like your optimistic outlook but I'm convinced it'd take a turn for the worst almost universally for all of us, considering how OCD we are now. There is no such thing as perfection, there will always be something to fix, and sometimes it's better not to know since no one has perfect jaw alignment (or perfect anything)

Lazlo

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3004
  • Karma: 175
for me this has nothing to do with girls. i could get girls before and i can now, that's not a problem.

but i disagree that the overall gestalt will not change. that's precisely what will change because with a balanced jaw and chin the overall proportions of your face will change radically. especially in my case i'm having a fairly extreme set of changes. chin lengthened and advanced, jaw advanced quite a bit, and I'm having the equivalent of a lefort II which will radically raise my cheekbones making my nose smaller.

and i absolutely do find that when I change things about myself --lose 20 lbs, get in shape and have a good haircut I look much much better. so this will only add to all that.

i'm going to look like a f**king boss after all this is said and done, no doubt about it.

x

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 604
  • Karma: 16
for me this has nothing to do with girls. i could get girls before and i can now, that's not a problem.

but i disagree that the overall gestalt will not change. that's precisely what will change because with a balanced jaw and chin the overall proportions of your face will change radically. especially in my case i'm having a fairly extreme set of changes. chin lengthened and advanced, jaw advanced quite a bit, and I'm having the equivalent of a lefort II which will radically raise my cheekbones making my nose smaller.

and i absolutely do find that when I change things about myself --lose 20 lbs, get in shape and have a good haircut I look much much better. so this will only add to all that.

i'm going to look like a f**king boss after all this is said and done, no doubt about it.
I didn't say it was necessarily just about girls. If you feel you need to look like a boss to be perceived as one than you're already proving your susceptible to other people's judgments of your superficial appearance. Otherwise you would act the part without feeling you had to look it, that is the mark of a true alpha. look at Joe Pesci in Goodfellas for reference

also i don't think lefort ii touches the cheekbones, otherwise I'd say screw it and get it done  ;D

Lazlo

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3004
  • Karma: 175
yes a quadrangular lefort touches the cheekbones, i mean quadrangular lefort II.

anyway, did you hear back from the ortho about expansion?

x

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 604
  • Karma: 16
yes a quadrangular lefort touches the cheekbones, i mean quadrangular lefort II.

anyway, did you hear back from the ortho about expansion?
negative


i see you ignored the gestalt of my post

Lazlo

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 3004
  • Karma: 175
negative


i see you ignored the gestalt of my post

no you misinterpreted the sense of my post --i didn't mean "boss" as in seeming alpha or how i was perceived or anything. i just meant "boss' as in awesome. i didn't want to get into the whole discussion about other people's perceptions etc. euphoria, i recognize my own aesthetic flaws and i want them fixed for my own sake, for my own sense of being able to appreciate my own appearance. i'm sure that how others relate to me will possibly change when i relate to myself in a more positive fashion. anyway, i don't really want to get into this discussion because i have to have this surgery now for largely functional reasons and so since i have to have it, i want to be as careful about the aesthetic payoff as well.


my desires for facial and other types of transformation are ENTIRELY motivated by my own interest in aesthetics and my own standards. sad but true. i have always, since I was a little boy been sensitive to aesthetics and my own appearance and had a more or else ideal vision of myself which i wanted to attain. whether this is possible or not, i don't care, i can't change what I want.

x

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 604
  • Karma: 16
I'll be blatantly honest though, it's a struggle feeling sympathy for the extractions guys when you feel your entire growth was altered during the truly important times the face is shaped. you say my face looks fine but that doesn't mean things went as planned and there's something very unsettling about knowing that, I have 2 brothers to look to for comparison. Also, my skeleton, which is 'complex' as you described it (and I agree).

comparing extractions to abnormal childhood growth is like comparing a paper cut to an amputation

CK

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 512
  • Karma: 39
i think euph's case is more obvious, his bite problem is blatant and aesthetically u have more to lose bro.

i wish there were some photos that showed extractions ruining faces as we hear often.

the lack of orthodontic work as a kid - imo - is good. i think most people dont really need braces. if u had 8+ years of ortho work i imagine you would look vastly different. 


 

x

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 604
  • Karma: 16
i wish there were some photos that showed extractions ruining faces as we here often.
I second this request.

Anybody? ... Bueller?

Kristen

  • Private
  • Sr. Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 282
  • Karma: 25
it really depends

my ortho was focused on retraining my abnormal muscular activity with the f**king works, and I'm not exaggerating. expanding my upper arch, making me wear the FR appliance so that my lips & facial muscles acted normally instead of abnormally, wearing a neck brace at night to keep my mouth closed so I didn't mouth breathe, removing enlarged adenoids & tonsils

if you have a quack for an ortho I can understand where you're coming from, but I think I would've been a lot worse off without treatment



What age did you wear that appliance.?  Do you feel it helped you?  Who was your ortho?
Are you having surgery ?

CK

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 512
  • Karma: 39
i think orthos seriously overrate their ability to manipulate jaw growth. in almost every case ive seen growth becomes undermines and sometimes destroyed with all the novelty appliances orthos pick up at conferences. i would like to see cases where orthodontic work guides and corrects growth disorders.

with teeth i can see orthos doing work, but beyond that it's more of a money maker than actually controlling facial growth.




pekay

  • Sr. Member
  • ****
  • Posts: 428
  • Karma: 15

if you have a quack for an ortho I can understand where you're coming from, but I think I would've been a lot worse off without treatment

i think my ortho was a quack despite his good reputation (catering to all the rich/elite kids in Westlake (Austin, TX) although I was never given a head-gear he had me on springs and those super thick rubber bands while I was in 7th and 8th grade
Chopsticks > Spoons

x

  • Private
  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 604
  • Karma: 16


What age did you wear that appliance.?  Do you feel it helped you?  Who was your ortho?
Are you having surgery ?
I was too young to appreciate whether it helped or not, nature is cruel like that. By the time you have capacity to understand the ramifications of not correcting these habits, it's too late. I was pretty rebellious about wearing it, something I regret to this day. I can't remember how long I wore the FR, but I think I started around age 10-11.

more here: http://jawsurgeryforums.com/index.php/topic,793.0.html

I'll pm you the ortho's name, he's a functional ortho I think. Only uses damon braces, doesn't do extractions unless they're absolutely necessary, etc