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A "man" can never become a "woman." A person gets the surgery to correct their genitals because they are already a woman inside. They were a woman inside all along and never had the identity nor neurology of a man. The surgery doesn't make a "man" into a "woman." It only gives someone who deeply believes they were always a woman what they feel are the parts they should have always had.

How does it feel? That depends on which point you are asking about. If you mean during surgery, they don't feel anything. They are under anesthesia while the doctor performs surgery. Immediately after surgery, the patient likely feels groggy from the anesthesia and quite uncomfortable. They may feel like they have to urinate when they don't. The pain may intensify until maybe day 3 or 4 when it is its worst. Maybe around day 5 or so, there will be some relief when the surgeon removes some of the packing. The area will be quite sore for a while. The area may be numb in places for a while too, and feeling should increase with time. The amount of normal feeling that returns depends on the surgery and the patient. Then the patient will have to dilate using a stint, and that can be a little sore to do for a while. If you mean how sex feels, that is hard to quantify since you cannot compare between persons, but many say it feels "natural" or "right for the first time."

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12y ago

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