Detrans Activist Removes His Breast Implants And Discourages People Against Transitioning: "Everything You Do Is Fake And Synthetic"
Daniel thought getting a breast augmentation would make him feel more like a woman. All it did was give him breast implant illness.
More and more people are coming forward to discuss their regret of transitioning, especially if it was done at a young age. 18-year-old Chloe Cole started taking hormone blockers at 13 and got a double mastectomy at 15, thinking she could become a trans man. At 16, she decided to detransition and live her life as the woman she truly is. Now she uses her platform to speak out against the trans movement and encourage people to understand the dangers of teenagers being given hormone therapy or surgery to "affirm" their gender identity. Others are now following suit and sharing their own detransition stories, including a young man named Daniel who attempted to live life as a trans woman before realizing that he was just ruining his body.
Detrans Activist Removes His Breast Implants and Discourages People from Transitioning
Daniel tried to live as a transgender woman for six years. He even got breast implants but recently had them removed; he shared some details about the process and how painful it has been for him.
"I had my breast implants removed. One of them was raptured. I had them for 3 years. It was Mentor brand," he tweeted with a photo of himself in the hospital bed. "I’m really happy that I don’t have them in my body anymore. I’m looking forward to see my new chest. I hope it will look like it was before the augmentation. Or just a little bit that way."
He also wrote about why he wanted to get the surgery done. It was all in the hopes of looking more like a female rather than the young man he truly is.
"I really wanted to get by breast augmentation done. I thought it will make more of a woman," he continued. "I liked them at first. They looked okay and it changed my body a lot to the feminine side. They were causing me pain and a lot of BII [breast implant illness] symptoms. I hated the way they made me feel. I’m really happy that my surgeon removed them and made my chest function again normally."
Breast augmentation, also known as augmentation mammoplasty, is a surgical procedure that involves the placement of breast implants or fat transfer to increase the size of the breasts, restore breast volume lost after weight reduction or pregnancy, achieve a more rounded breast shape, or improve natural breast size symmetry.
The surgeon makes an incision in inconspicuous areas to minimize visible scarring. These incisions may be inframammary (underneath the breast), periareolar (around the nipple), or transaxillary (under the arm). The implant is then inserted into a pocket either under the pectoral muscle (submuscular) or directly behind the breast tissue, over the pectoral muscle (subglandular). Once the implant is in place, the incisions are closed with layered sutures, and over time, the incision lines will fade.
While breast augmentation is commonly performed for cosmetic reasons, it is now considered a vital procedure in the process of gender transition for many trans individuals. Men may seek breast augmentation to create a breast contour that aligns with their supposed gender identity. This process of achieving physical alignment is referred to as gender-affirming surgery, which usually comes after hormone replacement therapy (HRT). Breast augmentation is said to help trans individuals feel more comfortable in their bodies and reduce gender dysphoria; activists even claim that the procedure can contribute positively to the trans person's mental health. However, Daniel's story proves otherwise.
"Going through transition sucks. I’m not gonna lie," he tweets. "Everything you do is just fake and synthetic. It will never be a body of the opposite sex. I hope more people will see the bad side of a transitioning and really think about it before going through it."
In another thread, he opened up about his "trans" experience. "After 6 years of 'living as a woman' I detransitioned. Was I happy? Sometimes. Did I still want to die? Yes. Did I start loving myself more? No. Do I regret going through all of that? Yes," he wrote.
"My body was struggling. I was depressed and I wanted to end this life. I felt like I needed to play some role all the time. Even though I believed I was who I was supposed to be I was still so unhappy," he continued. "Then I realized that my transition was just a mask behind which I could hide myself from the world. It was not about having a good relationship with my body and myself. I hated myself. I wanted to look nothing like me. The more I looked different the more I liked it. I just wanted to be someone else."
He added that it was difficult to date. Men were interested in him even though they knew he was trans, and "some of them didn't mind." But he realized eventually that he didn't want to be in a relationship with a man.
"Then I started to regret my decision to transition. It’s been almost 2 years since I started to struggle living my trans life," he wrote. "I detransitioned and sometimes it gets really tough. I still regret my past decisions and I blame doctors as you know from the interviews and tweets."
"I hope someone will see this and just understand that transition will never heal the hate inside the person. They will always hate themselves. They will always hate their body. They will only be saying that they’re happy because they think they’ve done something good for their life. It’s not true," he concluded. "We need to stop this demagogical ideology."
Sadly, there are more and more people like Daniel coming forward to discuss how transitioning has been detrimental to their lives. As our culture normalizes transgenderism and even promotes it to children (such as the Target tuck-friendly underwear in the kids' section), we can only expect that more people like Daniel will come forward with tragic stories about how they have butchered their bodies in the name of gender ideology.
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