Welcome to the deep dive on “top surgery” (the preferred community term) or, more formally, subcutaneous mastectomy with chest reconstruction . Let’s strip away the mystery, the myths, and the misinformation. In strict surgical terms, debreasting is the removal of breast tissue, fat, and skin from the chest wall. Unlike a total mastectomy for cancer (which removes all glandular tissue and often lymph nodes), debreasting for gender affirmation leaves the nipple-areola complex intact (resized and repositioned) and sculpts the remaining tissue to look like a masculine, flat, or androgynous chest.
After surgery, some people experience . Not because they regret it—but because the dysphoria that drove them for years is suddenly gone . The brain, accustomed to high alert, doesn’t know what to do with silence. debreasting
If you are considering this path: Find a surgeon with results you trust. Build a support system. Be patient with your healing. And remember—a flat chest does not make a man, just as a curved one does not make a woman. But a chest that feels like yours ? That makes all the difference. Have you undergone top surgery? Are you considering it? Drop a respectful question or story in the comments. This space is for sharing, not shaming. Welcome to the deep dive on “top surgery”
A: Increasingly, yes. In the US, many state-regulated and employer plans cover gender-affirming top surgery with a WPATH letter. Out-of-pocket costs range from $6,000 to $12,000. Unlike a total mastectomy for cancer (which removes