Did any of you also get cold feet in the time when push came to shove?
She says we can continue on and I should just use the pills and it's ok.
I told her the pills are not as reliable, about 50=60% of the time I cant last to satisfy her, and we can never really change positions.
Plus the constant anxiety in my head in the moments as we get turned on, to while we are having sex regarding will I last long enough or will it give out any moment and leave us both unfulfilled but skirting around the "its ok im fine" support she shows me but truly underneath I know she obviously would have much preferred to finish and have a enjoyable romp start to end.
But I am also getting a bit nervous.... it is after all irreversible. So if it fails for some reason, thats it....erections are done forever.
Any of you guys had cold feet just before, not just you but wife too? I cant fault her for being apprehensive.
I know some of you had bad implant experiences initially, but did pretty much everyone of those cases end up getting it resolved one way or another?
About to schedule my surgery, wife now casting doubts and making me question it
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KaBoom
- Posts: 52
- Joined: Thu Aug 14, 2025 12:27 pm
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cbinspok
- Posts: 974
- Joined: Wed Feb 03, 2021 7:45 pm
Re: About to schedule my surgery, wife now casting doubts and making me question it
kaboom
if your leg was broken you would get it fixed, if your arm was not working you would get it fixed. my wife was non supportive also. still the best thing ive ever done for myself. If you're wife likes sex she will come around and be glad about an implant. If she not, its your body and a part of that needs fixing.
if your leg was broken you would get it fixed, if your arm was not working you would get it fixed. my wife was non supportive also. still the best thing ive ever done for myself. If you're wife likes sex she will come around and be glad about an implant. If she not, its your body and a part of that needs fixing.
67years,fighting ed for over twenty years. A sever break, vit E, pataba, Viagra, massage Ved cilas, and I'm tired- throwing in the towel, Op for implant Mar 18, 2021 AMS LGX 18 x12 + 1 3cm RTE, gained girth and length, very glad I took the hard step.
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JohnnyBorg
- Posts: 332
- Joined: Tue Jul 01, 2025 9:35 am
Re: About to schedule my surgery, wife now casting doubts and making me question it
Hey KaBoom - as you know from our messages and my own journal, I’m HIGHLY risk averse. So much so that even though I could’ve started with an IPP, I went for the Rigi10 MPP.
My reframe around this is that if you go with an EXCELLENT high volume surgeon, you are setting yourself up for success. Yes, there are mechanical things that are sometimes out of their control for IPPs. But infection rates - when performed by a pro grade surgeon like Clavell, Hakky, etc - these are incredibly low for a virgin IPP. And if anything did go wrong mechanically with your IPP early on, these kinds of high volume surgeons will know how to sort it out with a proper revision.
“ But I am also getting a bit nervous.... it is after all irreversible. So if it fails for some reason, thats it....erections are done forever.”
So let’s go to this next layer - let’s say you get an IPP and it fails early, and this becomes a major dealbreaker for you. You don’t want to go with IPP revision, etc. As an MPP owner (still early on, so take this with a grain of of salt), an MPP is still a fallback option for you. And because of the simplicity of the device, in many cases you may not ever need a revision. By majority of accounts, the MPP is not as rigid as the IPP and you aren’t going to be able to cycle to regain lost size. Concealment is a bit of a pain in the ass. But it works. It’s an option for guys who started with an IPP, things didn’t pan out, and so they’ve made the switch (TheDriver is the big example here).
I’m a firm believer in “do all the research, pick the best surgeon you possibly can, collaborate with them, and you’re going to land in the right place”. I know none of us can guarantee you that things WILL work out, but that really is the best way to go about things.
It sounds to me like you AND your wife are in the right headspace and thinking about all the right things. Major surgery should absolutely give you pause. I didn’t get cold feet before my surgery but I was DEFINITELY freaking out. I had surrendered all the outcomes weeks beforehand, so I knew I was going to go through with it no matter what. But yeah man, in retrospect I was FREAKING out internally the days before and day of
it’s human. You aren’t alone there.
Maybe come up with sort of a “playbook” with your wife. Ie: “we’re going to start with an IPP. If it fails within x amount of years, we’ll get a revision to another IPP. If that one failed, we’ll revise to an MPP. If my IPP gets infected, we’ll hopefully get a salvage malleable and see how we like it for x months” etc. Really play out each angle. Write it all out, make a flowchart. Sounds really dumb but could be helpful to see all the different decision points the two of you have, and the different options.
My reframe around this is that if you go with an EXCELLENT high volume surgeon, you are setting yourself up for success. Yes, there are mechanical things that are sometimes out of their control for IPPs. But infection rates - when performed by a pro grade surgeon like Clavell, Hakky, etc - these are incredibly low for a virgin IPP. And if anything did go wrong mechanically with your IPP early on, these kinds of high volume surgeons will know how to sort it out with a proper revision.
“ But I am also getting a bit nervous.... it is after all irreversible. So if it fails for some reason, thats it....erections are done forever.”
So let’s go to this next layer - let’s say you get an IPP and it fails early, and this becomes a major dealbreaker for you. You don’t want to go with IPP revision, etc. As an MPP owner (still early on, so take this with a grain of of salt), an MPP is still a fallback option for you. And because of the simplicity of the device, in many cases you may not ever need a revision. By majority of accounts, the MPP is not as rigid as the IPP and you aren’t going to be able to cycle to regain lost size. Concealment is a bit of a pain in the ass. But it works. It’s an option for guys who started with an IPP, things didn’t pan out, and so they’ve made the switch (TheDriver is the big example here).
I’m a firm believer in “do all the research, pick the best surgeon you possibly can, collaborate with them, and you’re going to land in the right place”. I know none of us can guarantee you that things WILL work out, but that really is the best way to go about things.
It sounds to me like you AND your wife are in the right headspace and thinking about all the right things. Major surgery should absolutely give you pause. I didn’t get cold feet before my surgery but I was DEFINITELY freaking out. I had surrendered all the outcomes weeks beforehand, so I knew I was going to go through with it no matter what. But yeah man, in retrospect I was FREAKING out internally the days before and day of
Maybe come up with sort of a “playbook” with your wife. Ie: “we’re going to start with an IPP. If it fails within x amount of years, we’ll get a revision to another IPP. If that one failed, we’ll revise to an MPP. If my IPP gets infected, we’ll hopefully get a salvage malleable and see how we like it for x months” etc. Really play out each angle. Write it all out, make a flowchart. Sounds really dumb but could be helpful to see all the different decision points the two of you have, and the different options.
33 yrs old. ED since high school. Pills always hit or miss, mostly ineffective. Finally diagnosed with venous leak in early September 2025.
Rigi10 MPP 11mm rods 20 cm with 0.5 RTE.
Implanted w/ Dr Hakky on January 20, 2026. Recovering.
Rigi10 MPP 11mm rods 20 cm with 0.5 RTE.
Implanted w/ Dr Hakky on January 20, 2026. Recovering.
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