Date: February 21st, 2026 2:30 PM
Author: Mainlining the $ecret Truth of the Univer$e (One Year Performance 1978-1979 (Cage Piece) (Awfully coy u are))
Five months after his surgery, Mr. Trinh went for his final checkup with Dr. Craig Robbins, the surgeon who had overseen his lengthening. He was still using crutches, but he could walk.
And he was now exactly 5-foot-9, around the average height for an American man.
Mr. Trinh was not yet fully finished with the process. The implants in his bones needed to be removed. His left shin, he said, was still partly numb, which he had accepted could be permanent. He still felt tightness in his pelvis when he jogged.
In January, eight months after his surgery, Mr. Trinh went for a 22 mile hike at a forest in Texas. And he was surprised at how much better he felt in cargo shorts.
His recovery, he said, had gone particularly well. (Some patients on the same timeline were still working their way up to jogging, he said.)
People who knew him noticed, of course, that he was taller. He was truthful with some, and he held back with others. But the “itch” in his mind about his height, he said, was gone.
“I’m just perfectly average, where I need to be,” he said. ”It’s a nice feeling.”
He wondered sometimes whether his legs still looked proportionate. He had not yet ruled out a second surgery, this time on his tibias, to correct his bow legs.
It would be a bonus, he said, if it made him even taller.
Matt Yan contributed reporting.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5836985&forum_id=2],#49684979)