VANITY: Like a Virgin
Dallas women are—ahem—opening up to a plastic surgery
procedure that some doctors are calling the new boob job.
(April
24, 2006) - It’s gotta be a joke. That’s what Shay Gibson thought. Her husband
called from the road one night last spring, saying he’d heard a comedian on the
radio talking about a plastic surgery that tightens vaginal walls. “I thought
there’s no way the procedure can be real,” Gibson says. But, with her interest
piqued, she turned to the Internet. That’s where she learned it wasn’t a
joke—and that this wasn’t the only operation, either.
Gibson, a 28-year-old mother of three who
lives in Dallas, could also have her labia trimmed or even her hymen reattached.
Doctors across the country regularly perform the surgeries. And the more web
sites she visited, the more FAQ pages and testimonials she read, the more,
actually, Gibson thought an operation could be right for her.
Truth was, sex for her had become less
enjoyable after the kids were born. She couldn’t feel her husband as much. “I
thought, ‘Why not do it?’” Gibson says. Her husband agreed.
She flew to San Antonio last July, where she
met Dr. Troy Robbin Hailparn at the Laser Vaginal Rejuvenation Institute.
Hailparn is one of two doctors in Texas performing the surgeries—the other’s in
Pharr—and the only woman using the laser for these procedures anywhere in
the country. Gibson had her vaginal walls tightened and, for appearance’s sake,
her labia trimmed. The procedure took a little over an hour. She flew home the
next day.
The healing process took two months, but it
was worth it. Gibson won’t soon forget the first night back with her husband.
He screamed, “This was so worth the $10,000!”
CALL IT, AS ONE PLASTIC SURGEON DOES, THE
SEARCH FOR “designer vaginas.” Call it, as many people do, vanity run amok. The
truth is, there’s a growing number of women who want to look like a porn star or
feel like a virgin, or who want their sex lives restored or childbirth-induced
incontinence cured. There are about a dozen doctors across the nation who
perform these laser vaginal rejuvenations. And, no surprise, some of their
clients come from Dallas. The laser vaginal rejuvenation, some doctors say, is
the new Botox. Heck, the new boob job.
But there are no nationwide statistics kept on
the number of such surgeries. The LVRs are too new for that. Dr. V. Leroy Young,
head of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons Emerging Trends Task Force,
first heard about the surgeries three years ago. He thought then they were a
fad. He doesn’t now. He’s noticed the proliferation of ads in magazines and on
billboards, and the web sites that have popped up, even the discussion of laser
vaginal rejuvenation on Dr. 90210, a reality show on E!. Young says that
he hopes to have relevant stats by the end of the year.
It’s about time, Hailparn says. The labia
surgeries she performs at her clinic have tripled from two years ago, and the
vaginal tightenings have doubled. “I’ve done hundreds of these in the past two
and a half years,” she says.
Naturally, not everyone’s pleased business is
booming. Some feminist bloggers and authors say LVR is female objectification;
at worst, they liken it to genital mutilation. More locally, Charles Curran, a
professor of human values at SMU’s Perkins School of Theology, calls the
surgeries “just as rank” as anything else society faces today. And the American
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, while withholding a formal opinion
of the surgeries, aired several “concerns” about them in a 2004 letter, namely
how the surgeries are marketed to the public, labeled within the medical
community, and taught to other surgeons.
Indeed, business booms for people like
Hailparn because so few doctors are willing to perform the surgeries. The
controversy surrounding them is too great. “I think it’s seen as kind of a vain
thing,” Young says. Too vain for plastic surgeons? “The sexual aspect of it is
what makes it a little more taboo.”
And we still have yet to talk about what’s
most taboo, the hymen repair. Yes, you, too, can have your hymen reattached
(well, if you’re a woman). Shay Gibson opted out of that procedure. But
Jeannette Yarborough didn’t. She’s a medical assistant from San Antonio and she
went to Hailparn to have her vaginal walls tightened and her “virginity
restored” as a gift to her husband on their 17th anniversary. “It was the
ultimate gift that I could give him,” Yarborough says.
Though Hailparn doesn’t do too many hymen
repairs, Dr. Marco Pelosi does. He’s a gynecologist in New Jersey who’s
performed hymenoplasties for 30 years. Until recently, the women requesting them
came from Middle Eastern cultures in which punishment for an impure bride was,
in some cases, stoning. Today, though, most women requesting the surgery are
upper-middle class, largely white, coming from all over the world (and, yes,
Dallas, too, Pelosi says, though D could not reach any former clients),
and they are having the procedure for reasons similar to Yarborough’s. Pelosi
now does 10 hymen repairs a month, up from two a decade ago.
“I say it will be a one-night deal,” Pelosi
says. “But the women say, ‘I don’t mind.’”
Thomas G. Stovall thinks it’s all bunk. A past
president of the Society of Gynecologic Surgeons, he told the Wall Street
Journal surgeries to improve one’s sex life rarely work and “hymen repair is
a totally bogus procedure.” Jeannette Yarborough disagrees. She says Stovall
should ask her husband if he thought the hymen repair was bogus. And as far as
the sex goes, both she and Gibson say it is “incredible” now.
In any case, none of this comes cheaply. A
hymen repair costs about $5,000, roughly the same price as a vaginal tightening
and a labia trim. To have two surgeries performed, as both Gibson and Yarborough
did, can cost as much as $12,000. Financing in some cases is provided through
the clinic. But, still, $5,000 for a surgery that will be undone by morning?
Twelve thousand dollars for surgeries that insurance won’t cover?
“This can be a relationship saver,” Hailparn
says. She says the surgeries are borne, more times than not, out of marital
unrest. After childbirth, “no one is talking to women about the sexual
intercourse,” she says. “Ninety-nine percent of my patients say their OB-GYN
isn’t asking about it.” Women have been taught to accept a frustrated sex life,
Hailparn says. Or a mid-life filled with pain (because some pants chafe too
much) or embarrassment (because some pants reveal too much). “It doesn’t have to
be that way,” Hailparn says.
Shay Gibson agrees. “I think every woman
should have it,” she says.
Dr. David Matlock, the pioneer of vaginal
rejuvenations, who now does 500 a year in Los Angeles and teaches other surgeons
how to perform them, offered the procedures 10 years ago “as a result of
listening to women,” he says. And he’s kept listening. If a woman is pressured
into a surgery, he won’t do it. (Hailparn and Pelosi say they won’t, either.)
But now women want more than the perfect vagina, Matlock says. So he’s had to
work harder. He’s already patented one idea, even tested it on eager women who
enjoyed the results in their yoga and spin classes, or driving over cobblestone
streets. Matlock says the product will hit the market this summer.
It is a collagen-based g-spot enhancement.
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