Obviously there was some pain, duh, you get your legs broken. But the pain was not as bad, as some people here make it out to be. If you have an adequate pain medication mainly consisting of opiods, youre fine. Of course the first couple of days are painful, but thats just something you have to deal with and not wine around on the forum, and make it out to be some kind of torturous experience, which its not.
If you go read my diary, I have accurately documented my physical pain experience in the first two weeks. On three seperate occasions, since I had ll three times:
1. left leg ( tibia)
2. left leg (femur)
3. right leg (tibia + femur)
I can only speak for internal nail patients.
Siegfrid, first, massive respect to you for doing this procedure 3 times. We can agree to disagree on some things. I do think there's a marked difference in whining (as in "Oh my god, I can't take it anymore, this pain is unbearable, and so on"), and stating facts (Day 1-3 are excruciatingly painful, there's a slow slider down first week, second week more so, etc.).
Realism and accuracy matter here. For a lot of folks, this forum is really the only point of information they have, and the diaries offer the only window into what this procedure is actually like when they're considering this procedure. For instance, I communicated with Unicorn and some other Guichet/G-nail patients, and any thoughts of doing the procedure with Dr. Guichet, if I ever had any, went out the window (caveat: this is just me, everyone will of course choose what's best for them). I also found Dr. Birkholz on this forum, and was incredibly impressed. Were he not based in S. Africa, he would have been very high on my list. I also found Dr. Rozbruch here, from a patient diary. I didn't know he existed. I was all set to go with Dr. Paley until I consulted with Dr. Rozbruch.
There is a wealth of information here, as well as a wealth of misinformation. I do believe there are diaries that are understated. I don't want to speculate why, or point at anyone, but based on my own experience, there's not enough detail to let someone know that, for instance, the first week will literally be one of the toughest weeks you will go through in your entire life from a physical perspective, and that bit of information may be enough to motivate someone to stretch more, prep harder, strengthen their upper body (man, does that EVER matter), or decide this procedure is not for them.
I don't know why people that have not had this surgery would opine on how painful the surgery is. Truly baffling.
My opinions only. I appreciate your and everyone else's contributions.