I will launch this thread off with my favorite scars-- ones that I cannot hide yet it is nearly invisible !!
I was five (or six) years old when I was at my playmate's house. We were playing "House" and he was being the mother (yes, it was a "he") and me being his daughter. He told me to sit still while he fetched my make-believe dinner.
For SOME reason, I got this mischevious streak that told me to attack him from behind just to startle him. I ran and pounced off onto him.. and he went over forward. We ended up falling right into cement floor. (OUCH)
He got a bitten tongue and bawled endlessly while his mother asked me what did I do to him. Yeesh! I wasn't the one who hung my tongue out!
I hit my chin and jaw on his head and it did hurt a bit... but I rubbed it away.
Well, that incident was important in determining WHY I ended up having a swollen chin (and it wasn't because I was a chubby child). Two of my lymph nodes were swollen but I was not sick or infected. Apparently my fall onto my playmate's protuding head struck a nerve and encouraged my nodes to be filled with liquid which led to swellness.
Finally at age 8, after several disputes with the insurance company, an operation was approved for the doctors to drain out my nodes (they had NO idea why my nodes decided to stay swollen and they feared for my health)... With this operation I have been stabbed by a syprine two times a week for next two months... it was unsuccessful since every time they drained a dose, my nodes filled another dose. Finally an surgical removal was necessary. They cut my chin up and removed two nodes along with some muscles and tissues then closed the thin skin up.
To today, I have this strange scars that people will inquire about. If you feel it around, you can just feel the skin, the inside of me... no muscles or anythign to "protect" me... just the skin. It also explains the reason for its strange apperance because the skin was so damaged by the repeatious jabs of the needle. (shuddering).
Here they are! The scars are on my right side. You cannot see them if you meet me for the first time or if you know me for years... you only can spot it if you tell me to look at a gorgeous bird in the sky and I tilt my head up... then YOU will see the most obvious injury on my jaw. That is usually the moment that set people off into this line: "oh my god, what happened to your jaw?!?!?"
(
http://medicine.ucsd.edu/clinicalme...lymphnodes2.JPG *warning: big picture!* I think the nodes in submandibular area are the ones I lost.)
I did mention somewhere that my scars from this surgery looked like bullet wounds. Seriously. Either that or a bite wound from Dracula.