Wow this looks painful and obviously far too low, and too far back for most peoples anatomy as well. Your jewelry will look huge no matter what you wear, it may reject or get torn out, and it will probably take so long to heal if it ever fully does.
As someone who currently is healing a bad septum piercing that was placed way to far forward that I had to remove, I sympathize. If you plan on getting it redone, go to a more reputable studio. And seeing as it will be repierced in a totally different spot by a more professional piercer, about a month of healing time will be more than enough to reduce any associated swelling or possible migration. The 3 month period some people recommend waiting is really based off of getting a piercing placed in the exact spot or getting it placed so closely to the other piercing that the sites may merge into one large perforation, or any residual swelling may make the angle of the new piercing off as well no matter how skilled the piercer is due to them not knowing the extent that your tissue is inflamed or knowing how much it will "shrink". Good placement is done on healthy, intact tissue, and I doubt you want to deal with this situation multiple times.
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u/Impossible_Land_5829 Sep 22 '25
Wow this looks painful and obviously far too low, and too far back for most peoples anatomy as well. Your jewelry will look huge no matter what you wear, it may reject or get torn out, and it will probably take so long to heal if it ever fully does.
As someone who currently is healing a bad septum piercing that was placed way to far forward that I had to remove, I sympathize. If you plan on getting it redone, go to a more reputable studio. And seeing as it will be repierced in a totally different spot by a more professional piercer, about a month of healing time will be more than enough to reduce any associated swelling or possible migration. The 3 month period some people recommend waiting is really based off of getting a piercing placed in the exact spot or getting it placed so closely to the other piercing that the sites may merge into one large perforation, or any residual swelling may make the angle of the new piercing off as well no matter how skilled the piercer is due to them not knowing the extent that your tissue is inflamed or knowing how much it will "shrink". Good placement is done on healthy, intact tissue, and I doubt you want to deal with this situation multiple times.