As a breast surgeon, it is my responsibility to do my best to protect my beautiful breasts. As a general surgeon in the past, I always thought that breast surgery was very simple, just cutting small lumps. When I was a young doctor, my superiors also gave us this type of surgery, but now it seems that although it can not be said that it was done wrong, but it did leave a lot of beautiful breast scars that can not be eliminated! We still see a lot of patients with scars on their breasts in our clinic! Fortunately, we took the lead in minimally invasive breast surgery in Shenzhen in 2005, and so far the number of my personal surgeries is still in the lead in Shenzhen, so I have accumulated a lot of experience in this area – bragging about myself! When I first started doing this kind of surgery I was still a little apprehensive and would face questions from my peers – can this thing be cut clean? After so many years, this surgery is now accepted by most of our colleagues, and the acceptance level of patients is even higher! The advantages of minimally invasive surgery are very obvious: 1) Incision size: The incision is tiny (a few millimeters) and can be made in a hidden area. Ordinary surgery takes a few centimeters of incision. 2. Number of incisions: Minimally invasive surgery requires only one incision on one side of the breast, while ordinary surgery often requires multiple incisions if the tumor is located in different locations, and we often see breasts that look like watermelon rinds! 3.Surgery time: Take myself as an example, it usually takes half an hour to an hour for a patient to enter and leave the operating room for ordinary open surgery, but I am now doing minimally invasive surgery in about 15 minutes on average for a patient to enter and leave the operating room! Of course this speed is just my own. The situation in our department now is that over 90% of benign breast diseases have opted for minimally invasive surgery! Both after all these years of our review results and feedback from patients, there is a growing acceptance of this procedure. We will get better and better! In October this year, I had the honor to participate as a consensus seminar on minimally invasive breast surgery with only a dozen experts nationwide, where the indications for excision and biopsy of breast masses were discussed and a consensus was formed. I hope that for the sake of the beauty of our sisters, as a breast surgeon, we will stop “playing with the knife” on the breast!