He spent his childhood avoiding any social interaction and was too embarrassed to ask a girl on a date.
Describing his tough schooldays, Ajun said: 'I stopped wearing sandals outside since my third year of primary school.
'I've never had a girlfriend because I'm so imperfect. I never thought I'd find anyone who wants to be with me.'
Usually, people born with such deformities have the
extra digits surgically removed during childhood but Ajun's
superstitious parents did not want him to have the toes removed because a
fortune teller told them they were a good omen.
He suffered for so long with the condition because of his parents' stubborn belief that it was a 'gift from the heavens'.
Ajun
said: 'They were superstitious, so they didn't deal with it. They
thought if it really looked too bad, I could just cover it with my
shoes.'
Ajun was however determined to rid himself of the extra toes once he reached adulthood.
Dr Wu
Xiang, from Shunde Heping Surgical Hospital in Foshan, said: 'It's very
rare to see such a serious deformity having not been treated in a
21-year-old patient.'
His team spent nine hours operating on Ajun, forging a new big toe and chopping off the extra ones.
Dr Wu said: 'Other hospitals would've just removed his outermost extra toes.
'That would've been the easiest solution, but it wouldn't look the best.
'His
most natural looking toe is on the outside, so we decided to migrate it
inwards to its most ideal position, replacing his fifth digit and
creating a new big toe.'
Polydactyly is the scientific name for having extra digits on hands and feet.
Affecting
one in every 700 to 1,000 worldwide, it occurs during the sixth or
seventh week of pregnancy, where a foetus' 'paddle hands and feet'
divide into fingers and toes.
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