After a gun accident took off half his face, Richard Lee Norris spent 15 years living as a recluse in Hillsville, Va. Horribly disfigured, he hid indoors. When he ventured out, it was behind a baseball cap and surgical mask. He didn't pursue a career and never married.

Now, seven months after undergoing the most extensive face transplant in history, 37-year-old Norris is finally coming out of hiding.

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After a gun accident took off half his face, Richard Lee Norris spent 15 years living as a recluse in Hillsville, Va. Horribly disfigured, he hid indoors. When he ventured out, it was behind a baseball cap and surgical mask. He didn't pursue a career and never married.

Now, seven months after undergoing the most extensive face transplant in history, 37-year-old Norris is finally coming out of hiding.

Thanks to a combination of potent medications and dogged determination, Norris is healing faster than anyone expected, according to his doctors at the University of Maryland Medical Center in Baltimore, where his transplant was performed.

"We as doctors do the operation, but the rest is up to you as the patient," said Eduardo Rodriguez, a dentist and surgeon at UMMC. "You have to carry the ball." Norris, Rodriguez says, took the ball and ran with it.

By the time Norris was selected as a transplant candidate in 2005, he had already undergone more than a dozen operations attempting to give him functional use of his mouth. Despite the numerous surgeries, certain facial features -- such as his lips, nose and the front of his tongue -- were beyond repair.

"After several attempts at reconstruction, it became apparent it wasn't going to work," Norris, who declined to be interviewed in person, said in a written statement to The Post. "The face transplant was one of my very few options left."

The 36-hour operation was completed in March and involved more than 150 doctors, nurses and staff members.

"Everything from the scalp to the midline of my neck was replaced, including the jaw bones, teeth, part of my tongue, muscles, and nerves," said Norris, who has retained his eyesight through the accident and subsequent surgeries.

When Norris saw his new face in a mirror for the first time, he wrote, "The only thing I could do was hug Dr. Rodriguez."

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