Yes, this is a collaboratively edited Q&A and users better get used to that. Improvement of your posts may happen at any time and you'll generally just have to accept that.
But edits unfortunately are not always good. I've had posts edited which introduced problems or changed the question/answer fundamentally. You might argue, "you can always roll that back". True, but why wait and have reviewers spend time on something when you know you would reject it anyway? I think it's fair enough to have the OP be part of the review process of a suggested edit. Especially when the OP is the one person who knows what he intended to say.
This does not imply that the OP should abuse this "power". Fair edits are fair. If a user does not like the idea of his posts being edited, he should perhaps not participate. If I see such rollbacks which I consider a bad idea, I generally leave a comment to the effect that the edit improved the post and he might want to think twice about doing something which would essentially hurt his content. In general this is sufficient.
Should the user persistently roll back reasonable edits, perhaps a flag for moderator attention is in order. A message with a big diamond behind it might have a bit more of an effect.
So in summary, please let me as the OP have early input on suggested edits to my content. But don't let me abuse it.
do this the Right Way) was also lost in the edit. – Frédéric Hamidi Nov 3 '12 at 10:07