littletits (imported) wrote: Tue May 14, 2013 6:25 am No, Castration does not cause one to be transgender.I was castrated by accident and was a well adjusted Eunuch for over five years. I am now fully transgendered and enjoy being a woman. After my initial surgery (castration) I was left permanently impotent because of damage to my penis. I was put on bi-weekly Testosrerone injections. That almost sent me crazy with all the desires of a man and none of the ability to get relief. I stopped and adjusted and settled into the life of an assexual eunuch with absoletly no libido and would have continued until I ran into oestoporosis. I could not contemplate going back on T. I started on Estrogen and immediately liked the mental and physical effects. I began to develop breasts. They erupted very quickly and within three months I really needed a B cup bra and I could not hide them even under baggy clothes. I decided to go the full distance, went on full HRT, breasts went to a D cup the same as my sister and mother. I had trans surgery in Thailand and am enjoyong my life now. I can now orgasm for the first time since i was castrated. It is different to what I remember but is very enjoyable. Had I had a better experience with Testosterone I would never have taken Estrogen but I certainly have no regrets. I am still attracted to women only as,while I was a man ,I was totally straight. As a Eunuch I had no sexuality but my orientation was straight. Nothing changed in that department. I am now in a relationship with a natal woman. Castration did not cause me to become a woman but bone problems put that option to me and I took it.
I continue to ponder human biological diversity. It is my nearly lifelong experience that what seems to "cause" something for one person often does not "cause" it in someone else.
With my long years of hanging out with very biologically diverse people, I have known folks who, because of prostate cancer, were castrated and kept living for many years, some of whom experienced becoming functionally transgendered after their castration, whereas others had no such experience.
My view of a complete answer to the question originally raised by Hash is, "Sometimes yes, sometimes no, sometimes something other than yes or no."
Were I ever to be in a witness box in a court of law, and asked a question that did not make much sense to me, and ordered by a judge to "answer yes or no," my answer might be, "Yes or no?"
To which the judge might say to me, "I ordered you to answer yes or no."
To which I might reply, "That is exactly what I did."
Checkmate? In chess, I understand that "checkmate" is a mangled version of "Shah mat," meaning, "the king is dead." Fortunately, a chess piece king was never actually alive as a king? So, "checkmate" is not murder?
In the manner of a Jeopardy television show question, "What is contempt of court?"