Double22 (imported) wrote: Tue Sep 24, 2019 2:04 pm Also, and this is completely unrelated but...
Has anyone experienced changes in gender identity since their castration? I haven't experienced any gender dysphoria but a year ago I did a trial of chemical castration, and about two months later I started thinking a lot about what life would be like as a girl.
Wow, the trick is in recognizing whether or not one is experiencing some confusion of one's gender. Seriously, there are changes in our body's chemistry after castration. And these changes take some time to happen. Of course once the testes are removed there is an instant stop in that testosterone factory. Although we do indeed have some other small sources of testosterone production in our body's there is a huge hit to the hormonal balance which begins (even without realizing it) quite a few subtle changes. And that huge drop in hormonal balance has so many subtle side effects it's difficult to notice unless you are specifically looking for them.
In my case all I desired was to have neither male nor female genitals. If that is what decides gender all I wanted was to be neither male nor female. (and I still consider myself neither male nor female for that matter) Dysphoria suggests a confusion and I was never confused about my desires. I knew exactly what those desires were from childhood. It just took 30 years to accomplish those desires. Without sufficient hormone production in my body I did suffer some loss of energy and stamina as well as endurance after enough time of my body flushing or expending if you will the last of the hormones within. I needed some sort of hormone to get those back and chose estrogen. I simply didn't have enough understanding of everything that hormones do for us and didn't realize the physical changes that would take place. But over time those physical changes did begin and I didn't even notice them for a long time. Perhaps because I wasn't interested in those changes so I wasn't looking for them. Had I been looking for them I may have noticed sooner.
I never wondered or though
female. Nor do I now. Although society has chosen to view me as a female I know I'm not. I've never been confused (dysphoria) about my sex (gender). I'm honest with myself and am what/who I am. I don't lie to myself about that nor pretend to be that which I'm not. Make no mistake, because society sees us as either male or female I let them think what they want and avoid upsetting the apple barrel. The changes I've made to my body were done for me and nobody else. I am the only one who can breath air into my lungs.