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Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Fri May 18, 2018 8:30 pm
by BiBikerFL (imported)
daifu-orchid (imported) wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 4:55 pm
Yes, make sure that you have done everything in life that actually needs nuts, and then -maybe with a snip for a while- consider losing the nuts.
Losing them early in life's journey needs a lot of very deep consideration.....
Hello Daifu-Orchid. My pleasure meeting you. I very much would enjoy your insight and would like to get your thoughts on my wishes as a Eunuch to live in peace serving and pleasing my wife of 31 years. We are best friends and very much enjoy each others company. She has no sex drive and I have too much. What a small sacrifice on my part since we have two grown young men and are now in out mid 50's. She has no interest in sex as you have read. So castration is a simple and easy decision for me and us.
Blessings
Look forward to your reply...
Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Sat May 19, 2018 9:49 am
by cutnbulls2ox (imported)
BiBikerFL (imported) wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 8:30 pm
Hello Daifu-Orchid. My pleasure meeting you. I very much would enjoy your insight and would like to get your thoughts on my wishes as a Eunuch to live in peace serving and pleasing my wife of 31 years. We are best friends and very much enjoy each others company. She has no sex drive and I have too much. What a small sacrifice on my part since we have two grown young men and are now in out mid 50's. She has no interest in sex as you have read. So castration is a simple and easy decision for me and us.
Blessings
Look forward to your reply...
Lucky man ! 2 sons ! Every man wants sons to carry on all of his previous ancestors DNA ! With 4 young balls out there already spreading your seed, castration is a lot more possible for a man to go ahead with.
Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Sat May 19, 2018 1:58 pm
by daifu-orchid (imported)
BiBikerFL (imported) wrote: Fri May 18, 2018 8:30 pm
Hello Daifu-Orchid. My pleasure meeting you. I very much would enjoy your insight and would like to get your thoughts on my wishes as a Eunuch to live in peace serving and pleasing my wife of 31 years. We are best friends and very much enjoy each others company. She has no sex drive and I have too much. What a small sacrifice on my part since we have two grown young men and are now in out mid 50's. She has no interest in sex as you have read. So castration is a simple and easy decision for me and us.
Blessings
Look forward to your reply...
My 2 cents?
First, be happy. Make sure your plans are truly good for both of you. Many suggest a chemical trial first if nutless is what interests you.
Many here enjoy the eunuch state, but maybe take a taste of it first, before you do it for real?
Either way, hope it all works out for you!
Write me, if you like.
Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Sun May 20, 2018 7:16 am
by daifu-orchid (imported)
Yes, transition to no T is not the best part -flashes, lethargy... - but it generally passes. The flashes become less in intensity and frequency, and the lethargy lifts. Then you have the best part that I like best, being an eunuch, rather as eunuchs were always until the recent possibility of replacement T. I can always return with restarted TRT.
FWIW, I notice that each time I stop the T to go no-T, the transition is easier. The last time, with little in the way of flashes, and probably not much noticeable lethargy. I expect YMMV, but that's it here.
Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Sun May 20, 2018 9:31 am
by MikeGrant (imported)
I am curious as to your experience with Dr. Reed. We have exchanged emails about various orchiectomy options. He was adamant that any procedure would require the two letters. I even asked if i was already castrated, would he just remove the scrotum.He stated that they require a psychiatrist letter for any surgical ablation of male genitalia. I have now been chemically castrated for a couple of months, mostly enjoyable sensation, but some difficult side effects. Dont know how i would have copped if i had just gone straight to surgical as i had planned. Funny that now i am here, the drive and interest in castration has dropped. It is a mental state that, although i am finding mostly very pleasant, is a very different perspective than i ever expected.
Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Mon May 21, 2018 11:30 am
by BiBikerFL (imported)
Hi MikeGrant. Yes I saw Dr Reed on Friday. A very nice man that has a gifted hand for painting. Quite talented.
We sat in his office and talked about my desire for removal of testosterone from my body permanently with surgical castration. We discussed the pros and cons of each and we both decided on his recommendation of chemical anti-androgens, 100mg of Spironolactone twice a day for 3 months, then consider surgical. He said based on our conversations and my only interest is in testosterone removal and not feminization that he did not need a letter for chemical castration, but still does require 2 letters for surgical. Since chemical is reversible, our discussion, no interest in feminization, he had no problem writing me the script.
He was very thorough with a full physical including blood and urine work as well as a complete prostate exam. Best $250 I've ever spent medically.
He also required a letter from my wife giving her support and approval for both chemical and surgical. Which actually turns me on that I needed her written permission. I know it has to do with legal liability, but I was Beta buzzing from it. So the plan is to take the meds for 3 months and revisit with blood work in-between. To then decide if I want to continue with chemical or schedule for my Orchiectomy and scrotum removal.
I've ordered my script and will be taking the meds come next week. Eunuch calm, here I come.
I would love to hear more about your story and experience chemically. What pros and cons. What do you like most about it. Do you see yourself staying on meds or eventual surgical.
My wife and I are very excited at the possibilities this will mean for us as we so look forward to our next 31 years in love.
Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Mon May 21, 2018 11:45 am
by BiBikerFL (imported)
I for one would love to hear about your journey to becoming a Eunuch. Wha was your calling about it? What do you love most about it? How has it improved your life and the lives of those around you.
I really believe that a mans next level to consciousness on way to becoming aware, can only be achieved as a Eunuch. With testosterone in the body, clouds vision and judgement.
Why do you take T at times? I would like to learn about being a pure Eunuch. No HRT. Just a pure Eunuch.
daifu-orchid (imported) wrote: Sun May 20, 2018 7:16 am
Yes, transition to no T is not the best part -flashes, lethargy... - but it generally passes. The flashes become less in intensity and frequency, and the lethargy lifts. Then you have the best part that I like best, being an eunuch, rather as eunuchs were always until the recent possibility of replacement T. I can always return with restarted TRT.
FWIW, I notice that each time I stop the T to go no-T, the transition is easier. The last time, with little in the way of flashes, and probably not much noticeable lethargy. I expect YMMV, but that's it here.
Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Wed May 23, 2018 9:58 am
by notsomanly (imported)
BiBikerFL (imported) wrote: Mon May 21, 2018 11:30 am
Hi MikeGrant. Yes I saw Dr Reed on Friday. A very nice man that has a gifted hand for painting. Quite talented.
We sat in his office and talked about my desire for removal of testosterone from my body permanently with surgical castration. We discussed the pros and cons of each and we both decided on his recommendation of chemical anti-androgens, 100mg of Spironolactone twice a day for 3 months, then consider surgical. He said based on our conversations and my only interest is in testosterone removal and not feminization that he did not need a letter for chemical castration, but still does require 2 letters for surgical. Since chemical is reversible, our discussion, no interest in feminization, he had no problem writing me the script.
He was very thorough with a full physical including blood and urine work as well as a complete prostate exam. Best $250 I've ever spent medically.
He also required a letter from my wife giving her support and approval for both chemical and surgical. Which actually turns me on that I needed her written permission. I know it has to do with legal liability, but I was Beta buzzing from it. So the plan is to take the meds for 3 months and revisit with blood work in-between. To then decide if I want to continue with chemical or schedule for my Orchiectomy and scrotum removal.
I've ordered my script and will be taking the meds come next week. Eunuch calm, here I come.
I would love to hear more about your story and experience chemically. What pros and cons. What do you like most about it. Do you see yourself staying on meds or eventual surgical.
My wife and I are very excited at the possibilities this will mean for us as we so look forward to our next 31 years in love.
I'm starting my third month on Androcur and couldn't be happier. It's amazing how much more clearly I can think and how much more deeply I sleep. So far, I've experienced no loss of energy or hot flashes or depression. I'm closer to my wife than ever, and we have a great relationship. I'm planning on remaining chemically castrated for at least another six months before deciding on surgical castration. A lot of men report that the significant negative side effects take several months or years to develop and whether they dissipate or remain varies with the person. I'd like to avoid T supplementation after castration so I'm strongly motivated to wait until I stabilize to see how it will be.
Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Wed May 23, 2018 6:07 pm
by daifu-orchid (imported)
Great news! Hope it all continues to be good for you.
Yes, it feels very good to be a happily married eunuch!
We also enjoy the no-T option.
Re: Testosterone Blockers
Posted: Fri Mar 01, 2019 12:48 pm
by whitemoustache (imported)
Gentlemen, I was relieved to read so many positive responses in the foregoing. I was chemically castrated out of medical necessity. The diagnosis was Stage IV prostate cancer. The tumor was even trying to recruit the inguinal lymph nodes. My urologist sent me to the B.C. Cancer Agency here in Victoria, where a sweet young radiation oncologist took me in hand. Literally! My chemical castration began that day. The plan was for 18 months of antiandrogenic ablation with 37 radiation sessions to nuke the tumor, and my treatment team nailed it. I remain cancer free, and get a PSA every 90 days as an early warning, should it return. Men in their seventies secrete testosterone by the droplet, but in the meantime, I consider myself lucky.