Acting on my desire....
Posted: Wed Jun 06, 2007 6:00 am
As most of you know, I have been wanting a surgical castration for some time, but have not found what I deem to be a suitable doctor.
So frustration is the order of the day (and week and month and year and decade) as this has been my situation for nearly 33 years....
I've explored all the various DIY options. I don't want to do any cutting, and I don't want any outward disfigurement (damaged or missing scrotum) or a nasty embarrassing trip to an Emergency Room. That doesn't leave very much choice, does it?
Well, the other day, I had had enough, so I got out the woodworking clamp that I had purchased a while back, and crunched the cord to my right testicle Burdizzo style. I am missing a goodly section of the vas deferens thanks to an old vasectomy, so the only thing left to squash are the veins and arteries which are pretty flexible and squishy.
The clamp has firm but rubbery plastic tips that are flat and rectangular. I was able to squeeze the entire cord nicely. The clamp has a sliding mechanism that maintains the pressure without the operator having to hold the handle, but is quick release like a vise-grip pliers. Since the clamp body itself is lightweight plastic, you can apply it easily with one hand on the cords and the other on the clamp. I did the right side as an experiment so that I can compare any atrophy of the right testicle with the left one. Also, I am right-handed so doing the right side was easier.
To make the scrotum relax, I did the experiment while underwater in my hot tub. There was very little pain - just a somewhat unpleasant squeezing sensation. I applied and released the clamp several times while trying to find the best location so as to crush the entire cord. I did feel something "pop" at one point, but I am patiently waiting to see if any atrophy occurs. The testicle now seems to have a different feel to it and hangs a bit lower, but I am not certain if this is just wishful thinking....
I'll keep you up to date if anything happens, or I decide to repeat this experiment.
Don't try this if you have an intact vas deferens. That is one tough little rubbery tube, so crushing it is difficult at best. (I got to examine mine after I had the vasectomy.)
So frustration is the order of the day (and week and month and year and decade) as this has been my situation for nearly 33 years....
I've explored all the various DIY options. I don't want to do any cutting, and I don't want any outward disfigurement (damaged or missing scrotum) or a nasty embarrassing trip to an Emergency Room. That doesn't leave very much choice, does it?
Well, the other day, I had had enough, so I got out the woodworking clamp that I had purchased a while back, and crunched the cord to my right testicle Burdizzo style. I am missing a goodly section of the vas deferens thanks to an old vasectomy, so the only thing left to squash are the veins and arteries which are pretty flexible and squishy.
The clamp has firm but rubbery plastic tips that are flat and rectangular. I was able to squeeze the entire cord nicely. The clamp has a sliding mechanism that maintains the pressure without the operator having to hold the handle, but is quick release like a vise-grip pliers. Since the clamp body itself is lightweight plastic, you can apply it easily with one hand on the cords and the other on the clamp. I did the right side as an experiment so that I can compare any atrophy of the right testicle with the left one. Also, I am right-handed so doing the right side was easier.
To make the scrotum relax, I did the experiment while underwater in my hot tub. There was very little pain - just a somewhat unpleasant squeezing sensation. I applied and released the clamp several times while trying to find the best location so as to crush the entire cord. I did feel something "pop" at one point, but I am patiently waiting to see if any atrophy occurs. The testicle now seems to have a different feel to it and hangs a bit lower, but I am not certain if this is just wishful thinking....
I'll keep you up to date if anything happens, or I decide to repeat this experiment.
Don't try this if you have an intact vas deferens. That is one tough little rubbery tube, so crushing it is difficult at best. (I got to examine mine after I had the vasectomy.)