Quote from: Christine_Hart on October 07, 2016, 08:57:26 AM
I'm assuming you need to go to a doctor to get those prescribed? I looked at one medical page which mentioned soreness or swelling in the breast area. So there might be some physical change after all?
In terms of how they might affect you mentally, is there anything beyond a lowering of the normal male sex drive?
In most countries, you do need to go to doctor to get a prescription for an anti-androgen.
Mentally, testosterone in an enabler (not cause) of various aggressive or assertive emotions, as well as enabling the sex drive. As I went on, and off of it three times before committing to it; my experience each time is that it acts as an on/off switch, not a linear more-T = more-angry. Took me about two weeks after starting the AA for the switch to go off, and just a couple days for it to come back on.
I can't say whether that feature is specific to the wiring of my brain (which is, without doubt, disordered, and thus atypical), or whether its a universal property of how the receptors are activated in the brain.
So having my T now at zilch, and my estradiol still below female physiological levels, I can say I have zero libido, its nearly impossible to make me angry or agitated, I don't have nightly nightmares, I'm MUCH less prickly in public, and I'm also a bit less assertive. I like to sleep more now, but that may be because sleep is finally a pleasant experience for the first time in 50yrs.
nb, my disordered brain and my transgendered state are different little problems, which are, fortunately, treatable with the same method.... KILL THE T!!!! lol.