Quote from: davis on November 29, 2012, 04:36:25 AM
I'm seriously considering eating much less than I should just to stop my period. Because I can't anymore. I just can't live if it happens even just once more. I think this quote from one of my favorite books sums it up: "it's not desiring the fall, it's terror of the flames" because I don't want to be hungry all the time and pass out every now and then but I can't go through that hell again. It's just too hard.
I know it seems tempting, and I know the feeling you're talking about with that quote (I might have to steal it to describe that time in my life if I have to again), but not eating isn't a case of just being really hungry and occasionally passing out. I've known someone who was struggling with anorexia, and yeah, she wasn't deathly bad or anything, but it wasn't pretty. Her hair was falling out, she was constantly cold (we would spend our lunchtimes in the bathroom because she could stand under the hand drier and next to one of the only radiators that worked in our school because she was so cold) probably because it screwed up her circulation, her fingernails went weird -- I can't remember how now -- and apparently she was at risk of losing them. Her grades dropped, she was an A* student, but she ended up getting a couple of Bs I think in the exams that she took at her worst points, and that was unheard of for her. She also had to quit swimming, and she was one of the best in her age range at the time, and she'll probably never get back to the level she was at again.
Quite a few years ago, I think it was 2008-9, I stopped eating as much as I could get away with because I was disgusted with my body. It wasn't so much that I saw myself as 'fat' but I hated all the places that fat gathers when it's in an estrogen run system (thighs, hips, ect). I wanted rid of those because I thought that it meant I was unhealthy, because why should it be okay for me to accept the 'female' body fat ratio when the 'men' have a lower one, did it mean that I was taking the easy option out? This was before I realised I was trans, so I didn't really 'get' that my estrogen run body needed the extra couple of percent of fat to run properly. I can't remember much of that time, but I do remember that I pulled myself together and ate properly again because I had a burn on the back of my hand that was getting infected. It was slightly green, pussy and showing no signs of healing after probably a week and a half despite being bandaged and disinfected and treated exactly how it should be. The school nurse knew that it wasn't something I wanted my parents knowing about, but she also knew that it would need more treatment than she could give if it got any worse, and told me on a Friday that if it wasn't any better by the Monday she would call my parents and take me to the doctor (we spend 50% of the time blackmailing each other). So I gave eating a try. By the Tuesday I had the bandages off. What would have happened if I'd not started eating? I'm not too sure, but worst case scenario: potentially fatal septicemia.
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It wouldn't take too much time either I don't think, maybe though. I'm not obese or anything I'm at a healthy level.
Everyone's bodies different, but it would. It wouldn't be a 'quick fix' at all. You've got to get down to a very low body fat level for this to work.
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Just that since I'm too young to get any kind of help it seems to be the only choice I have. I guess I have come to a point where I'm trading physical health for my sanity. Because if it happens, just once more, I mean... I live near a train station and I really wouldn't want to traumatize an operator but jumping in front of them and splash.
I don't know your age, and I'm assuming you're below 18 so you're not allowed to post your age on here, but there are things that you can do to stop them. Birth control, hormone blockers, etc. You'd need to way up the pro's and con's of each and see what's accessible to you, because there
will be a better way than starving yourself to death. Heck, I'm personally seriously repulsed by the idea of sticking more female hormones than I've already got into me, but I'd take that over the effects of not eating, your body basically starts to devour itself, first the fat reserves, then the muscles and then your organs just fail.
You say you don't want to traumatise a train driver, but it's more than that, you're traumatising anyone who sees, your family, and more so using that method, they would have to ID your mangled body. And tbh, starving yourself is really just another form of suicide, just a slower one. Even if you are only considering this for that reason the obsession with counting calories and obsessing over your food intake/exercise regimes can still really take a hold and that's hard to get out of. Trust me.
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I don't know what the point of this post is... just can anybody relate or anything? I just don't know what else to do. I've already waited for years. I can't wait any longer.
I can relate. Ugh. Today. All you can do really is try and zone out of it as best you can. I don't know what type of stuff you use to deal with it, or underwear you wear, but I've found that pads plus two pairs of tight underwear work the best for me. (I can't cope with sticking things inside me. Nope. Not happening.) It helps stop you feeling anything, and maybe it's just me because I have a crazy sense of smell -- I can smell when I have matches in my trouser pocket for example -- but it stops me being able to tell it's happening that way.
Quote from: Mosaic dude on November 29, 2012, 04:45:20 PM
It is also possible to use estrogen/progestogen pills to stop your period, but if you do that on a regular basis you'll end up in the emergency room if my friend's experience is anything to go by.
I'm not sure what's going on with your friend there, our school was recommended oral birth control pills as one of the best methods of contraception and they wouldn't have done that if it wasn't safe. They recommend having an "off" week, but I was told it's not necessary to carry that out, apparently some women just like it. I also know several people who are on oral birth control for medical reasons, ones anemic for example, and she's had no health problems from it. My mother was on it for quite a while I think when she was younger because she was trying not to have me (they have about a 1:100 fail rate when used as contraception).
I think the main problem for trans people is just the fact that you're adding female hormones to your body, and that's just... urgh.