I'm finding a lot of wisdom in this post.
Quote from: Jack_M on June 26, 2013, 01:50:06 PM
it may be that you would be better taking doses less spaced out. For example if one injected every 2 weeks, maybe a half dose every week would average it out more.
This actually did me a lot of good. It helped my depression, and it might have helped me with some anger issues. Despite my complaints about my emotional rollercoaster, I am making progress. I used to be genuinely fearful that I would forget myself, lose control, and physically lash out at someone. I'm still worried about that, but I have to admit that when it comes to other people (and animals), I have things pretty well under control now. What drives me nuts now is how my emotions control me when I'm pretty much alone and something unexpected happens. I go into what my therapist calls "overwhelm."
Quote from: Jack_M on June 26, 2013, 01:50:06 PM
Also, you have to remember that your body is going through a lot of changes right now and there'll be a lot of triggers. No kid goes through puberty very easily, it's a hard time and that's what we're reliving.
My first puberty was pretty horrible, and I have always been very sensitive to chemical changes and medications and stuff like that. Maybe that's why my second puberty has been so rough. But it was also accompanied by so many other changes, and that's true for a lot of trans people. Most teenage adolescents don't have to cope with the loss of a marriage/partner, job, and longtime home when they are going through puberty! And plenty of other trans people lose parents, friends, extended family, kids...now that I think about it, this sort of thing can make for a very rocky second adolescence.
Quote from: Jack_M on June 26, 2013, 01:50:06 PM
Also, the first time we go through puberty, we have all those around us going through the same thing, and support as such from peers and family. This time, it's a little more alienating,
I didn't feel that I had any support the first time--but on the other hand, I don't have much support now, either! The past couple of years, the only person I've really had to talk to about all of this is my therapist. I don't like the support groups anymore, I've been too busy to see my closest trans friend, I don't see my best cis buddy very often (and I don't talk much to him about the less attractive aspects of transition), and my best gay friend doesn't even know I'm trans (and I'm too busy to see him these days, also). I come here, of course, but there is something liberating about talking to somebody face to face and speaking the words out loud...as I have said to my therapist many times in the past year or so, "You're really the only one I can talk to about this nowadays."
Maybe my sense of isolation is a key factor in my current difficulties in dealing with my emotions. But I know that there's more to it than that, so I spend a lot of time figuring out my past and my present and my triggers and my hangups.
Randomroads, it might be useful for you to analyze the various aspects in your life that could be contributing to your anger. What were things like before, and what are they like now? What is the same, and what is different? What emotions has transition uncovered, smoothed over, made more intense?