Susan's Place Logo

News:

Based on internal web log processing I show 3,417,511 Users made 5,324,115 Visits Accounting for 199,729,420 pageviews and 8.954.49 TB of data transfer for 2017, all on a little over $2,000 per month.

Help support this website by Donating or Subscribing! (Updated)

Main Menu

Your change and your pets

Started by Mysteryman, December 13, 2013, 11:10:01 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Mysteryman

Attention trans people with pets! This might be an odd question but... Did you pet react in any way to your transition? Pets work with their senses - and transitioning changes not only your appearance, but your scent, your voice and much more. Did your cats/dogs notice? Did they react in any way?

On, still on, I wandered on,
And the sun above me shone;
And the birds around me winging
With their everlasting singing
Made me feel not quite alone.

Christina G. Rossetti
  •  

Danielle Emmalee

There is a pet forum on Susan's.  Not complaining that you put your post here, just thought it might be of interest to you if you didn't know
Discord, I'm howlin' at the moon
And sleepin' in the middle of a summer afternoon
Discord, whatever did we do
To make you take our world away?

Discord, are we your prey alone,
Or are we just a stepping stone for taking back the throne?
Discord, we won't take it anymore
So take your tyranny away!
  •  

Oriah

None of my other pets seemed to notice, but my pygmy goats have.  I have two does and a buck.  The buck always tried to attack me before my doses were adjusted, and one of my does flirted with me A LOT.  The other doe was terrified of me.  After the increase in doseage, my one doe still flirts with me a lot, but the buck does too now, quite a bit.  The doe that was always afraid of me is becoming less timid and occasionally approach me.  They're up by the compost pile, and they regularly smell our urine (it speeds up the breakdown of compost) so they are reasonably more sensitive to my hormonal changes
  •  

Mysteryman

Quote from: Orange Creamsicle on December 13, 2013, 11:12:13 AM
There is a pet forum on Susan's.  Not complaining that you put your post here, just thought it might be of interest to you if you didn't know

No didnt know! thanks for the heads-up! I am always terrible at working forums
On, still on, I wandered on,
And the sun above me shone;
And the birds around me winging
With their everlasting singing
Made me feel not quite alone.

Christina G. Rossetti
  •  

Mysteryman

Quote from: Oriah on December 13, 2013, 11:23:09 AM
None of my other pets seemed to notice, but my pygmy goats have.  I have two does and a buck.  The buck always tried to attack me before my doses were adjusted, and one of my does flirted with me A LOT.  The other doe was terrified of me.  After the increase in doseage, my one doe still flirts with me a lot, but the buck does too now, quite a bit.  The doe that was always afraid of me is becoming less timid and occasionally approach me.  They're up by the compost pile, and they regularly smell our urine (it speeds up the breakdown of compost) so they are reasonably more sensitive to my hormonal changes

Wow thats quite interesting - I have cats, and they are male... I wonder if they would notice... mind you they are pretty ok with anyone who feeds them lol
On, still on, I wandered on,
And the sun above me shone;
And the birds around me winging
With their everlasting singing
Made me feel not quite alone.

Christina G. Rossetti
  •  

Tossu-sama

We have a cat and he hasn't noticed anything, or then he just hasn't reacted in anyway. Then again, he's a bit of an oddball for a cat. He was socialized with humans so early on that he probably doesn't really understand the difference between humans and cats.

Neither has the dog and older cat at my mom and stepdad's noticed anything. The dog is still his goofball self and the cat is the same old egotistic butthole who thinks she's the center of the world. :P
  •  

Anna++

My aunt's cat didn't seem to remember me the first time I saw her after starting HRT (maybe about 4 months in).  She sniffed me for a really long time and just kind of looked confused.  I'm guessing that if you already live with a pet, they'll adjust to your hormone changes without thinking of you as a new person.
Sometimes I blog things

Of course I'm sane.  When trees start talking to me, I don't talk back.



  •  

Mysteryman

Quote from: Anna++ on December 13, 2013, 12:38:00 PM
My aunt's cat didn't seem to remember me the first time I saw her after starting HRT (maybe about 4 months in).  She sniffed me for a really long time and just kind of looked confused.  I'm guessing that if you already live with a pet, they'll adjust to your hormone changes without thinking of you as a new person.

I love your Avatar! Yeah I am pretty sure my boys will give me a few dirty looks.. then probably forget... Id image dogs would be more able to understand a change
On, still on, I wandered on,
And the sun above me shone;
And the birds around me winging
With their everlasting singing
Made me feel not quite alone.

Christina G. Rossetti
  •  

Adam (birkin)

My dogs didn't really seem to care. I had a hamster that became more hostile to my smell after a few months on T, though...
  •  

Mysteryman

Quote from: caleb. on December 13, 2013, 01:20:52 PM
My dogs didn't really seem to care. I had a hamster that became more hostile to my smell after a few months on T, though...

wow a hamster! would never have thought... 
On, still on, I wandered on,
And the sun above me shone;
And the birds around me winging
With their everlasting singing
Made me feel not quite alone.

Christina G. Rossetti
  •  

greypeacock

I have a dog and he hasn't seemed to care about my changes. On T he does listen a little better... likely because I'm more assertive.
  •  

greypeacock

I think some of the changes we see could be because we ourselves are changing. We might seem more confident, or stressed, or whatever. Transitioning makes us change inside and out, and I bet it's those behavioral changes, rather than our smell, that influences our pets more.
  •  

Mysteryman

Quote from: greypeacock on December 14, 2013, 11:59:52 AM
I think some of the changes we see could be because we ourselves are changing. We might seem more confident, or stressed, or whatever. Transitioning makes us change inside and out, and I bet it's those behavioral changes, rather than our smell, that influences our pets more.

lol that describes my boys! I think cats just dont care about anything but being fed
On, still on, I wandered on,
And the sun above me shone;
And the birds around me winging
With their everlasting singing
Made me feel not quite alone.

Christina G. Rossetti
  •