Thanks for all the subtle advice...
I'm not that much of a believer in people just psychologically 'identifying with cultural stereotypes',
I'm more into looking at actual biologically driven behaviour patterns. It does seem that much of our
current consumer culture is built by the hands of others who understand how we actually 'work' at that level
all too well. I'm pretty sure I'm being 'drawn' in these directions by something powerful, but at the moment
at least I still have the power to resist, I'm just choosing not to do so quite so much as I was before.
I'm not attempting to muscle in on any IS community, I'm just trying to let off a bit of steam really by
telling the whole truth as I see it. It's just that it's such a relief to finally have some kind of understanding
of what's really been going on all my life. I know that you're right that it's not fair to attribute everything
that's gone 'wrong' with me to some hypothetical and highly unusual condition. (It's growing less and less
hypothetical by the day, at least to me. I had another 'LH/FSH' blood test taken today at the request of
the gender identity clinic, so they must now be tracking me a bit more closely..)
If I stick with the NHS then I don't have to worry about insurance companies. (I have no other insurance
for one thing, so if I went private for things I'd just have to pay out of pocket), I understand that it
can be a very slow process, they seem to be rather 'backed up' with cases at the moment, but perhaps
I'll be considered a somewhat special case and prioritised..
I'm not saying I haven't screwed a lot of things up of my own accord, but it's kind of comforting to know
that the very worst periods of depression I've experienced seem to have closely coincided with certain
physical 'developments' that I didn't have much real understanding or expectation of at the time.
I suppose that it's wrong to speculate on certain kinds of subconscious influences on the various things that
I've done in my life, but it's actually quite a lot of fun!
I could quite easily put much of my moodiness and somewhat frantic 'nest building' type behaviour in the
last couple of years down to my 'biological clock' beginning to tick very loudly in my ear.
In fact for even the last 5 years or so I seem to have been desperately waiting for some kind of a relationship
to arrive, even though each potential professional one that I've found has been 'not right' in some respects.
I've not personally sought out a physical relationship myself, as something has always felt 'wrong' about even
pretending to be straight or gay or something in between as a male. I kind of sort of 'knew' what
kind of relationship I was looking for, but there seemed to be no way of finding it in the real world.
I don't know if the seemingly increasing prevalence of these kinds of things is actually down to the speculated
'environmental endocrine disruptors' or the contraceptive pill, (which the more conspiracy theory minded people
seem to think are in fact a deliberate wide-scale social engineering tactic, a la 'Brave New World'..), but there
certainly seems to be a lot of trends going on in the developed world at the moment, which when analysed from
this direction have certain 'resonances' with what I've experienced.
I've a friend from school who seemed to be the most similar to me personality wise, in fact he was the only
person I could find to talk to in any depth. He was highly intelligent. (Well he got much better A level results
than me for one thing), but during his late teens and early 20s he went through similar kinds of depression cycles
to mine, including actually being suicidal at one point.
At some point a few years ago he had some 'bizarre' physical symptoms, which from his description sound
surprisingly familiar. When he sought treatment for them the medical profession told him he had 'anal leakage'
and a 'cyst' which he had to have removed. He was then put on Citalopram for 5 years, which seems to have
helped him settle down a lot, and he has now found a good place for himself in the right kind of community.
Well I guess you'd probably describe him as a 'hipster' now.

As a teenager he hit his growth spurt early, was quite lanky and has never been able to build up much muscle tone,
in fact there was one incident when the class watched a sex education video containing the words, "At this age,
you will often find that the tallest person in the class is a girl!", and most of the class turned to him and laughed.

Now of course I can only speculate as to what was really the underlying cause of his problems, but over the same
time span I mentioned his personality seems to have shifted a lot towards the more feminine end of the spectrum.
Firstly by dropping out of an economics degree and taking up film studies instead, then by getting more heavily
into design, fashion and music etc. He seems to have kept switching jobs, and locations, moving ever closer to
'hipster' territory as he went. He also took up smoking at an age where you'd have thought he would have more
sense than to start getting into something well known to be expensive/addictive and life limiting.
[As I walked around while quite sexually charged up and emotionally detached, it really looked to me like smoking
is really just a 'displacement activity' for something else, something that people probably don't actually have so much
in mind when they do it, but which makes sense in terms of 'tension/release cycles' in a mixed sex office environment,
in terms of the age at which so many teenage girls seem to take it up, and in terms of the physical appearance of many
of the males that also do so at around the same time.
(Thanks for providing that little bit of insight Messrs. Freud/Bernays!

) ]
When he explained his problem to me, he said he worked out what was going on with him from watching a particular
episode of 'South Park' where a similar thing happened to Eric Cartman. I can't say I've ever watched that one,
so I don't know the full story, but if true it seems like a convenient way of dropping a nugget of possibly false
but socially reassuring information into the public consciousness...
I feel like my own personality has shifted a lot over the past 3 years too, post the brief Citalopram incident,
and I'm not sure now if it's entirely for the better. Socially I'm much more 'in tune' with other people, but I seem
to be really struggling to maintain some of my former levels of ability in deep concentration, mechanical/logical
thinking and long term planning.
Now as my 'cycles' progress I also seem to gain and lose other abilities, and really struggle to successfully reverse my car
into the garage sometimes.

I don't want to swing too far in either direction mentally really, ideally I want to be
able to maintain a nice balance of male/female activated mental traits/capabilities, if necessary by chemically 'tweaking'
myself from one direction to the other as required for a given task..
I'm still on the fence about that one really. Do I actually want to become much more unconsciously 'inside' of current society, and have a much more social existence now that I've worked out how I can be, or do I still stand aloof from it being rather analytical, but with much greater insight into what is really going on around me?
Whatever happens, no one is going to get away with telling me I have just have a 'cyst' somewhere,
I know what I'm feeling happening inside! I believe I understand way too much about the intersection of biology/endocrinology/psychology for that at this point, and I really deserve to be given the actual 'truth'
about my own anatomy, however bizarre it eventually turns out to be.