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What happens when a non-trans person takes hormones?

Started by Brenda E, July 19, 2014, 04:57:37 AM

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Amy1988

Quote from: Brenda E on July 19, 2014, 04:57:37 AM
If someone who isn't trans (but might think they are) takes hormones, what would be the result?  Some kind of immediate realization that something is horribly wrong, or would the hormones make the person think they are trans after all?

First thing is boobs.  If they are not trans then they probably won't like having boobs.  I love mine even as small as they are.  It also mellows you out which I also love.  The only thing that bothers me is that I have lost some hand eye coordination and I have trouble visualizing things in my mind when I'm doing CAD work. 
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EllieM

Quote from: Brenda E on July 19, 2014, 04:57:37 AM
If someone who isn't trans (but might think they are) takes hormones, what would be the result?  Some kind of immediate realization that something is horribly wrong, or would the hormones make the person think they are trans after all?


OK, I realize this is an N of 1, but Alan Turing did not do so well on estrogen. Back in the dark ages (the 1950s) in England, he was convicted of homosexuality (yes, it was a crime then) and to avoid prison, he accepted estrogen injections. About two years into his imposed HRT, he developed a profound fondness for cyanide.

I feel the same as Grace, it didn't make me feel more feminine, it makes me feel normal.

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Miyuki

Now that you mention it, I remember hearing about that. I first learned about Alan Turing in a computer science class, but they usually don't discuss that part of his story... But why on earth did they think it was a good idea to give someone who was homosexual estrogen? If anything I would have thought they'd try to increase his testosterone levels, or something like that.
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luna nyan

Regarding Turing, I think it was a case of using oestrogen to kill the deviant sex drive, or something along those lines.  It wasn't too long ago that HRT was given willy nilly to women as the fix it all drug.  (Look up some stuff on HRT history, the mind boggles reading some of it)

Sad to say, Turing was an example of how poor practice can arise due to poorly understood mechanics of both "disease" and "treatment".

And I mean "disease" as in the historical context before someone accuses me of anything.
Drifting down the river of life...
My 4+ years non-transitioning HRT experience
Ask me anything!  I promise you I know absolutely everything about nothing! :D
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Emily.T

I definantly know where your coming from with this issue before my x wife left me for a "real man " as she puts it she would always ask me to prove that I am trans, I told her that I have no real proof other than the feelings that I have inside me telling me that something isn't right with me and that I am not the person that I was supposed to be. Now she just calls me crazy and thinks that I am a freak but her opinions don't really bother me I am who I am and that is that I am happier within myself since starting to transition so I must be heading in the right direction.
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Allyda

Quote from: Ms Grace on July 19, 2014, 07:17:45 AM
Well it doesn't make me feel more feminine anyway - it just makes me feel normal.
Ditto this ^^______^^!

Allie :icon_flower:
Allyda
Full Time August 2009
HRT Dec 27 2013
VFS [ ? ]
FFS [ ? ]
SRS Spring 2015



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Violet Bloom


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JohannaJohn

This is truly awful that one's medical professional would "fight" you for "proof-positive" you are trans....sounds like a medical professional from the Dark Ages, and maybe consider switching to a more CORRECT and enlightened medical professional ASAP if you continue to "fight" with her...

To me, it almost sounds like she is similar to a "fundamental religious advocate" who insists that is "against God's will to change what God gave you for a physical gender."  Hogwash!

Something like the Boy Scouts trying to "talk gay teenagers out of being gay by engaging in more masculine activities."  Hogwash!

Or the Iranians, who apparently support trans surgery, but only as a "cure" for homosexuality.  Hogwash!

I am only 5 weeks in, but I am seeing astounding physical and mental results here that I have discussed in much more detail in the Introductions section.

WOW...do I feel great!

WOW...do I feel happy.

If we breast development forces me to "come out" at my University professor position, I suppose I will just have to deal with that.

The only people I have "come out" to so far, are my 6 year old daughter, and my beautiful genetic girlfriend.  She is 32B and age 26 while I am age 56, and I want that size or more!!!  She painted my toenails bright red a week ago, so obviously she accepts me.

I would guess that someone who is an alpha-male on hormones would be terrified of no longer being able to have much in the way of erections, and terrified in the daily obsession about "getting p---y, to get laid."

I have almost no erections now just 5 weeks in, and I am good with that.  I still feel strongly attracted to the breasts of females...but now I want those breasts for myself!

I would think an alpha male would feel terrified.

Female hormones made the gay British scientist in the early 1950s suicidal, because the British government had a Dark Ages medieval mentality at that time.  He wanted to take cyanide to kill himself he felt so "wrong."

I would suppose that my unbelievably positive reaction to 5 weeks of strong medical grade E and P probably simply confirms I am heavily female, even if I feel that my life as a male has been reasonable.

I feel SO great, especially when taking micronized progesterone.  WOW I am sometimes mildly euphoric with happiness...

I solve problems now with calm and INTUITIVE FEEL instead of just pure masculine analysis...

Wow wow wow wow wow do E and P make my physical body and my mind feel RIGHT!!!



I am female.
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Emmaline

Body... meet brain.  Now follow her lead and there will be no more trouble, you dig?



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Emmaline

I had a conversation with a cis male friend explaining how it felt to be transgender- how I knew I wasn't male.
It really brought home how not male I was.  It really freaked at the idea of losing erections and growing boobs.
Body... meet brain.  Now follow her lead and there will be no more trouble, you dig?



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Miyuki

Quote from: Emmaline on July 21, 2014, 05:58:35 PM
I had a conversation with a cis male friend explaining how it felt to be transgender- how I knew I wasn't male.
It really brought home how not male I was.  It really freaked at the idea of losing erections and growing boobs.

This is so true. When I tried talking to my brother about my plans to get an orchiectomy, he really started to freak out about it. The thought of having testicles surgically removed made him feel physically ill. It made me realize that I don't think about my body the same way a cis male would at all, because for me an orchiectomy is on the same level as an operation to remove a cancerous growth from my body.
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Joelene9

Quote from: Sandy on July 19, 2014, 09:47:14 AM
Actually, they do.

Males are given estradiol and antiandrogens to reduce prostate swelling, and certain types of prostate cancer.

In nearly all cases the male body feminizes as would be expected from what we MTF's refer to as HRT.  However, the males who receive this treatment, who have not been diagnosed as transsexual, regularly feel depressed, sad, and angry from the loss of their manhood.  The depression can become quite severe and require anti-depressants in addition to the cross hormone therapy.

The do not become calm, they become quite agitated.  They do not feel more feminine, they feel that they have been deprived.  Conversely, trans women often times become more calm and serene.

It is not conclusive proof of being trans, but it is statistically significant.

Unfortunately, there is no common cross hormone therapy for women that has any clinical basis, so it is difficult to say if this would be true for trans men.

-Sandy
I would fall under that category.  Prostate problems was the trigger in my case to start HRT for my dysphoria and to treat the prostate, same meds.  Being transgender going into it, I had the calming effect occur.  Female HRT for prostate and testicular cancers is usually the last resort treatment.  It is usually applied to men over 70, few younger.  It is the younger cis males ones who have more difficulty handling the changes caused by the HRT.  Some menopausal women and men over 50 would experience traits of the other gender.  In older men, the T levels drop naturally and some grow "moobs", experience a lower sex drive/erectile dysfunction and depression. Some women experience hair growth on the face and chest due to the lower E and P levels.  Tiny amounts of T applied to some post menopausal women is known to increase their sex drive. That study is still ongoing. 

  Joelene
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warlockmaker

I've been looking all over the internet for answers to this question. Not much luck, does anyone know of any studies done? My therapist, and I had a few, all wanted me to start HRT to furthr confirm what we knew I was. The answer was provided by 2 therapists in that we are born with estrogen and testorone brain receptors and in Trans people the dominant brain receptors are not driven by their preferred hormones. Thus when a MTF like me starts HRT it is pure bliss, our estrogen starved brain receptors are finally getting their way. I did have a very high T count (over 1,000) and that made the change wonderful. Today its all part of my normal new perspective and I am ver so happy.

So I don't know the answer but my therapist considered this to be the Litmus test of a TG, would love to read studies - maybe I will ask my therapist for some research references tomorrow when I chat with him.
When we first start our journey the perception and moral values all dramatically change in wonderment. As we evolve further it all becomes normal again but the journey has changed us forever.

SRS January 21st,  2558 (Buddhist calander), 2015
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Evienne

Well now I'm curios. I mean, hormones more kinda just change how you look mostly, but not sure if they can severely change your feelings. But then again, scientifically speaking, one is usually trans due to having unbalanced hormones, and to much from the opposite sex. So perhaps it can change your thinking. Would be neat to find out, but testing on a non-trans person would be hard, considering they probably wouldn't want to volunteer, cuz if it works, they probably don't want to be trans :/
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Ticking Time bomb: 533 days
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kelly_aus

Quote from: Sam314 on July 22, 2014, 12:24:48 AM
Well now I'm curios. I mean, hormones more kinda just change how you look mostly, but not sure if they can severely change your feelings. But then again, scientifically speaking, one is usually trans due to having unbalanced hormones, and to much from the opposite sex. So perhaps it can change your thinking. Would be neat to find out, but testing on a non-trans person would be hard, considering they probably wouldn't want to volunteer, cuz if it works, they probably don't want to be trans :/

Hormones do more than just change your appearance.. They do also have a neurological influence.
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Brenda E

Quote from: warlockmaker on July 21, 2014, 11:51:59 PM. . . my therapist considered this to be the Litmus test of a TG . . .

Mine too.  I was never really convinced at all that there was any physiological basis for my trans issues (I thought I was just a pervert who let his fantasies take control), but after taking estrogen for a week, I'm absolutely convinced that there were some kind of receptors that were starved of estrogen.  The speed at which I felt better (even on the lowest dose) was crazy!  So yes, I think that if your trans feelings are caused by something chemical missing in your system, a bit of estrogen to use as a diagnostic tool is a quick and effective means to cut through the years of therapy and get a more conclusive, scientific answer.

Not to diminish the relevance of therapy, because I would be dead right now without it, but once the patient has demonstrated feelings of gender dysphoria, a trial of low dose HRT is a good follow up step.
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Emmaline

It's hard to uncouple feelings of relief and expectations from the estrogen itself - though I did hear of double-blind placebo tests giving significant results,  from my own experience it goes beyond my expectations- effects such as color sense, emotional responses beyond the range I was aware of possible, and most significantly clear thinking and lifting of fatigue.  I have to say it does give weight to the receptor theory in my mind.
Body... meet brain.  Now follow her lead and there will be no more trouble, you dig?



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Violet Bloom

  My HRT started with Spiro first so it is much harder for me to isolate estrogen effects.  The best I can describe it is reducing my T-level immediately calmed my nerves and relieved my near-chronic fatigue and daily stomach discomfort.  Basically testosterone was acting like a poison in my system and was also driving my metabolism out of control.  Feeling physically better combined with the t-drop cleared my depression.  Erections have not gone away entirely although that 'area' is notably more relaxed almost all of the time.  This should continue to improve as my dosage in progressively increased.

  When I later started Estrace there was no pronounced change.  It really just slowly filled in the rest of the missing pieces in transitioning my body.  It does serve to boost my mood though as I'm significantly more cheerful and also more tolerant of stressful and confrontational situations.  In short order my nipples started hurting strongly and this has never quite stopped throughout my subsequent breast development.  I just had an increase in my E dose and they are hurting more again.  Thankfully this is the only discomfort I experience any longer.

  Other changes I have noticed in the long term are facial shape, body hair thinning and reduction, lost scalp hair restoring, testicle shrinkage and minor body weight gain.

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warlockmaker

"(I thought I was just a pervert who let his fantasies take control" Brenda, thats exactly how I felt. For me the mental changes were and still are occuring and its all been good. Being a female starts with the mental changes that HRT brings, the physical side happens naturally.
When we first start our journey the perception and moral values all dramatically change in wonderment. As we evolve further it all becomes normal again but the journey has changed us forever.

SRS January 21st,  2558 (Buddhist calander), 2015
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JohannaJohn

Quote from: Emmaline on July 22, 2014, 06:08:07 AM
It's hard to uncouple feelings of relief and expectations from the estrogen itself - though I did hear of double-blind placebo tests giving significant results,  from my own experience it goes beyond my expectations- effects such as color sense, emotional responses beyond the range I was aware of possible, and most significantly clear thinking and lifting of fatigue.  I have to say it does give weight to the receptor theory in my mind.

YES YES YES YES YES

right on your comments about "emotional responses beyond the range I was aware was possible" THIS THIS THIS THIS THIS

I hadn't even thought of a way to express this part of the mental change until I read your post...

I now can FEEL this...just 5 and a half weeks into this journey on P (micronized) and estradiol valerate.

Johanna
I am female.
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