Quote from: Nancys Girl on April 18, 2017, 12:06:56 PM
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Even while depression eased after I was discharged I was never entirely free of it. Until I began HRT. Now I watch the sunrise with what I think must be joy in my heart and think "is this what normal people feel like?" I recently asked the psychiatrist that manages my meds whether it could be possible that my very long history of depression might not be the result of gender dysphoria. "I wouldn't be a bit surprised" he answered.
It only took me 13 years to find that out.
Oh, this is dead on.
I was an effeminate child who had not started puberty at age 15. (Undescended testicles. DES exposure in utero...) I was an A student, but quiet and withdrawn. I was caught dressing.
I avoided ECT and aversion therapy, in favor of a lighter conversion therapy, testosterone injections to lower the testicles and kick off puberty, and counseling by an authority figure associated with a private elementary school and place of worship. I became a sullen, angry, antisocial D student.
I'm pretty sure that was when the depression and dysphoria started. It got worse over the decades, and anxiety was added to the mix. I'm pretty sure the depression and anxiety were social in origin, driven by the perception that others would reject me if I came out of hiding, and driven by severe gender dysphoria.
Like your experience, mine was that starting HRT was the treatment that made the biggest difference. I was started on an anti-androgen (spironolactone) and after several weeks I started experiencing periods frequently where I could easily find a state of calmness, where the distracting 'noise' in my mind faded away. I started estradiol (via patches) a month into HRT, and that improved my mood at once. About 2 months into HRT, that state of calmness and mental quiet became my new normal.
This made a remarkable change in my mental state, and my outlook on life. I've still had rough patches, mostly related to the social issues we encounter, around rejection by others, but I AM doing much better than before I started HRT. It was a life saver in my particular case.