Quote from: debrferguson on July 26, 2017, 11:43:23 PM
At some point before any medical intervention, I made a scale to measure my distress and document in my journal. I would never call it depression or hopelessness. For me it was a physical distress that existed in different levels of intensity:
1 - I can't believe I ever felt that way. That's stupid. I'm cured! The world is clear, the fog is gone, harmony, no dissonance (happens after sex)
2 - Not thinking about it at all, when I do I'm indifferent.
3 - Its there, but in the background. If I think about it, like white noise hissing faintly in my ears.
4 - Occasionally in the foreground, but I can push it to the background.
5 - In the foreground, but I can work through it. A little edgy.
6 - Occasionally distracting, but if I focus on something else, I can ignore it. Fairly edgy.
7 - Distracting. I want to do something. I feel compelled, but sometimes I can get through it.
8 - I need to cope. My 'bright passenger' needs attention.
9 - Nothing else matters. I HAVE to do something. I can't concentrate. Almost debilitating. I'll find anything to cope. I can barely fake normalcy.
10 - Completely debilitated.
Hi Deb, sorry to hijack this thread and I know you wrote this 4 days ago but this is a great post. I made a post on the main transgender talk subforum but I saw this and had to respond.
In my life I have always been somewhere on that spectrum as well. I would say after college when I became independent in 2012 is when I began to have serious desires. But even a short 5 years ago the transgender communities online were not what they were today. In late 2013 was the first time I actually thought transitioning could be something for me. But I fought it every step of the way. I would try to satisfy it with crossdressing and it made things worse. I tried to satisfy it with being ultra masculine and lifting heavy weights and such but that didn't work. I tried therapy and counseling and it didn't work. There would be temporary lapses where I was at "0" on your scale and wondered how I ever felt that way and would hate myself for ever having felt that way, but I would always end up climbing up the scale eventually.
I would go from 0 to 1, then 1 to 2, and then eventually buy clothes and makeup to crossdress with, would get to "10" on the scale, crossdress a little more, then purge it all, shame myself, think I was cured and be back to 0, and would be there for a few months, do ultra masculine things like heavy weight lifting and picking up women at bars to make up for it, and the cycle would repeat.
QuoteThat's a great observation. Gender Dysphoria has so many side effects.
I'd spent the previous decade plus trying to get healthy without meds. The result was that I had gotten a lot of the other junk out of my life and all that I had left was the chemistry problem.
i was a very reluctant traveler down this path. I loved my old life circumstances. I didn't want to upset them. So I fought really hard against going down this path.
Bingo. Took the words out of my mouth.
This time(after 4 or 5 expensive purge cycles in the past few years) I decided this isn't going away and its time to address it head on. Went to therapy, finally shed myself of the shame and guilt and realized for many years I have tried the natural, non medicine approach and it hasn't gotten me anywhere but out thousands of dollars from purging as well as endless anxiety and stress. I fought hard against going down the transition path but I am surrendering. I don't want to keep fighting that battle for the years to come with no end in sight.
So I started HRT 3 days ago. Leading up to making that decision I was at an 8+ on the scale for a few weeks running. When I got prescribed my horomones it was a 10. I was accidentially prescribed testosterone at first so when I went to pick it up at the pharmacy I was given the wrong meds. So I had to wait an extra day until the right prescription could be called in and those 24 hours were extremely stressful, it sent my dysphoria into overdrive and I was well past 10 on your scale. Simply because I had to wait and extra day to begin. I figured if I was that stressed over a short delay on beginning my HRT that definitely meant this was the right choice.
But I started 3 days ago and like you I dropped on the scale all the way down to the lower numbers like 2 or 3(haven't hit 1 yet and don't think I ever will again). I doubt any effects of the horomones so far could contribute but I think it has more to do with the fact that its no longer a fantasy, but reality and I am trying to come to terms with it. It's one thing to dream, its another to do.