Quote from: Deborah on November 26, 2017, 11:48:40 AM
I also destroyed lots of stuff over the years. My most memorable destruction was ripping a door off its hinges and throwing it down a hallway.
I did this too. People were pretty scared, I´m sure they never encountered anybody like me.
Never injured anyone either, except one time when somebody really had it coming (they tried to corner me).
My experience is this. It´s not the testosterone. But testosterone can have an influence on it.
Before testosterone I used to be extremely unhappy and this used to show itself through frustration. I couldn´t figure out exactly what was going on, and that made me even angrier - and I also find that estrogen actually made me more violent because I did not like the type of emotions it gave me.
Testosterone has helped me calm down, but it has also lowered my tolerance for any, any at all, bullsh* in my life. If I feel unhappy about something and I don´t SAY it, I will get cranky. If I am forcing myself to do something without listening to myself first, I will get cranky. If something is bothering me and I don´t stop in my tracks to figure out what´s wrong, again, anger.
Try to pinpoint if you are unhappy with aspects of your life and whether it´s related.
For me, not taking my hormones on a regular schedule can also mess with my emotions. Be careful.
If there´s a pattern to your anger (angrier in week 3 after the shot, for example), then consider moving to a different pattern of injections - but preferably after you check what your levels are.
However if you´re way behind on your shots now, I don´t know if you will still get an accurate reading. If you want to know if your levels affect your mood, best thing would be to get back on it for a while and then have your levels tested.