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Does HRT halt dysphoria?

Started by MissKatie, November 27, 2018, 03:15:59 PM

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MissKatie

Mine has been pretty bad recently, it's compounded by the occasional time I catch a side glimpse in a mirror and see how I look in heavy makeup, then it returns to full man mode.
I am hating every aspect of how I look at the moment and I know HRT is a gradual process but will it at least make me FEEL better mentally? Because I am really struggling at the moment
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LizK

Hi Miss Kate

HRT made a big difference to me both physically and psychologically.. Wether or not the placebo effect is prevalent I don't know and don't care. I think in reality and in a very real sense it does impact my GD...I have had to stop my HRT as part of surgery prep and I can really notice the difference and an increase in my GD.

Liz


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
Transition Begun 25 September 2015
HRT since 17 May 2016,
Fulltime from 8 March 2017,
GCS 4 December 2018
Voice Surgery 01 February 2019
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NatalieRene

There is a calming effect but the looks take time on hrt and for most also require surgeries.
  • skype:NatalieRene?call
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pamelatransuk

Hello again Katie

No, HRT does not halt GD. However it certainly lessens the intensity of it.

For me, HRT gave me a an early sign of peace and softer skin.

After 3 months I knew I was on the right fuel.

I still have GD but HRT helps me to realize when negative, that I am making progress.

Significant physical changes happen later.

Hugs

Pamela


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GingerVicki

HRT does not remove my dysphoria, but it helps. I know that right now I am doing everything I can.
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Lacy

As most of the other ladies have said, HRT hasn't removed my dysphoria, but it has cleared my head.

I don't feel like I'm in a fog all the time. I am more comfortable expressing myself in little ways that used to feel like I was outside my comfort zone.

The GD is much less for me and not as regular. I still look in the mirror or at my body hair and shudder. But starting HRT makes me feel proactive in working through GD and becoming my true self.

Lacy
She believed she could so she did!

The continuing story of my new life!



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Janes Groove

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Beverly Anne

HRT has helped me emotionally in many ways, and my mood is more stable, but seeing other body changes has increased my dysphoria and gender correction surgery is now a certainty.
Be authentic and live life unafraid!
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Swedishgirl96

I have not started hrt yet but will begin soon. But I believe that it will have a psychological effect at least on me that when you are on hrt your body is actually being feminized a little bit everyday, though it may go slowly it is actually happening. I think that will have a big effect on me at lest. That things are actually happening.:)
La dolce vita
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Jaime320

Quote from: RealLacy on November 28, 2018, 06:25:47 PM
As most of the other ladies have said, HRT hasn't removed my dysphoria, but it has cleared my head.

I don't feel like I'm in a fog all the time. I am more comfortable expressing myself in little ways that used to feel like I was outside my comfort zone.

The GD is much less for me and not as regular. I still look in the mirror or at my body hair and shudder. But starting HRT makes me feel proactive in working through GD and becoming my true self.

Lacy


YESSSSSS EXACTLY
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Another Nikki

It took the edge off for me.  About 10 days in i suddenly realized i wasnt constantly thinking  about gender.  i can work on a project now and focus.  it's been pretty nice :)
"What you know, you can't explain, but you feel it. You've felt it your entire life—that there is something wrong. You don't know what it is, but it's there like a splinter in your mind, driving you mad. It is this feeling that has brought you to me."
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MissKatie

Quote from: Another Nikki on November 29, 2018, 07:30:00 PM
It took the edge off for me.  About 10 days in i suddenly realized i wasnt constantly thinking  about gender.  i can work on a project now and focus.  it's been pretty nice :)

That'll be nice :)
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Linde

HRT did do nothing for me, except slightly swollen feet once in a while.  I may as well have my copay for the patches invested in candy, my boobs would probably bigger by now!(along with the rest of my body)!

But to be honest, I never had much of any dysphoria anyway, and the best HRT cannot do anything against a male speech pattern!
02/22/2019 bi-lateral orchiectomy






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Lisa_K

Let me start out by offering my opinion on the OP's question to say that nothing ever really "halts dysphoria" but HRT may help you take some of the wind out of its sails?

Quote from: Swedishgirl96 on November 29, 2018, 10:00:53 AM
... I believe that it will have a psychological effect at least on me that when you are on hrt your body is actually being feminized a little bit everyday, though it may go slowly it is actually happening. I think that will have a big effect on me at lest. That things are actually happening.:)

Before I started HRT, I was an emotional basket case to the point of becoming non-functional by refusing to continue to live my life the way I had been. It was just too crazy and I didn't see any way I could go on or envision any sort of light at the end of the tunnel all made worse by signs of my long delayed puberty beginning to show which absolutely mortified me. It was immobilizing.

Up until I was 15, my gender had been ambiguous. People that didn't know I was a boy weren't sure what I was both by appearance and manner.  Along with the liberties I was allowed in expressing myself pretty much by demanding them, by the time I was 16 my long years of confusing people had wound down. People, strangers, shopkeepers, waiters, etc., accepted me as a girl without having to wonder and it just seemed normal and the way things were supposed to be. I didn't understand it. I didn't know why I was this way or how I'd turned out like this but I just had somehow? I knew it was weird but it didn't feel weird.

The problem was by the time I was a junior in high school, that same girl that everybody else saw and treated me as went to school looking and acting no differently but was known as a he/him/it with a boy's name and I just couldn't do it anymore. I had no "boy mode", never had and no clue even how to boy. I liked the learning part of school, I was a bright kid, but doing this five days a week when I was known as a she/her and by a girl's name the rest of the time everywhere else found me in a dark and troubled place struggling to not drop out to get away from it all. I hated, hated, hated it. Before that year was over, I knew I was not going back which sparked a major civil war with my folks.

The whole gender thing never really mattered much to them. They'd seen me struggle not being a girl all my life, never really treated me differently from one and how now being seen and affirmed as one just seemed inevitable and the only thing that made sense in a sea of nothing making any sense but not graduating high school was something that really did matter to my folks more than anything. They weren't about to cut me any slack because I was different or how hard it was for me but they did recognize I wasn't going to make it without getting help. I had doubts I was going to make it at all, period.

But help came. I started HRT at 17 at the beginning of summer before my senior year basically on the condition that I'd try to go back to school and tough it out until graduation. It was proposed to me that once I did graduate, I'd never have to be known as a boy again so having something to look forward to was dangled before me like a carrot to motivate me. Seeing this light at the end of the tunnel did have a big effect on me which is hard to separate from the actual emotional effects of estrogen. Knowing that something was happening and I had a plan and at last a name and understanding explaining my life made a huge difference and I'm sure the HRT was as much a part of that as anything. It gave me the boost that my long nightmare would be over in just nine more months and to maybe not care so much about those hours of the day of being that chick that was really one queer MF'er of a dude. Ugh! I may have mentioned I hated this? I did make it to graduation, by then with breasts and hair down to my waist and as intended, never had to be known as a "boy" ever again after that. That was forty-five years ago in 1973. I was 18. Had I not started hormones, I likely wouldn't have been able to finish school so they did help.

Fitting seamlessly into the world, I got a job in an office and got on with a normal life as an average late teenage girl/young woman. My folks were disappointed I didn't go to college but I think they understood the academic environment had so been toxic and traumatic for me that even if I was a full time girl I wanted nothing to do with it. I discretely had SRS in my early 20's, was married at 30 for a dozen years, started my own small enterprise in my early 40's that I'm still doing and have had a couple of 5+ year LTR's since then and will be 64 years old in a month. Guys at the corner pub where I spend most of my time have argued with me that I'm even over 50 so the years have been good to me and I've held up well. I've had a successful and rewarding life but don't think for a minute that I've ever been completely dysphoria free about one thing or another. I think it is unrealistic no matter what drugs you take or surgery you have to think that you're never ever going to not be a little dysphoric about something, even if it's just your history which even though was hella long ago for me, is still part of my baggage. Yes it becomes manageable and I think HRT does help with that. It can even lay silent at times and can change focus or return in different ways as you get older but I would say some degree of dysphoria is something you might always have to live with? Certainly if you're in the throes of a gender crisis, dysphoria can get better and in many cases a lot better and HRT will probably help but HRT and even surgeries alone aren't necessarily the nuclear force one might expect when coming to terms with your own level of dysphoria which really comes from within.

Trying to sort all this out as mature adults transitioning from an established former life is absolutely mind boggling to me in its complexity and difficulty. I wish you the best in power and strength in finding your peace.

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Allison S

Yes and no. If you're on hrt give it time to see how things turn out. While waiting on that, it would be wise to meet with a ffs surgeon or two- just as a back up. I understand wanting to end dysphoria, but a lot of being trans for me has been managing it. Who do you compare yourself to? Are your insecurities making your dysphoria worse? I'm a little over a year on hrt and these are just a few things I'm dealing with. I also try to remind myself to be realistic in my expectations... But I know, once the girl decides she needs to come out, it can be consuming...

Sent from my VS501 using Tapatalk

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Dani

For myself, HRT made me feel much better about myself, but genital surgery and passing as best I can is what really relieved my gender dysphoria.
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Sabrina Rei

Mine has most certainly diminished to the point where my gender hardly crosses my mind. I only really feel out of place when I see pictures of myself or catch a glimpse in mirror and see the beard shadow creeping in. Hopefully, that won't be an issue too much longer since I'm addressing it.

Linde

Boy, I wish I could feel the results of HRT as well as you girls can.  I never had any real gender identity.  I tried to be a ma, and failed at the end.  That trying and not being able to achieve the goal was the largest source of my dysphoria.  Now that I have the chance to be a woman, almost all the dysphoria is gone.  I don't know if I have any gender identity now, but I want to be a woman.  On the other hand, years earlier, I wanted to be a man, and that did not work that well, I hope now that I want to be a woman, this will work out better.
Currently I feel, as if I am recapturing my body that was taken away from me many years ago!  I don't know if HRT will do anything about this, but I am marching onto the female path already for about 15 years now.
I still don't know if I have a real gender identity now, because I am still this intersex person who is part female and part male.
02/22/2019 bi-lateral orchiectomy






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Swedishgirl96

@Lisa_K

Thank you for sharing your story. <3
La dolce vita
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Maybebaby56

Quote from: Lisa_K on November 30, 2018, 03:12:51 AM
I think it is unrealistic no matter what drugs you take or surgery you have to think that you're never ever going to not be a little dysphoric about something, even if it's just your history which even though was hella long ago for me, is still part of my baggage.

^This. I've not had 40+ years to deal with this like @Lisa_K, but this has been my reality.

~Terri
"How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives" - Annie Dillard
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