In my experience shots are the middle ground but aren't safer. They raise your estrogen levels higher and have great risk of infection/ complication. Pellets are best for long term treatment and I would argue are safer. They are the original method of TRT and very effective. The drawbacks are clear, minor surgery to implant and they must be removed by surgery to stop treatment. However you can stop treatment with a pellet and can't with a shot and the testosterone in a shot isn't normal testosterone and has to be processed more by the liver. There are other differences as well but to get deeper means looking into exactly what is being done and added to the testosterone. Make your choice.
Trap- if you decided to take HRT by injection look into a long term mixed ester testosterone like sustanon or nebio *spelling is wrong on Nebio*. It is a larger injection but longer between shots. It is the difference between 12 shots or 2. On the other hand some guys really like the gel. Talk to your therapist because it is far easier to give injections yourself then go to the doctor.
Excuse me for a minute while I bang my head against a wall. An educated consumer is not a bad client. Lots of therapists are threatened by a knowledgeable client but that doesn't mean the client should stop reading. However just because you think you have symptom x, doesn't mean you have symptom x and using official terms can confuse your professional. The problem is whatever symptom you have could be symptom x but it is the same as symptom a, b, c, d, e, f... and if they assume you are correct they will misdiagnoses and mistreat you. It is always better to describe your symptoms by what happens and not official terms. That way they have a better chance of truly understanding you. A good example is my balance issue could be addressed by over 7 specialties and described by over a dozen terms. However only one of those terms actually describes my symptoms in a way the right doctor can connect to the illness I have. I didn't get the right treatment until I had the right combination. It would have been easier if I described it instead of tried to find the right word.
->-bleeped-<-boy
Posted on: July 21, 2008, 01:01:57 AM
I am not encouraging you to cut Elwood, that was my method. I am encouraging you to talk and find other ways seriously if you can't control your self harm then you need to address it. Burning your arm against a light falls under serious and severe injury and could morph much faster then you could deal with. Pick up scarification or tattooing with a professional artist, ask your doctor (or me if you are comfortable) to take you through safe and non-safe injuries, talk to me or another professional about how to care for wounds, don't be afraid to go to the doctor if something goes wrong, use clean instruments and properly care for the wound after. That is being a responsible self harmer that way if the psych system gets you, there is still a way out.
I would say I self harm about 1 out of every 20 times I want to. I am learning how to live with my emotions and that takes time. Injuring bought me that time and I won't negate what it did for me. I still self injure but I am alive, my scars bring my closer to people and I can get better. You also need to be accountable to someone you trust. If not your self harm will get out of control. You need to be able to talk about what happened to make you do this. It is alright to say the world was overwhelming me and instead of doing some thing worse I did this. The trusted person shouldn't attack you but should look at what happened and try to help you to figure it out. It isn't alright to just hurt yourself and hurt yourself without ever looking at why.
->-bleeped-<-boy