Quote from: Kumodamoogle on September 22, 2009, 11:41:51 AM
Frustration is the root of all anger -That's a much better explanation than estrogen making you crazy. Some people are actually allergic to estrogen (such as myself
, yeah good one on the Karma there Fate) and that has all sorts of freaky side effects but acting pissy isnt one of them. That's usually a side effect of "hormonal swings" between estrogen cycles. Stabilizing your homone levels, such as long acting Testosterone injections, ect might stop some of those mood swings but your feelings of well being are probably more mentally based. Finally getting somewhere as far your body matching your soul is a huge relief.
Before I started T I might have agreed with you on this, but knowing how I feel on T and how I felt off, I can definitely tell you that the hormones make a difference.
How it works, I don't know. And it's probably not
just the hormones. But it's as if since puberty I've been on drugs that made me hazy and irritable, and now that's just
gone. My head feels so much clearer. I no longer cry over nothing. I no longer find myself fantasizing about beating the crap out of some random person. And when I went through a phase of needle phobia and wasn't able to have my shot until several days after it was due, there was a definite swing back towards that overly-emotional crazy-state.
I definitely process anger differently than I used to, as well. I don't get angry as easily, and I don't stay angry as long. I find when I do get angry I have to put more effort into controlling any anger impulse, but fortunately that impulse is not violent so much as really snarky.

It's my mouth that's going to get me in trouble one of these days, and there was a time when that never would have been the case.

I also find that my anger can now suddenly vanish completely, and I can go back to being cheerful in an instant. Whereas before I had to work my way slooowly down from angry, to disgruntled, to too drained to care before I could even think about being cheerful.
It's hard to explain, but it's such a palpable difference, and it starts long, long before there are any visible changes from the T. (Five months on T now, and I still can't pass worth *bleep*. Grrr. But I'm cool ...

)