Quote from: Kieri on October 24, 2009, 01:41:01 PM
I think hormones have some sort of effect on your reactions or ability to pick up biological signals from the opposite sex at the very least, even if they don't change your orientation. As a guy, many women have told me I smell really good after I hug them - and I don't wear any cologne or anything, and sometimes was even sweaty at the time. Not a single guy ever has though.
Generally speaking, guys don't consciously pick up on body scent as a screening device for lovers. I believe that this is one reason men in general and gay men in particular are able to be so sexually prolific. Women are hard-wired to pick up on pheromones, and some women use it to decide, once and for all, whether they are going to pursue a relationship or go to bed with a guy. In the United States, however, we tend to cover body scent. In a way, that's too bad.
What happens with trans people? I don't know. That's a whole other ball game. I've always used body scent to determine who was compatible and who wasn't. Testosterone has not altered my sense of smell, although I was kind of hoping it would so that (as a gay man) I would not be hamstrung by it and be unable to form attachments with men who are otherwise compatible with me except for their body scent.
My own experience is anecdotal but suggests that certain areas in the FTM brain are fully consistent with normal female brains. My life so far suggests that part of my brain is still organically female in at least one specific way. Max Valerio's experience with changes to his sense of smell suggests that his experience was chemical rather than organic. So I dunno.
Sorry to hijack. With regard to sexual preference, it took me years and years to realized that just because I thought a woman was physically attractive, that did not necessarily mean that I found her sexually attractive.
I tried hard to be bi for many years but became less and less adamant about it as the evidence against it continued to mount. When I was in college, I
felt gay--so I decided I must be attracted to women as well as to men. I think I intellectualized my sexual orientation and made myself out to be bi. I also think that I wanted to be queer SO badly but wanted to deny my transness. For example, as a teacher, I used to avoid using pronouns when I talked about my significant other. I so desperately wanted my students not to assume that I was straight. I was so desperate to be seen as queer that I didn't even mind if they thought I was lesbian or bi.
I guess I was pretty effed up inside. Now I've finally admitted to myself that I have no interest at all in women. I'm pretty much a Kinsey 6. And I'm quite sure that my shift is psychological and not hormonal. The hormones had no direct effect on my sexual attractions. T only allowed me to be seen as I really am. And that freed me up to admit my true orientation.