I thought I'd post about this here because many of you have experienced changes in your level of T. Mine seems to have gone in the opposite direction (less not more) but maybe you can tell me if this sounds T-related or not. I guess I'm just looking for informal opinions on my suspicions before I show up at the endo complaining of low T.
I always seemed to have really high testosterone, naturally. I had an annoyingly high sex drive, good muscle tone, good energy level, high metabolism, strong sense of who I was and what I liked and disliked. I was motivated and passionate about things. I enjoyed working out every day.
About a year and a half ago, I had a miscarriage, and my hormones seemed totally out of wack for a couple of months afterwards. The one thing that didn't return to normal after a few months was my sex drive. My once-high sex drive was non-existant. I just thought, "Well, I've heard of hormone levels changing after pregnancy," so I didn't worry about it. And I was really enjoying my lack of a sex drive.
What's scary is that over the past year, I've been having more symptoms of low testosterone, and it seems to be getting worse. For about a year, I had hot flashes. Over the past 6 months or so, I've become unmotivated and indifferent to everything. I'm not depressed at all. In fact, I'm content. But I'm not the person I used to be. It's like I'm just drifting blissfully through life without caring about anything. It's really similar to a description I heard of what happens when you have really low T.
Even scarier - now I'm having some weird muscle weakness, and my metabolism has slowed. I just looked up symptoms of low T and found out these things can be caused by low T and are dangerous. So I'm going to try to get to an endo.
Hey, maybe I'll end up getting prescribed T before making plans to transition. Wouldn't that be interesting?
EDIT: I forgot to mention that I'm 31 and it's obvious that I'm not going through menapause or anything like that. If I was older, I guess some of this stuff would be normal.