Quote from: Felix on April 25, 2012, 01:25:58 AM
Thanks guys.
What seems to help me the most is to do pushups or lift weights. For when I'm in public I have one of those squeezy handgrip things, which is portable and doesn't look as douchey as walking around with a kettlebell would. It's a tad silly, but using my muscles makes me feel like I'm still in the driver's seat instead of just getting kicked around by life.
That sounds like T combined with the fight-or-flight instinct. During times of anxiety, fear, or anger, the body readies itself to attack, defend, or run away. One of the manifestations of this (in women also but in men especially) is an urge to flex the muscles. Possibly this is some sort of evolutionary muscular warm-up. I dunno.
Exercise of any sort during such a time can be very cathartic. A former male roommate of mine used to keep a punching bag in the back room and go at it furiously when he was feeling tense. I don't have such a strong reaction; I just tend to get really fidgety and start chewing my cuticles (a bad habit I really need to break). A friend of mine paces (a lot) when she's feeling tense. It manifests differently for everyone and everyone has a different way of coping with it.
It seems to me, based solely on anecdotal evidence, that the muscular urge seems to get stronger under the influence of T (for example, angry men seem to punch holes in walls more often than angry women in my experience), but I have no hard data to back that up.
As long as your coping mechanism doesn't become destructive or threatening to others, I'd consider it a sign of your body settling into its masculine role. If squeezing a handgrip helps you feel more in control, that seems like a pretty healthy way to deal.