Quote from: Adio on June 22, 2012, 05:55:58 PM
Honestly...I'm rather confused about natural transitioning. I guess the natural part is making your body produce more T "naturally"? But why not take a natural hormone that your body already produces some of and add to that? Rather than putting foreign chemicals and substances in your body, forcing it to possibly produce more T? That hardly seems natural (or safe) to me. Do what you will, but I don't understand it.
HRT
is chemicals, meaning it's not a "natural hormone". Even so-called "bio-identical" hormones are made by pharmaceutical companies (btw, bio-identical is not a medical term, it's just marketing language) with the active ingredients being synthesized in a lab. True that the hormones produced by the body itself are referred to as "chemicals" but it's still different from lab synthesized ones.
All of the "natural" supplements to increase testosterone are also made with cis men in mind. Biologically, if you have gonads that are naturally producing a lot of testosterone some of those herbs, etc. might help to boost that. They aren't testosterone in and of themselves. Therefore, a female-bodied person is going to get a very different result (as female bodied people just have a very small amount of T being produced by the ovaries and adrenal glands - only exception is if you have a disorder such as PCOS in which the ovaries start producing more than normal). As someone else pointed out, there are some serious potential side effects to these herbs as well. And since none of them are regulated and rarely "prescribed" by a knowledgeable person (medical doctors won't usually recommend them and it's very hard to find a legit nutritionist that really knows what they're doing) people self-medicate, upping the chances for side effects.
The last hurdle for "natural transition" is of course that you probably will have a hard time "passing" - even after working out, taking supplements, etc. You also probably could not ever get a legal gender change.
I know all this is a bit of a bummer. I'm one of those "all natural" people, but I'm not actively trying to transition either, so it works out for me personally. I have bulked up a bit just from exercising and I have higher than average T levels naturally which helps me feel more like a guy on the outside at least.
My advice, is if you find you DO want to fully transition, and if you're seriously into the "all natural" thing, take the doctor prescribed injectable T (with very close doctor monitoring of your levels and overall health, watching for side effects, etc.) until you get some noticeable changes. You may go for surgeries to help further your process along and actually get the gender marker change. Most people from what I can tell, stay on T for the rest of their lives, but it's not a requirement, I think it's more a personal preference. For instance, if you don't get a hysto, the T will stop "shark week" from happening. From what I can tell some changes after taking T for a certain amount of time do become permanent (for instance, downstairs growth).
Just don't feel like you have to follow a specific set of rules for transitioning. You can pick and choose certain things and experiment to see what your comfort level is as well as if your body is reacting in positive or negative ways. Hope that helps.