Monthly Cycles

I decided to write this entry when I saw Jill Macayla's blog entry "Testosterone Laden".

What I have to tell isn't entirely relevant to that entry, but I suspect may be an important observation the group needs to hear about.

I'm currently in my 50's. When I was in my mid thirties, I began to realise that there was a regular cycle to my TG/CD impulses. There would be periods when I couldn't care less what I was, then there would be other periods when I could barely control myself. There would be occasions when I would be walking along a street, for example, and see a girl or woman in a particular outfit, and instantly my brain would go into overdrive, and I would be consumed by what I would look like in that outfit, and so on. This might monopolise my thoughts for days, or possibly until I saw something else, in the street, a paper, or on the TV, and the new thing would take over my thoughts.

This would build up into a fever pitch, and then, over a brief period of perhaps half an hour to an hour, the fever would vanish, and I would return to 'normal'. It would be like going from a hurricane to a dead calm over that short a period. It was many years before I realised that there was a regular pattern to these occasions.

Once I did realise that these happenings were regular, I figured out that (i) they occurred at about monthly intervals and (ii) they also coincided with the times that I was most sexually active. From that I deduced that my impulses, physical and mental, were likely driven by my body's Testosterone. I also realised that my body, like my partner's, runs on monthly cycles, and I wondered about that, since conventional medical wisdom would seem to suggest that men's bodies don't do that sort of thing.

Now, normal (!) males seem to be always in a Testosterone high, in a perpetual state of oversexed excitement, and when I was growing up I could never understand why this was. True, I was attracted to females, but never to the extent that some of my contemporaries were. (I suspect some of them would have shagged a corpse if it had been wearing a skirt.) I was always a lot more discriminating than they were, and I looked for personality as much as physical attractiveness.

My conclusions, based on a sample of one, are that conventional medical wisdom is mostly bollocks - if you'll excuse the terrible pun. I believe that men's Testosterone levels do indeed run on a monthly cycle just the same as women's do with Estrogen. Judging by my own experiences, the levels aren't a sine wave, but more an asymmetric saw-tooth - building up at a steady rate to some point where the pituitary gland says "enough" and switches off production, before starting from the bottom again.

Why don't other people notice this? My theory is that although most men's bodies do this, the amount of hormone they produce is much greater than mine is, so that their bodies are saturated with the stuff no matter what part of the cycle they are in. This explains the "oversexed" part. I produce a fair bit less, so that sometimes I'm below the threshold and sometimes above.

This produces an interesting dilemma, and that is that I believe my transgender tendencies are fuelled by my Testosterone. You can see where I'm going with this. If I decided to have SRS, and lost the man bits, would that also have decreased my wish to be a woman? If I want to be transgender, and I most fervently do, I am forced to keep, and keep in good condition, the very parts of me I dislike the most.

Would the loss of the Testosterone be balanced off by the introduction of Estrogen? Only those who have had SRS would be able to answer that one. There's an interesting side issue with that one: normally, in a genetic female, her Estrogen is actually made from Testosterone, so she presumably receives some benefit from the intermediate product. In a transitioned female who is receiving HRT, presumably this doesn't happen.

Is this a reason why some of those who have had SRS feel deflated afterwards, since the thing that drove them forward no longer exists? Note: I do not assume that my ramblings above necessarily apply to all of us, just a proportion. After all, there are many reasons why we have ended up here.

I would be interested to hear others thoughts on my experiences, and how it might compare to their own.

Penny

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