Jump to content
  • Welcome to the TransPulse Forums!

    We offer a safe, inclusive community for transgender and gender non-conforming folks, as well as their loved ones, to find support and information.  Join today!

Hrt And It's Effects On Personal Likes And Hobbies.


Guest piinyouri

Recommended Posts

Guest piinyouri

First to start, I am not on HRT, and in all likelihood, that is still a long ways off unfortunately.

However I've often pondered just what the extent of the changes will be. How profoundly and in what ways will it affect what I enjoy doing?

Example, two things I enjoy a lot are metal music and drumming, particularly in the metal style.

My fear is that after HRT my interest in these things might wane or disappear completely.

Does anyone have any experiences to relate to maybe put my mind at ease with this subject? : )

Link to comment
Guest Alexandra89

I still play music (flute, guitar, harp, piano) as much as my schedule will allow, and I've been on hormones for almost 5 months. The rest of my interests haven't really been affected directly, though just feeling batter in general has affected some of them indirectly, I'm sure.

Link to comment

I am over 3 years on hrt and post op, i still like NASCAR, bicycling, gardening and just about everything i did before i transitioned.

Just because you transition does not mean you have to give up everything you liked doing.

Paula

Link to comment
Guest NatalieRene

I've been on hrt since January of 2010 and I am still every bit of the computer geek that I was before starting. I don't play World of Warcraft anymore but I attribute that to just being bored with the game since I have been playing the game since vanilla. I don't spend as much time on techie things but that is because socially I have much more of a life now. In summary I'm the same me just happier.

Link to comment
Guest Riana

I noticed that as I began to open up to my feelings, the things I used to enjoy just don't really do it for me anymore. Depending on how much you stuffed your feelings away that might make a big difference to you too. And I haven't started HRT yet.

Link to comment
Guest Vixen Amber

It's all the same as before :) just feel better over all. I do however noticed my attention span to things is shorter than before. Probably because I was more miserable before and just wanted to escape the world. Still I will play morrowind for hours at a time.

Link to comment
Guest NatalieRene

Wow you still play Morrowind? I haven't played that game in ages. I remember it being awesome but if I play elder scrolls I mostly play Oblivion now.

Link to comment
Guest Vixen Amber

Oblivion is crap compared to Morrowind in my opinion. Especially cause I have both completely modded out. Not even the same game :P I still prefer New vegas though :)

Link to comment
Guest Julie T

I have been on HRT for 33 months and I have the same interests I had as a male to a degree, but there are some changes. These changes have more to do with my decrease in muscle strength, and my grooming as a woman. For example, I keep my nails long now so I avoid working on the car and doing dirty type work, at least putting on gloves, I also have to hold tools differently Also with my long hair, I get hot doing outside work, so I avoid that now. I also have noticed that as a full-time woman opportunities are more open for me. I shop for fabrics and sew, and I can talk with other women about techniques and ask questions more freely than I felt I could as a male. Also, here is more interest in pretty things, clothes, shoes, make-up, hairstyling, and things that make me look good, so I don't have the free time for other activities like before.

And I have started cooking again. As a male it was special dishes, like BBQ grilling and such, but now it is more everyday and subsistence cooking. I therefore have a hobby that has changed into a real job, cooking for the three of us.

We are treated differently as women. Dee Jay and I went to a gun and knife show. We were treated totally different, and it was nice. My interests were similar, of course, but with a woman's viewpoint. I looked at purses with a gun holster built in. I looked at defensive knives made for a woman's use. I bought gun ammo shot shells, for my 44 magnum, instead of standard ammo, knowing I no longer had the strength to fire that bad boy. The shot shells are defensive and I no longer consider going to the range for target shooting, as its too hard to carry ammo boxes and such. Right now I can still chamber my automatics, but I know I will eventually have to sell and replace them with revolvers. I can hardly load the clips and pulling the cocking mechanism is sometimes iffy.

And my computer site interests have changed. I get more into sites where I can help people, because my empathy level has increased a hundred fold. I now dislike those violent computer games. It's not that I have gone all 'pink' but rather I am less 'red,' not liking all that teenage boy aggression stuff anymore. My tastes in television shows and books has changed drastically. Even the movies I have seen a hundred time are now like they are brand new.

Do you remember the scene in Sleepless in Seattle where the guys were making fun of the woman watching the old movie An affair to Remember ? - it's like that.

I still like long distance bicycling, and I want to get back to backpacking. I just now have to tailor my activities to my physical resources.

Yes, you keep the old and you develop the new. But isn't that what you want? To be your true self?

Julie

Link to comment
Guest NatalieRene

Oblivion is crap compared to Morrowind in my opinion. Especially cause I have both completely modded out. Not even the same game :P I still prefer New vegas though :)

Nah Oblivion isn't crap just a little dumbed down in the stats but that isn't as important as the immersion the game creates. Oblivion has it's moments. My favorite quest was the one in the assassin's guild where you get locked in the house with other guests with the goal of killing them one by one. if you do it right they start turning on each other and you can get the last two to kill each other without lifting a finger. Then there was the paranoid guy that asks you to spy on random strangers because he thinks they are all out to get him. LOL The game is classic. Not that Morrowind isn't but Oblivion is far from crap. :D

Link to comment
Guest Vixen Amber

Yes the dark brotherhood quests were amazing I will say that :P IT suffered from the same thing Fallout did. 1 the same graphix and 2 it just was so bland outside of the towns. All the same surroundings you see. I do like when you are able to go to sheogeraths realm. That was alot of fun.

Link to comment
Guest chngnwnd

I have a social life now - so I no longer game online like I used to. Also, I find I eat a lot healthier, but it was not really a conscious choice. It just sort of happened. My food cravings are a little different now.

hugs,

Bobbi

Link to comment

I have to agree on Lizzy in that, I used to watch visually graphic shows and lots of horror movies. Before where I could look at internal organs and not flinch now... I just don't want to see that kind of thing. It doesn't make me sick or anything I just don't care to see it so I close my eyes or look away. Working as an EMT and ER Tech I've seen all those things for real anyways, so now I really notice how fake some stuff looks which ruins the movie anyway.

Also as far as interests, they didn't change but I found new ones. I was able to more fully infulge my feminine side and I was able to find new passion in hobbies like Cross Stitch, knitting and crocheting. My dislike of sports, aggression and competitiveness only increased. I don't get angry or annoyed as easily anymore and over all I just feel better, like a huge weight was lifted off my shoulders.

Anyways, I know lots of female metalheads and I am sure there are plenty of women drummers. I don't think you'll have to worry about that changing just because of HRT.

Link to comment
  • Admin

I still have the same interests I did before HRT: reading, science, baseball (watching, not playing), football, fishing, etc. But i find more enjoyment in socializing now, especially with other women. It's much easier, and I do things I would never have dreamed of doing before, like touching, hugging and kissing (woman to woman).

I also like clothes shopping a lot more than I used to, and can spend an hour or more in a store now, whereas previously I would rush into a men's store or department, find what I needed and rush out (after paying, of course. LOL!).

Carolyn Marie

Link to comment
Guest piinyouri

Wow, thanks everyone!

Your stories were very helpful and put my mind at ease.

I too hope I can take some of the me now and mix it with some of the me post HRT and somewhere in the middle, discover who I really am.

<3

Link to comment
Guest Donna Jean

,

Good answers......

I like lots of my old stuff and I like lots of new stuff....

So, in the big picture, I think that I come out ahead!

Huggsw

'Donna Jean

Link to comment
Guest Nostros

hehe I dunno if it was HRT, but after I started it my creative hobbies turned into earring and pin crafting, also nail art, eventually gained a manicurist proffesion and now am studying cosmetology

Link to comment
Guest Alexandra89

I still play music (flute, guitar, harp, piano) as much as my schedule will allow, and I've been on hormones for almost 5 months. The rest of my interests haven't really been affected directly, though just feeling batter in general has affected some of them indirectly, I'm sure.

I'm going to figure out which one of my fingers slipped when I typed that so I can cut it off and throw it out the window. Excuse me.

Link to comment
Guest Aly Kat

I'm going to figure out which one of my fingers slipped when I typed that so I can cut it off and throw it out the window. Excuse me.

I felt "batter" once... BIG mistake D: I didn't know you played music! that's awesome =)

but yeah... like everyone else has been saying, I've been on HRT for about a year and half & my personality hasn't changed THAT much. I still like the same bands, foods, etc. etc. Some of my senses have changed a little bit I think so I like candles more than I did... and I think Eminem sounds "hotter" than he used to =P and I have less headaches, so I can listen to louder stuff. I dunno... being on the correct hormones kinda just amplified who I already was. I play drums too btw =D

Link to comment
Guest Miss_Construe

First to start, I am not on HRT, and in all likelihood, that is still a long ways off unfortunately.

However I've often pondered just what the extent of the changes will be. How profoundly and in what ways will it affect what I enjoy doing?

Example, two things I enjoy a lot are metal music and drumming, particularly in the metal style.

My fear is that after HRT my interest in these things might wane or disappear completely.

Does anyone have any experiences to relate to maybe put my mind at ease with this subject? : )

Still rocking and drumming strong at 7.5 Months. :P

I'm interested in more things, but it is more like relief from depression than HRT.

April

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Who's Online   4 Members, 0 Anonymous, 138 Guests (See full list)

    • April Marie
    • Betty K
    • Heather Shay
    • Petra Jane
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      80.7k
    • Total Posts
      769.3k
  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      12,057
    • Most Online
      8,356

    Aleksandria
    Newest Member
    Aleksandria
    Joined
  • Today's Birthdays

    1. Conner_Sent_By_Cyberlife
      Conner_Sent_By_Cyberlife
      (22 years old)
    2. CtN1p
      CtN1p
    3. heyim_finn
      heyim_finn
      (21 years old)
    4. Jayn
      Jayn
    5. joni_girl_1988
      joni_girl_1988
      (51 years old)
  • Posts

    • Heather Shay
    • April Marie
      Thank you @missyjo! You do wonders for my ego.   It turns out that pastel colors were the "thing" at Kentucky Derby Day so my dress was perfect. I went with white 5" heeled sandals and a wide-brimmed fuscia hat. Dinner and Mint Juleps added to the fun of watching the (recorded) festivities and races.   Perhaps, we'll repeat it for the Preakness in 2 weeks.   Right now it's just blue striped sleep shorts with pink flowers, a pink t-shirt and flip flops. I can't tell you how much wearing  sleep-rated breast forms at night has done to quell my dysphoria. 
    • April Marie
      I can still rock 5" heels.
    • April Marie
      Good morning, everyone!!   My wife and I had our yearly Kentucky Derby Day evening. Dresses, heels, hats, Mint Juleps and a light dinner while watching the festivities and races. Relaxing and fun. I think we'll do the same for the Preakness in two weeks.   It's rainy and cool here today so it's pretty much going to keep me indoors. Ahh, well. A day of rest.   Enjoy and be safe!!
    • Ladypcnj
      Thanks Sally Stone
    • KymmieL
      Thanks, Mindy. It has been so far. Tomorrow, work some more on the wife's grand monkey. Got the right side of the hood primed, just need to do a little more work on the left then I can prime it. Then a 600grit wet sand.   I promised the wife we would take out the bike this weekend.   Kymmie
    • JessicaMW
      During my last visit with my psychologist (who has agreed to provide required letters of recommendation along with a colleague to provide the second) we discussed the shift towards my wife's acceptance. It was a long discussion but one point I mentioned was how much the two of us sitting down and watching this documentary helped:  The Kings | A transgender love story (2017)
    • Betty K
      Oops, I did not mean to post that comment yet! I was going to also say, having read a mountain of commentary on the Review, I think Julia Serano’s response (linked by Vicky above) is the most accurate and thorough. You can also read a non-paywalled version at Substack: https://juliaserano.substack.com/p/the-cass-review-wpath-files-and-the   To me the three key areas in which the review is deficient are:   1. As has already been said here, its views on social transition;   2. Its attempts to give credence to the “ROGD” theory (without ever actually mentioning ROGD because presumably a canny editor knows that would be too transparently transphobic);   3. To me, most crucially, its claims about trans youth and suicide, which are dealt with summarily in about five pages and do not stand up to any deeper scrutiny.    I will be writing about each of these issues in isolation over the next few weeks and appearing on a radio show and podcast to discuss them late in the month. I will post links to these on TP later if anyone is interested.   All that said, I actually think it’s dangerous for us to respond with outright vitriol and condemnation to the review since, like any effective piece of disinformation, it does actually contain some factually based and even helpful recommendations. The Tavistock Gender Identity Service really was underfunded and understaffed and certain staff were not adequately trained. Trans kids really were funnelled away from mental-health support once they started gender-affirming care too. So yes, more investment in youth psychology services would help, as would a less centralised model of care, more training in treatment of trans kids, and more research.   One last thing for now: beware the claim that Cass ignored 98% of studies. That’s not strictly true. She seems to have taken other studies into account but leaned heavily on the 2% that met her standards. Nor does she ever claim that only randomised controlled trials are good enough evidence to justify the use of blockers for kids; just as with ROGD, she strongly suggests this, but is too canny to say it, because she knows such trials would be impossible. For now, I think the best response to this comes from the Trans Safety Network: “[…] we believe there to be systemic biases in the ways that the review prioritises speculative and hearsay evidence to advance its own recommendations while using highly stringent evidence standards to exclude empirical and observational data on actual patients. “ (https://transsafety.network/posts/tsn-statement-on-cass-final-report/)   To me, the scariest aspect of all this is that, if it follows Cass’s recommendations, the NHS will very likely follow Finland’s recent model of trans care, which seems to amount to a prolonged form of conversion therapy. I can’t find the link right now, which is probably lucky for anyone reading this, but I bawled my guts out reading the testimonies of kids who had been mistreated by that system. Truly horrific. To me, at least from my Australian perspective, the Cass Review is the most frightening development in trans rights in recent years. To me, the safe care of trans kids is THE number one issue in politics atm.   Ruth Pierce has a good summary of responses from trans folk and their allies sk far: https://ruthpearce.net/2024/04/16/whats-wrong-with-the-cass-review-a-round-up-of-commentary-and-evidence/    
    • Sally Stone
      Welcome to the wide, wild world of transgender, M.A.  It can definitively be overwhelming, but everyone here is amazing, so no doubt you'll get bunches of wonderful support. I think you'll be happy you found us.   
    • Sally Stone
      @Ladypcnj  This is so true.  I think all of us here have had a post or two that didn't get a response.  Sometimes, it's as simple as adding to your original to post for a clearer explanation, or re-reading what you wrote originally, and rephrasing it.  But don't despair, we aren't ignoring you.   Hugs,   Sally 
    • Willow
      So, we left for lunch in our Taos, talked and went to the dealer and came home with the Cadillac.  
    • Betty K
      I have just finished reading the Cass Review, all 380-odd pages of it, and am totally open to questions including via DM if anyone wants more information on it
    • Abigail Genevieve
      What season are you?  If you don't know, look around on the internet. Or ask a girl friend..  Maybe someone here is even a color consultant?   And there are guides on figure-flattering clothes for all shapes that you should look into.    Abby
    • awkward-yet-sweet
      Just know that your kids will probably turn out OK, in spite of the chaos.  One of my partners was widowed in her very early 30s, left with 3 kids.  They're teens now, and one graduated a year ago and is working, but still living at home.  A few bumps in the road, but the three are turning into responsible young adults.  It is amazing how resilient kids can be.  They should be able to handle your changes as well.
    • Adrianna Danielle
      Had my time with my 2 long friends I was in the Army with.We went through the photo books and talked memories.They also found about the guy that bullied and sexually assaulted me.He is in prison,sexually assaulted and raped 2 women off base.Doing a 40 year sentence for this and was dishonorable discharged
  • Upcoming Events

Contact TransPulse

TransPulse can be contacted in the following ways:

Email: Click Here.

To report an error on this page.

Legal

Your use of this site is subject to the following rules and policies, whether you have read them or not.

Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
DMCA Policy
Community Rules

Hosting

Upstream hosting for TransPulse provided by QnEZ.

Sponsorship

Special consideration for TransPulse is kindly provided by The Breast Form Store.
×
×
  • Create New...