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Specifically for progesterone:
Con: near constant ravenous hunger Pro: greater difference in fat distribution, especially top growth
Þ° (they / any)
Specifically for progesterone:
Con: near constant ravenous hunger Pro: greater difference in fat distribution, especially top growth
Make up wipes or creams are ideal.
Big thing is that these are not water-based and require a little bit of solvent help get along. One of the safest things to try would probably be a little bit of olive oil. 
I am living it, and I am living my best life.
Agender/enby with a nebulous connection to gender at best. For me, I will be ever in transition for as long as I’m alive and adapting. And I take comfort in that.
But for a more serious answer:
Between the milestones of recognizing that I am trans and accepting myself - mental health care (including HRT), support from my friends and partners, and a whole lot of introspection. I’m grateful to have the privilege of all that. And I wish it was more accessible.
I consider non-binary identities raised with an enforced binary socialization like myself have every reason to identify as trans. That’s not explicitly displayed in Nimona, but I can confirm that I felt represented and had an incredibly emotional reaction to the film.
Also: there is at least one trans pride flag colors not-so-hidden in the movie. 🏳️⚧️
Like mentioned elsewhere, folks with menstruation cycles are well known to show exacerbated ADHD symptoms with the fluctuations in hormones.
Progesterone made my ADHD a lot worse. Second biggest reason I stopped taking it once getting up to where I wanted to be in top growth. (first being that I was constantly ravenously hungry)
Going back on spironolactone has made it better though. Missing my evening doses of that and estradiol will throw me off a bit the next day.
They’re words that have been having less and less meaning to me over the last couple years.
To me, they’re the extremes of what society says are the inconsistent rules. I have been increasingly drawn to queerness, and the refusal to align with a single of these in favor of being one’s self.
I have been more in touch with aspects of both since transitioning. Same for shedding a lot of the toxic expectations of both. And that has only highlighted that it’s a socially enforced binary.
I really wish people in general would stop labeling anyone but themselves as eggs or making similar assumptions.
If I had to pick one: “IDK If I’m a Boy” - Blue Foster
Transfem enby:
Definitely notice some of the men I’d hung around as friends started being more dismissive of me when interacting as though they clearly thought less of me. Not sure the ratio of typical misogyny to transphobia.
The weird one was actually noticing coworkers starting to express some protective, almost herding like behavior. Was simultaneously endearing to recognize they still see me as part of the group but also incredibly patronizing.
As an enby trans person, it was checking in my early teens for surgery scars of sex determination assuming that I had been intersex and that my parents chose a gender and being disappointed that there were none but still hoping that it was too early to have developed noticeable scars.