Home > Sex in Theory > Whore moans and crazy bitches
26 Feb

Whore moans and crazy bitches

I would like to think that emotions can usually be controlled. That’s not to say it’s easy. And maybe we can’t always keep them in check… not like actions, but often we can. Emotions follow thoughts, thoughts acquire speed, lips acquire stains, the stains become a warning. Or something like that.

But I also can’t get past the fact that it’s all biology. Hormones and neurotransmitters and shit. It’s kind of humbling how little control we have over these impulses that can blindside us. A chemical imbalance can compel you to injure yourself; a surge of dopamine can make you instantly giddy… or it is giddiness, I’m not even sure. I was a liberal arts major.

Even when we want to think that we have control, a chemical signal can fuck that right up. Sex is a perfect example: Penises wax rampant at awkward times, or you suddenly feel inconveniently bonded to that person you were just using for sex.  The honeymoon phase of a relationship often wears off predictably at the precise moment that the natural swoon stimulants runs dry. And (I love this one) you can take a tiny little pill to trick your body into thinking it’s already got a little zygote passenger on board so you can have crazy monkey sex with reproductive impunity.

I started a new birth control pill last month. I liked my old one just fine, but my insurance dropped it and not getting knocked up is pretty expensive when it’s not subsidized, although it’s nothing compared to getting knocked up.

So I switched to something that was still in my formulary. When I say “new pill”, that’s a little misleading because it’s actually the same one (Ortho Tri Cyclen) I started on when I was 19, until I was put on a lower hormone dose (Ortho Tri Cyclen Lo) a couple years later because the lady at Planned Parenthood said it was better.

I was more nervous than I would’ve been with an untried oral contraceptive, though, because I couldn’t help but remember being miserable for nearly every single day that I was on regular Ortho Tri Cyclen. The only exceptions were the bright patches that coincided with the months when I was off-again with my abusive boyfriend. Oh, also, I was miserable for roughly a year before I started taking any contraceptive pill, which eerily began a few months after we started dating, when I found out he was OMFGcrazy. But despite all this, I asked myself: what if the misery was all down to the hormones making me crazy? What if I’ve vilified him in my memory to rationalize that crazy? What if my female hysterics made him hit me and do other not-so-nice stuff? Or what if the hormones contributed even just a little to the whole accursed business? I didn’t want to go back to any part of that.

I knew these questions weren’t rational (I was irrationally afraid of becoming irrational! Can you stand it!?). The difference is literally 0.01 mg of fake estrogen a day. That might make a subtle difference, but it’s probably not going to make someone’s emotional well-being unravel entirely. But however absurd, I was trepidatious about going back to the higher dose. My Ortho Tri Cyclen Lo had been like a grisgris, a talisman protecting me from the dark, ominous mysteries of female hormones and their mind-bending wiles.

It is profoundly sexist that I was swallowing any form of “estrogen makes you crazy” line. I realize that. I don’t think that estrogen makes people crazy, irrational, or emotionally fragile. I don’t even think that fake estrogen does. I was just a little worried, in the back of my mind. Because of internalized sexism, obviously. And beaten girl syndrome. Thanks, patriarchy.

However, I certainly wasn’t going to let all this stop me from taking an oral contraceptive that I could actually afford, so of course I sucked it up, filled the new  prescription and started taking it. I enlisted Laramy to alert me to any strange, “crazier than usual” behavior. He agreed to tell me the absolute, brutal truth, as long as I wasn’t holding anything sharp at the time.

A month in, no perceptible emotional changes have surfaced. I feel vindicated. I was never hormone crazy. I was just abused, and that probably made me depressed, but that’s a fairly natural and sane reaction. I have noticed some physical changes. I was a bit nauseated for most of the first month, which seems to be abating, and my boobs hurt more than usual before my last period started, but that’s fake-out pregnancy for you.

On another hormone tip, I recently adjusted my thyroid medication and I’ve been masturbating like crazy all week and humping the furniture and shit. Which I guess we should call “back to normal” for me. I love science.

  1. Mab
    February 26th, 2010 at 10:12 | #1

    Mood changes on the pill are definitely real – I noticed a big difference when I tried it (and apparently I was also hell to live with) however miraculously the men in my life refrained from abusing me :) I’m glad it’s going well so far – certainly sounds like it.

  2. quizzical pussy
    February 26th, 2010 at 12:41 | #2

    @Mab Can you imagine their tremendous restraint at NOT abusing a woman with hormones stampeding through her system? You should probably send them each a thank you note immediately!

    So apparently the pill really can affect moods. Good to know! Probably only in rare cases can it make a person certifiably crazy, though. I hope. I also hope it makes my boobs bigger.

  3. March 1st, 2010 at 15:33 | #3

    Ortho Tri Cyclen pretty much made me bipolar, so I think triphasic pills just suck. I lost something like 20 lbs in a month when I started them, too. The sight of food killed my appetite and anything I did force down went through me really fast. My stomach adjusted after 3 months (lost 45lbs total), but the bipolar effect didn’t. Switched pills after a few suicidal spells.

    Monophasic pills were never a problem, aside from mild libido reduction and increased grogginess for me.

    (On a side note, it was really annoying that some people were complimenting my weight loss from the TriCyclen. Anyone paying attention should have been worried by how drastic it was. It was like having food poisoning for 3 months, I went from being in decent shape with a flat stomach to being too weak to climb a hill without getting out of breath.)

  4. quizzical pussy
    March 1st, 2010 at 16:13 | #4

    @osoborracho Wow. So I guess my worries about switching pills were a lot more justified than I thought, although they’ve always been fine for me personally. It sucks that you had such a hellish experience on triphasics. I’m glad you recognized what was happening and got off them in time.

    Also, yeah. I can’t stand that people go ahead and presume that pretty much all weight loss is desired and attractive. It’s so obtuse. The same ex I refer to in this entry once told to me excitedly, “my aunt just asked me if you’ve been sick recently… because you’re so much thinner than you were the last time she saw you!” I actually had nearly constant stress nausea because he and I had moved in together and whenever I wasn’t scared he would kill me I was terrified he’d leave me. I’d never weighed less and I’d never hated life more. He thought I should take it as a compliment. Because skinny is good and skinnier is better and fuck happy and healthy, I guess.

  5. March 2nd, 2010 at 23:24 | #5

    @quizzical pussy
    Glad that your pills worked out alright. I actually didn’t realize that mine were making me mentally miserable for a while since I too had a boyfriend that was making me more miserable. The crazy feeling didn’t stop when we broke up, though.

    I’ve always thought it was BS for people with the thinner-is-better attitude to claim they’re concerned about anything other than appearance or control (yours, theirs, or both). I get really annoyed if they try to lie that it’s about health, it obviously isn’t.

    The future ex had been hitting on me before I started the TriCyclen and we started dating after my drastic weight loss. I started to gradually gain back to my normal weight and he was:
    A. happy that I was recovering and regaining strength.
    B. glad I was no longer bruising abnormally easily due to malnutrition.
    C. complaining that I was gaining weight.
    D. suddenly disgusted with my body and refused to fuck me for a while.

    You can probably guess which two it was. At first my thoughts were “what the fuck, he liked me just fine back when I weighed more” but later realized he was just controlling and abusive. If I had been a goddess/perfect, he would have still invented things to criticize.

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