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#285690 - 07/11/08 04:13 AM
Re: Hormones
[Re: Ariadna]
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 Hopeful Romantic
Registered: 01/12/08
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You're young, two weeks won't matter, but I understand your impatience. Like so many others of us, I've been there, and waited several months longer than I would have liked (seven months instead of the standard three). I think I'm in the minority, I was a good girl, despite how impatient a person I am.
One consideration might be to call her office and ask if she's willing to order the blood work early. There's no real need for you to see your endo herself to get the blood work done; it'll be good for her to have that available when she does meet with you. Further, if you can get the results, you'll be able to see for yourself if things are out of norm. If you've started to self-medicate before you get the results, and anything is out of whack on the report you should probably stop and wait for your endo to go over them. If they're ok, well then, it is unlikely your endo will ever know you started taking them early as your first blood work will be pre-hrt.
It's also very possible that since you're young your endo will write the scrips on the day you see her, in particular if she has many transsexual patients and understands their impatience. She might plan on calling you or changing your prescription only if she sees something wrong with your bloodwork later. If that's the case, there's no real need to order online - it's going to take a couple weeks to get them to you anyway. But, as you've said, at least you'll have them if you want them and she postpones again.
_________________________
"Go confidently in the direction of your dreams." - Thoreau
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#285708 - 07/11/08 08:55 AM
Re: Hormones
[Re: Cassie]
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 08/14/07
Loc: Eastern Washington state, U.S....
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I have to agree with Cassie. Two weeks feels like an eternity, but it is totally worth the wait to know you have a good Endo checking your labs.
_________________________
"The mass of men lead lives of quiet desperation." Henry David Thoreau
His disciples asked him, "Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?" Jesus answered, "Neither he nor his parents sinned; it is so that the works of God might be made visible through him. " John 9:2-3
Mahatma Ghandi, though a devout Hindu, was widely known to admire Jesus; Ghandi often quoted from the Sermon on the Mount, in fact. Once when the missionary E. Stanley Jones met with Ghandi he asked him, "Mr. Ghandi, though you quote the words of Christ often, why is that you appear to so adamantly reject becoming his follower?" Ghandi replied, "Oh, I don't reject your Christ. I love your Christ. It's just that so many of you Christians are so unlike your Christ."
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