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05-29-2008, 06:53 PM
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#1 (permalink)
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Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 14
Points: 1,348.42 Bank: 0.00 Total Points: 1,348.42 | NPR/Testosterone My sister sent me this link a while back and I just listened to it today. It talks about the effect of testosterone on the personality. Very interesting.
ETA: Apparently, I can't post URLs yet, but it is on the ThisAmericanLife dot org/Radio_Episode.aspx?episode=220 Quote:
220: Testosterone
Stories of people getting more testosterone and coming to regret it. And of people losing it and coming to appreciate life without it. The pros and cons of the hormone of desire. Prologue.This American Life producer Alex Blumberg explains that he wanted to do this show because of his conflicted relationship with his own testosterone. He tells host Ira Glass that the reasons go back to a girl in his eighth-grade homeroom and the 1970s seminal feminist novel The Women's Room. We also hear from a man who stopped producing testosterone due to a medical treatment and found that his entire personality was altered. (9 minutes) Act One. Life at Zero.
The interview with a man who lost his testosterone continues. He explains that life without testosterone is life without desire—desire for everything: food, conversation, even TV. And he says life without desire is unexpectedly pleasant. The man first wrote about his experiences, anonymously, in GQ Magazine. (7 minutes) Act Two. Infinite Gent.
An interview with Griffin Hansbury, who started life as a woman, but began taking massive testosterone injections seven years ago, and now lives as a man. He explains how testosterone changed his views on nature vs. nurture for good. (17 minutes) Song: "To Sir With Love," Lulu Act Three. Contest-osterone.
The men and women on staff at This American Life decide to get their testosterone levels tested, to see who has the most and least, and to see if personality traits actually do match up with hormone levels. It turns out to be an exercise that in retrospect, we might not recommend to other close-knit groups of friends or co-workers. (12 minutes) Song: "What Kind of Man Are You?," Ray Charles Act Four. Learning to Shut Up.
Novelist Miriam Toews, author of The X Letters (which appeared in an earlier episode of the show), tells the story of a recent road trip she took with her fifteen-year-old son. (11 minutes) Song: "That's Alright, Mama," Elvis Presley | |
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06-01-2008, 11:57 PM
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#2 (permalink)
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Join Date: May 2008 Location: Northern CA
Posts: 137
My Mood: Points: 5,370.63 Bank: 0.00 Total Points: 5,370.63 | The hormone of desire. Isn't that the truth? I'm a spiritual persona and stayed at a convent in 2001 to see if it was for me. It wasn't because I like sex. Last night I laid in bed thinking, "well, none of my relationships work, I chase the men away, Met makes me not want sex when I take high doses-Now it would be very easy to be a renunciate and not want for a damn thing. It really is the hormone of desire or a severe lack of it. |
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