When something breaks on your car, the low-t response is to crouch into a ball and cry because you can't fix things. The high-T response is to suck it up, shit happens, you'll make more money, and you know how to fix this shit with your eyes closed, it's just a fuckin' car, and you read the service manual while taking a shit.
I get that. But getting aggressive towards others, when you're solo, isn't a low-t response.
It most certainly can be. Think about what the hormone does, it primes the body for action. If you have a lot of it, naturally, you become resistant to it to a certain extent.
The hormone doesn't get produced in a vacuum it's regulation and production is something that is established long term. A person who is naturally high testosterone, won't be influenced as much should the environment instruct the body to produce it. A person with low-t in their natural state is in contrast extremely sensitive to testosterone. Thus should a situation arise, where one's status is called into question, or one's sense of self is challenged, and the body produces testosterone, the low-t individual will experience a greater shift in mood and emotion as a result.
Whereas a high-t individual may not even recognize the increased T production due to a challenging event, it's just business as usual, due to the person interacting in an environment that promotes high T base levels for years and years.
Androgens such as testosterone and estrogen bring about confidence, stability and a sense of well-being. That is why women get so moody and aggressive when their estrogen drops during menstruation. Men with low T suffer from permanent PMS making them aggressive.
Oestrogen is not an androgen, you fucking idiot. You should have opened your biology book in high school instead of giving hand jobs
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