“I experienced negative behavioral effects such as suddenly becoming much more interpersonally aggressive than the situation calls for.”
I am somewhat confused about how you conclude that this is a liver problem or something unique to exogenous testosterone rather than a completely standard, well-known effect of raised testosterone levels. Not experiencing from UV light indicates that UV light is raising your testosterone levels (much?) less.
UV light is raising your testosterone levels (much?) less
I doubt my doctor chose a dose that would average out to be much higher than the amount produced endogenously by a healthy young man. (I was young at the time.) My guess is that the exogenous testosterone was causing testosterone levels to vary in a pattern different from the pattern caused by endogenous testosterone production. For example, endogenous production might result in a much steadier concentration.
UV light proably has significant positive effects other than tending to raise testosterone. Alexis Cowan asserts that it is a more potent stimulus to endorphin production than aerobic exercise is.
“I experienced negative behavioral effects such as suddenly becoming much more interpersonally aggressive than the situation calls for.”
I am somewhat confused about how you conclude that this is a liver problem or something unique to exogenous testosterone rather than a completely standard, well-known effect of raised testosterone levels. Not experiencing from UV light indicates that UV light is raising your testosterone levels (much?) less.
I doubt my doctor chose a dose that would average out to be much higher than the amount produced endogenously by a healthy young man. (I was young at the time.) My guess is that the exogenous testosterone was causing testosterone levels to vary in a pattern different from the pattern caused by endogenous testosterone production. For example, endogenous production might result in a much steadier concentration.
UV light proably has significant positive effects other than tending to raise testosterone. Alexis Cowan asserts that it is a more potent stimulus to endorphin production than aerobic exercise is.