Thursday, October 11, 2012

Hormones



In 9th grade, when I was 14, my rather poor running technique caused me to develop shin splints after only a week or two in gym class.  One trip to the doctor later, and I was prescribed a mild steroid to treat the feeling of knives digging into my shins. 

I don’t particularly remember what steroid it was specifically, nor do I have concrete memory of how it was administered (though I believe it was in pill form).  In any case, taking this anonymous steroid certainly diminished the pain of walking significantly, though I began to notice other, mild changes in my behavior.  Now, one could possibly chalk this up to the placebo effect and my prior expectations of what steroids do (I remember thinking it was strange and oddly funny that I was taking steroids), but I definitely noticed little things.  I remember being more irritable, and I was less inhibited in trying the more “macho” aspects of gym class. 

Again, these were mild steroids, so the effects probably wouldn’t have been anything too significant.  Certainly, I didn’t experience anything close to “’roid rage,” but I was still happy to finally get off of them once my shin splints healed, and my mood seemed to improve noticeably.

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