
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Puberty is a right of passage that most of us experience as teenagers. But for some trans folks, big hormonal changes happen again in adulthood. Anita meets three transmasculine people who started taking testosterone as adults...and experienced everything from emotional fluctuations and voice changes to acne and new body hair in a period of second puberty.
Meet the guests:
- Julian Socha, actor, shares his experience of second puberty after being on T for eight years and how the physical changes have influenced his acting and how he's read in social situations
- Gibby Armijo, a chef, has been on testosterone for just about three years and talks about his journey of taking the hormone more intermittently and how it's influenced his ideas about masculinity and adulthood
- Luckie Alexander Fuller, the founder and CEO of "Invisible Men," spells out how his medical transition at age 30 influenced his relationships with his kids and helped his outer appearance align with the way he sees himself
Read the transcript | Review the podcast on your preferred platform
Follow Embodied on X and Instagram
Leave a message for Embodied
Sign up for WUNC's new Politics Newsletter here.
By WUNC4.7
227227 ratings
Puberty is a right of passage that most of us experience as teenagers. But for some trans folks, big hormonal changes happen again in adulthood. Anita meets three transmasculine people who started taking testosterone as adults...and experienced everything from emotional fluctuations and voice changes to acne and new body hair in a period of second puberty.
Meet the guests:
- Julian Socha, actor, shares his experience of second puberty after being on T for eight years and how the physical changes have influenced his acting and how he's read in social situations
- Gibby Armijo, a chef, has been on testosterone for just about three years and talks about his journey of taking the hormone more intermittently and how it's influenced his ideas about masculinity and adulthood
- Luckie Alexander Fuller, the founder and CEO of "Invisible Men," spells out how his medical transition at age 30 influenced his relationships with his kids and helped his outer appearance align with the way he sees himself
Read the transcript | Review the podcast on your preferred platform
Follow Embodied on X and Instagram
Leave a message for Embodied
Sign up for WUNC's new Politics Newsletter here.

91,297 Listeners

21,954 Listeners

43,837 Listeners

38,430 Listeners

43,687 Listeners

27,011 Listeners

11,895 Listeners

7,718 Listeners

14,655 Listeners

74 Listeners

9,100 Listeners

2,225 Listeners

1,323 Listeners

16,512 Listeners

1,005 Listeners

564 Listeners

33 Listeners

67 Listeners