She's definitely a female, no hemipenes at all, very clearly a female in the second photo, as AHBD confirmed.
I have to agree that this is most likely a horrible impaction from feeding her freeze-dried insects. That's why she's so bloated, she was trying to "strain" to go in that photo.
You absolutely need to stop feeding her ANY freeze-dried insects at all, and especially not freeze-dried mealworms. Living mealworms cause horrible impactions, so if you feed her freeze-dried mealworms or crickets this is what usually happens.
Here's the thing: Bearded Dragons in general do not "drink" water. There is not much, if any standing water in their natural environment (Australian Desert), and they get most if not all of their daily
hydration from their LIVE Insects and FRESH greens/veggies. That's it.
Freeze-dried insects have ALL of the moisture removed, so you're not only depriving her of any
hydration from her insects at all, but also depriving her of all of the essential vitamins and minerals, nutrition in general that she needs to eat every day. So please, please stop feeding her ANY freeze-dried insects, otherwise this is going to continue to happen over and over again. And it's extremely unhealthy for her anyway, as those dried insects are seriously, no joke, like feeding her very hard cardboard.
Being an adult she should be eating a large salad every day made up of only FRESH greens and veggies, no "dried" veggies/greens, or "commercial" bags of dried greens. The good news is that fresh greens and veggies are very cheap, and since they have to be FRESH to provide her with her daily
hydration, you can buy a massively large bag of Collard Greens, Turnip Greens, and Mustard Greens at any Walmart, called "Greens Trio" for $2.78. It's huge. In addition to those 3 greens, other FRESH greens that are appropriate for Beardies include Endive, Escarole, Bok Choy, Pak Choy, Arugula/Rocket, Swiss Chard, and Dandelion Greens. AVOID ANY KALE OR SPINACH, IT PREVENTS THEM FROM ABSORBING ANY CALCIUM...
So she needs a nice large, fresh salad every morning, and I'm a believer in still offering LIVE insect protein to my adult Dragons every day, so you need to choose a live "staple" feeder insect that is appropriate for Dragons, which include either Crickets, Roaches (several varieties), Silkworms, or Phoenix Worms/BSFL. She'll most likely go crazy for some nice, juicy, LIVE insects. I order 1,000 size Large BSFL/Phoenix Worms from
www.dubiaroaches.com each month for $23 shipped. Excellent live feeder staple insects, and they are FULL of water, so if you completely stop feeding her any freeze-dried insects and no mealworms at all, and start feeding her a nice, large, FRESH salad every day and then also offer her some live BSFL or other appropriate staple live insect, she'll stay
hydrated and she'll be much, much healthier and live a much longer life.
As for the current impaction, you need to buy a jar of Prune Baby Food, a can of plain, raw Pumpkin, and you'll need either an oral syringe or an eye dropper. If you empty the jar of Prune Baby Food into a microwave-safe container, then add 3 tablespoons of the plain, raw, canned pumpkin, mix it up very, very well, then add enough water to it that it can be used in the syringe or eye dropper (Unflavored Pedialyte is a much better choice at this point, as she is no doubt very dehydrated), then mix it up very well again. Then microwave it for 30 seconds, mix it up really well again, then another 30 seconds. Mix again very well, fill the syringe or eye dropper, then test it on your wrist like a baby bottle (you want it warm, not hot). Then try dripping it on her snout, usually they like it and will lick it right off. Continue doing this as long as she'll keep licking it off, ideally you want to get at least 3ml/cc in her. Then put her back under her lights on her basking spot/platform for an hour or two, then you can try a warm
bath, but most likely it will take at least one more laxative slurry feeding and another
bath for her to start passing the impaction. Just keep feeding her the laxative slurry (you can do this 3 times a day), letting her digest it under her lights, and then give another warm
bath.
As far as the
bath goes, you can do it right in your bathtub, you want the water pretty warm since she's impacted, but not hot. You only want the warm water to go up to her shoulders. Put her in the water, and then try to get her to swim, because the more she moves her back legs in the warm water, the more likely she'll have a bowel movement. You can do this by passively moving her through the water, usually they just take off (they are pretty good swimmers). If she doesn't have a bowel movement within 15-20 minutes maximum then take her out, and try again in a few hours. She obviously has to go, as she was definitely straining on the carpeting, so the warm water
bath alone might start the process, but keep in mind that if she quickly has a small bowel movement, she's probably not passed all of the impaction, and this will continue for another day or two until it's all out. The key is getting as much water/pedialyte in her through her mouth, along with the natural laxative slurry.