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Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
TRT to Supraphysiological Levels for Body Building
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<blockquote data-quote="Phil Goodman" data-source="post: 215524" data-attributes="member: 42777"><p>Completely valid questions, and I don’t think people should shut down others for simply having discussions. There are lots of people who entertain the thoughts you’re having, and I’d say it’s responsible to try to go in with a risk/reward mindset. There’s a lot to unpack so I’ll just try to keep it condensed for the sake of time. The three main factors that will determine how well your body can bounce back when/if you decide to stop are: doses used, length spent using them, and age when you stop. There really isn’t a way to cheat the system, so the more you get out of it the more damage you’ll do to your body(ie you’ll see better gains on 500/week vs 150/week but also do a lot more damage). I’d also say there are better agents if your main goal is strictly gains in the gym, but they also come with lots of negatives and will be dose dependent. Add to that the fact that everyone is different, and there really is no way to know how it’ll turn out for you. Sure you can do things to make your odds as good as possible, but you won’t really know how things will go. More than likely you could do one or two rounds with little issue, but the problem is that most people won’t stop there. If you have body dysmorphia(and honestly I think most of us do to some extent), then you won’t want to lose what you gain, and in your eyes will probably look bad when in actuality most others could think you look fine. So instead of losing it lots of people decide to jump back on and the vicious cycle continues. And with each round you get older and do more damage to your natural system. I think that’s why so many of those guys end up in a boat where they absolutely have to jump on TRT, because they’ve done too much harm over the years. And you may try to convince yourself that you can just do one or two cycles, but again that is up to the person and probably harder to do than most people realize. For me personally I had chances to do that when you get but always avoided it because I just didn’t think it was worth it. If you want a good resource there is a youtube channel called anabolic doc that covers tons of topics regarding different approaches, managing health, etc.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Phil Goodman, post: 215524, member: 42777"] Completely valid questions, and I don’t think people should shut down others for simply having discussions. There are lots of people who entertain the thoughts you’re having, and I’d say it’s responsible to try to go in with a risk/reward mindset. There’s a lot to unpack so I’ll just try to keep it condensed for the sake of time. The three main factors that will determine how well your body can bounce back when/if you decide to stop are: doses used, length spent using them, and age when you stop. There really isn’t a way to cheat the system, so the more you get out of it the more damage you’ll do to your body(ie you’ll see better gains on 500/week vs 150/week but also do a lot more damage). I’d also say there are better agents if your main goal is strictly gains in the gym, but they also come with lots of negatives and will be dose dependent. Add to that the fact that everyone is different, and there really is no way to know how it’ll turn out for you. Sure you can do things to make your odds as good as possible, but you won’t really know how things will go. More than likely you could do one or two rounds with little issue, but the problem is that most people won’t stop there. If you have body dysmorphia(and honestly I think most of us do to some extent), then you won’t want to lose what you gain, and in your eyes will probably look bad when in actuality most others could think you look fine. So instead of losing it lots of people decide to jump back on and the vicious cycle continues. And with each round you get older and do more damage to your natural system. I think that’s why so many of those guys end up in a boat where they absolutely have to jump on TRT, because they’ve done too much harm over the years. And you may try to convince yourself that you can just do one or two cycles, but again that is up to the person and probably harder to do than most people realize. For me personally I had chances to do that when you get but always avoided it because I just didn’t think it was worth it. If you want a good resource there is a youtube channel called anabolic doc that covers tons of topics regarding different approaches, managing health, etc. [/QUOTE]
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Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
Clinical Use of Anabolics and Hormones
TRT to Supraphysiological Levels for Body Building
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