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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Side Effect Management
Crashed E2
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<blockquote data-quote="DS3" data-source="post: 175121" data-attributes="member: 18514"><p>Interesting [USER=3]@Nelson Vergel[/USER] liked this post from you [USER=40337]@Stylo[/USER]. Continued learning and openness to new evidence is the cornerstone of progression in thinking and limiting the risk of reductionistic thinking. Unfortunately, as we get our heads stuck on singular modes of thinking it becomes hard to take a step back and review opposing evidence without dismissing it as an ephemeral blip.</p><p></p><p>Personally, I keep my E2 between ~50-70 pg/dL, the higher end being where I start to experience the head fog, decreased memory, and decreased cognitive horsepower. So for starters, this is hardly a 'crashing your E2 level.'</p><p></p><p>[USER=40337]@Stylo[/USER] conducting personal studies on yourself if you are intelligent and have been trained in some form of graduate degree in science (so you've gained exposure regarding how to conduct studies) is not that hard. As you track your hormone levels and see patterns in how you feel (and systematically record those as I do), specifically for me regarding cognitive function, it isn't hard to decipher what works and what doesn't.</p><p></p><p>To say "It's not your E2 causing your symptoms" to me is comical, to say the least. Tell me then, what does it mean when I keep my E2 between 50-70 pg/dL, and as I approach the 70 pg/dL mark the symptoms appear. Then, as I take Calcium d-glucarate and 0.125 mg anastrozole 1x per week the symptoms correct themselves and I am back to optimal cognitive function? As I microdose and keep my T levels at a near-constant, diet at a near-constant, supplements at a near-constant, exercise and sleep at a near-constant, and the only thing quantitatively or qualitatively that I am allowing to fluctuate is estrogen, what else do you propose is causing my symptoms that are quick to disappear as I take a tiny dosage of anastrozole to reduce E2?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DS3, post: 175121, member: 18514"] Interesting [USER=3]@Nelson Vergel[/USER] liked this post from you [USER=40337]@Stylo[/USER]. Continued learning and openness to new evidence is the cornerstone of progression in thinking and limiting the risk of reductionistic thinking. Unfortunately, as we get our heads stuck on singular modes of thinking it becomes hard to take a step back and review opposing evidence without dismissing it as an ephemeral blip. Personally, I keep my E2 between ~50-70 pg/dL, the higher end being where I start to experience the head fog, decreased memory, and decreased cognitive horsepower. So for starters, this is hardly a 'crashing your E2 level.' [USER=40337]@Stylo[/USER] conducting personal studies on yourself if you are intelligent and have been trained in some form of graduate degree in science (so you've gained exposure regarding how to conduct studies) is not that hard. As you track your hormone levels and see patterns in how you feel (and systematically record those as I do), specifically for me regarding cognitive function, it isn't hard to decipher what works and what doesn't. To say "It's not your E2 causing your symptoms" to me is comical, to say the least. Tell me then, what does it mean when I keep my E2 between 50-70 pg/dL, and as I approach the 70 pg/dL mark the symptoms appear. Then, as I take Calcium d-glucarate and 0.125 mg anastrozole 1x per week the symptoms correct themselves and I am back to optimal cognitive function? As I microdose and keep my T levels at a near-constant, diet at a near-constant, supplements at a near-constant, exercise and sleep at a near-constant, and the only thing quantitatively or qualitatively that I am allowing to fluctuate is estrogen, what else do you propose is causing my symptoms that are quick to disappear as I take a tiny dosage of anastrozole to reduce E2? [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Testosterone Side Effect Management
Crashed E2
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