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Clomid for PCT, fertility or low T
Question: Pharmaceutically restimulating the hormonal axis
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<blockquote data-quote="Deno" data-source="post: 167929" data-attributes="member: 38086"><p>CoastWatcher, can you possibly DM me with who I need to call (phone call)? </p><p></p><p>I haven't replied in a long time, about a year. I had this thread on my mind, repeatedly. However, I didn't have the money to do anything, and insurance doesn't actually pay for what it takes to make someone truly better; as on the whole, the insurance scam is about making people sick(er).</p><p></p><p>I started working full-time after 10+ years of not being able to work, to be able to afford the costs of recovery.</p><p></p><p>January 2019 was my initial post above. To catch you up, 6 months later, in June/July, I got a 'gently used' StimTens device for nearly $300 - essentially a $30 TENS unit reprogrammed to do cranial electrical stimulation, inflated in cost by several hundred dollars <em>(Fisher-Wallace and AlphaStim are other brands).</em> </p><p></p><p>While I could not afford to keep it, the effects of 3 weeks of 2x daily 30 minute sessions improved my neurology enough, that despite sending it back, I was able to go back to school, and then work.</p><p></p><p>I was only guestimating that I'd have the stamina for a M-F 8 hour-a-day class, plus driving. I made it, and graduated top of my class, and got an offer to work. I have a desire to do well, however, my stamina and focus and such has been greatly affected by low-testosterone visa-vi brain injury.</p><p></p><p>I want to leave the following comment for others, as this site is indexed, searchable, and some of you may be personally-affected: </p><p><span style="font-family: 'Book Antiqua'"></span></p><p><span style="font-family: 'Georgia'"><em> We were housed in contaminated barracks (2002), built in the 80's, as the Army's 'specification' was a 3/4" filter of fiberglass mesh that, filters nothing (MERV rating of 1.. out of 20. Typical pleated poly filters are 12-13). Hundreds of thousands of new soldiers must have passed through those barracks between 1990 and 2015. Figure 5 years of organic build-up, before mold spores trigger massive outbreaks of respiratory infections within the first 3 weeks of Basic, around 1990. A report, dated 1997, by several doctors with rank in the military, detailed critical information, so if anyone was alive afterwards, they could make a claim. Considering the state of the military, that's probably the best the doctors could do. I forgive them for putting in a 'conclusion' that recommended more vaccination, as they were looking for those cushy jobs in pharma after leaving office. At least they documented the problem.</em></span></p><p><span style="font-family: 'Georgia'"><em></em></span></p><p><span style="font-family: 'Georgia'"><em> The starvation of oxygen from partly-closed bronchial's, from sleeping in a contaminated barracks for 8 hours a night, (plus a 1,500ppm CO2 level, over the EPA 1,000PPM limit*) coupled with pushing oneself hard to do your best, led to IQ reduction, character and personality change in a large number of soldiers (and sometimes, weeks of oxygen starvation followed by death**), via moderate to severe traumatic brain injury, which later would resurface as out-of-character decision making, 'accidents', and other mishaps the soldier would be disciplined for, having no idea they had been severely brain-damaged in basic training (of all places). It can take several months, to years, for the effects of brain damage to surface. </em></span></p><p></p><p><span style="font-family: 'Georgia'"><em>I left, reporting on the criminality in my current unit, many months later, having not gotten any substantial support for what I didn't realize was, a severe TBI. While I had blacked-out during Basic, I had forgotten about the incident, putting it behind me as soon as I took the 12-hour dilators the outpatient clinic was handing out like candy. Sadly, others died after weeks of oxygen starvation. See attachments.</em></span></p><p><span style="font-family: 'Georgia'"></span></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'">* "Environmental (Indoor Air Quality) Data: Levels of CO2 in "Starship" type barracks (2/60th InfBn) were noted to consistently exceed NIOSH threshold limits of 1,000 ppm throughout sleeping hours. Peak levels occurred during troop concentration times at 2100 and 0500hrs. ... In general, the CO2 threshold level is exceeded whenever greater than 40 trainees occupy the sleeping bay area; peak levels are reached rapidly within 15-30 minutes of entry." - </span><em><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'"> Epidemiologic Consultation No. 29-HE-8062-97, Investigation of Adenovirus and Acute Respiratory Disease (ARD) among Recruits. Nov-Dec 1997, U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine (USACHPPM)</span></em></span></p><p></p><p><span style="font-size: 12px"><em><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'">** </span></em><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'">Army recruit Dale Patterson lost consciousness less than a mile into a required run and collapsed on a dusty road at Fort Sill, Okla. When he came to, he was cradled in the arms of another recruit. “I don’t know what’s wrong with me,” Patterson managed to whisper. Then he stopped breathing. <em>"Illness taking grim toll at nation's boot camps", Seattle Times, Dec 2004.</em></span></span></p><p></p><p></p><p>Yes, brother. I advocate a low-carb, high-fat moderate-protein diet, like our ancestors. And when you go to the ripped guys who obviously know what they are doing, as opposed to a 'Dr' who has a port-belly and golf-game, they will tell you that the brain running on ketones is healthy, and that a carb based diet is actually destructive to neurology. Plus, my ancestors herded reindeer, etc, that type of thing. Carbs just give me gas and upset my biology.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Deno, post: 167929, member: 38086"] CoastWatcher, can you possibly DM me with who I need to call (phone call)? I haven't replied in a long time, about a year. I had this thread on my mind, repeatedly. However, I didn't have the money to do anything, and insurance doesn't actually pay for what it takes to make someone truly better; as on the whole, the insurance scam is about making people sick(er). I started working full-time after 10+ years of not being able to work, to be able to afford the costs of recovery. January 2019 was my initial post above. To catch you up, 6 months later, in June/July, I got a 'gently used' StimTens device for nearly $300 - essentially a $30 TENS unit reprogrammed to do cranial electrical stimulation, inflated in cost by several hundred dollars [I](Fisher-Wallace and AlphaStim are other brands).[/I] While I could not afford to keep it, the effects of 3 weeks of 2x daily 30 minute sessions improved my neurology enough, that despite sending it back, I was able to go back to school, and then work. I was only guestimating that I'd have the stamina for a M-F 8 hour-a-day class, plus driving. I made it, and graduated top of my class, and got an offer to work. I have a desire to do well, however, my stamina and focus and such has been greatly affected by low-testosterone visa-vi brain injury. I want to leave the following comment for others, as this site is indexed, searchable, and some of you may be personally-affected: [FONT=Book Antiqua][/FONT] [FONT=Georgia][I] We were housed in contaminated barracks (2002), built in the 80's, as the Army's 'specification' was a 3/4" filter of fiberglass mesh that, filters nothing (MERV rating of 1.. out of 20. Typical pleated poly filters are 12-13). Hundreds of thousands of new soldiers must have passed through those barracks between 1990 and 2015. Figure 5 years of organic build-up, before mold spores trigger massive outbreaks of respiratory infections within the first 3 weeks of Basic, around 1990. A report, dated 1997, by several doctors with rank in the military, detailed critical information, so if anyone was alive afterwards, they could make a claim. Considering the state of the military, that's probably the best the doctors could do. I forgive them for putting in a 'conclusion' that recommended more vaccination, as they were looking for those cushy jobs in pharma after leaving office. At least they documented the problem. The starvation of oxygen from partly-closed bronchial's, from sleeping in a contaminated barracks for 8 hours a night, (plus a 1,500ppm CO2 level, over the EPA 1,000PPM limit*) coupled with pushing oneself hard to do your best, led to IQ reduction, character and personality change in a large number of soldiers (and sometimes, weeks of oxygen starvation followed by death**), via moderate to severe traumatic brain injury, which later would resurface as out-of-character decision making, 'accidents', and other mishaps the soldier would be disciplined for, having no idea they had been severely brain-damaged in basic training (of all places). It can take several months, to years, for the effects of brain damage to surface. [/I][/FONT] [FONT=Georgia][I]I left, reporting on the criminality in my current unit, many months later, having not gotten any substantial support for what I didn't realize was, a severe TBI. While I had blacked-out during Basic, I had forgotten about the incident, putting it behind me as soon as I took the 12-hour dilators the outpatient clinic was handing out like candy. Sadly, others died after weeks of oxygen starvation. See attachments.[/I] [SIZE=15px][/SIZE][/FONT] [SIZE=12px][FONT=Verdana]* "Environmental (Indoor Air Quality) Data: Levels of CO2 in "Starship" type barracks (2/60th InfBn) were noted to consistently exceed NIOSH threshold limits of 1,000 ppm throughout sleeping hours. Peak levels occurred during troop concentration times at 2100 and 0500hrs. ... In general, the CO2 threshold level is exceeded whenever greater than 40 trainees occupy the sleeping bay area; peak levels are reached rapidly within 15-30 minutes of entry." - [/FONT][I][FONT=Verdana] Epidemiologic Consultation No. 29-HE-8062-97, Investigation of Adenovirus and Acute Respiratory Disease (ARD) among Recruits. Nov-Dec 1997, U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine (USACHPPM)[/FONT][/I][/SIZE] [SIZE=12px][I][FONT=Verdana]** [/FONT][/I][FONT=Verdana]Army recruit Dale Patterson lost consciousness less than a mile into a required run and collapsed on a dusty road at Fort Sill, Okla. When he came to, he was cradled in the arms of another recruit. “I don’t know what’s wrong with me,” Patterson managed to whisper. Then he stopped breathing. [I]"Illness taking grim toll at nation's boot camps", Seattle Times, Dec 2004.[/I][/FONT][/SIZE] Yes, brother. I advocate a low-carb, high-fat moderate-protein diet, like our ancestors. And when you go to the ripped guys who obviously know what they are doing, as opposed to a 'Dr' who has a port-belly and golf-game, they will tell you that the brain running on ketones is healthy, and that a carb based diet is actually destructive to neurology. Plus, my ancestors herded reindeer, etc, that type of thing. Carbs just give me gas and upset my biology. [/QUOTE]
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Testosterone Replacement, Low T, HCG, & Beyond
Clomid for PCT, fertility or low T
Question: Pharmaceutically restimulating the hormonal axis
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