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🧠 TRT + AC262 — Does Being on TRT Change the Game?
Got a solid question from a member: “If I’m on TRT year-round, does that mean I can run AC262 longer?” Let’s break this down in a logical way. First — this is not medical advice. SARMs are not approved for human use. This is strictly an educational discussion around how hormones behave on paper and in lab work. 🔬 The Core Concept If someone is on TRT year-round, their baseline testosterone level is being maintained externally. That means suppression isn’t the same concern it would be for someone who is natural. But here’s where most people get confused… AC262 (like other selective androgen receptor modulators) binds to androgen receptors in muscle tissue. When those receptors are occupied, more circulating testosterone may show up as free testosterone on labs. That does NOT automatically mean testosterone production increased. It means hormone dynamics shifted. Big difference. ⚠️ Where Problems Actually Happen The issue usually isn’t total testosterone. It’s what happens downstream. Higher free testosterone can convert into: • DHT • Estrogen • Prolactin shifts And when guys start “feeling off,” they guess. They assume: - “It must be estrogen.” - “It must be low test.” - “I need an AI.” Without labs, that’s just gambling. And gambling with hormones stacks problems fast. 🧪 The Only Thing That Actually Tells the Truth: Labs. Before. During. After. Not feelings. Not Reddit threads. Not bro science. Bloodwork tells you: - Liver markers - Lipids - Total test - Free test - Estradiol - DHT - Prolactin Without that data, you’re just reacting emotionally. 🧠 The Bigger Lesson TRT doesn’t make you immune to side effects. It just changes the variables. Some people report running AC262 long-term without noticeable lab issues — but the key word is lab-verified. Small problems start small. Unchecked problems compound. If you’re going to experiment with anything in the hormone world, the standard isn’t “Do I feel okay?” The standard is “What do the labs say?”
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🧠 TRT + AC262 — Does Being on TRT Change the Game?
🧠 My 3-Year Transformation: What Actually Mattered (No Hype)
I originally posted this video on my Youtube channel about 5 years ago Over the last 3 years, I rebuilt my physique from the ground up — adding ~30 lbs of lean muscle while keeping body fat roughly the same. This post isn’t advice or a recommendation. It’s education + experience. Take it for what it is. What I didn’t do: ❌ No extreme diets ❌ No perfect consistency ❌ No “magic pill” mentality ❌ No blind trust in flashy supplement brands What actually moved the needle: ✅ Training intensity when I could train ✅ Staying active even during gym closures & travel ✅ Learning from mistakes instead of quitting ✅ Understanding suppression & recovery ✅ Using one compound at a time before stacking ✅ Not expecting compounds to fix bad habits ⚠️ The Biggest Mistakes I See Guys Make • Using underdosed or mislabeled products • Taking too many compounds too soon • Ignoring diet & training fundamentals • Thinking “bulking vs cutting” is about the compound (it’s mostly diet) • Not understanding testosterone suppression & recovery If you don’t know what causes the side effects, you’re stacking too early. 🧪 What Worked Best For Me Everyone responds differently — this is just my experience. • RAD-140 – Consistent strength & lean mass gains • S23 – Extremely powerful, also extremely suppressive • Cardarine – Used sparingly for cardio output, not daily use Again: experience, not encouragement. Sources: https://discountchems.com/
🧠 My 3-Year Transformation: What Actually Mattered (No Hype)
How to Read SARM Labels & Syringes (So You Stop Guessing)
I see the same questions over and over: “How much is in the bottle? “How full do I fill the syringe?” What does mg per mL actually mean?” So I put together a simple breakdown on how people interpret SARM labels and liquid measurements in research discussions. This is not advice and not for human consumption — it’s purely educational so people can: • Read labels correctly • Understand mg per mL • Know how total compound per bottle is calculated • Understand why different brands require different math • Stop blindly guessing or copying random comments Most confusion comes from one thing: people don’t actually understand what’s written on the bottle. Once you understand: mg per mL × total mLs = total compound Everything else starts making sense. • Label math • Dose splitting logic (in research contexts) • Total amount needed across a full cycle • Why short vs long half-life compounds are discussed differently Discussion • What label confused you the most when you first started researching this stuff? • Do you prefer droppers or marked syringes — and why? • What’s the most common dosing mistake you see people make? Drop your thoughts below 👇If you’re new, introduce yourself and let us know what you’re currently researching. This group exists so people can actually learn instead of guessing.
How to Read SARM Labels & Syringes (So You Stop Guessing)
AC-262,536 — The Newer “Selective” Buzz
What it is: A newer SARM with a growing online footprint. Research snapshot: Limited public human outcome data; lots of uncertainty. What users report: Leaner look, training drive, sometimes fewer “harsh” sides—again, anecdotal-heavy. This is by far my favorite SARM. It gave me a quick boost in muscle gains, while leaning me out slightly. This one worked well for me when taken pre-workout, and only on workout days. Common downsides: Unknowns are the downside: unclear long-term profile, inconsistent product quality across market. I did have some lethargy issues when taking it every day. Watch-outs: With newer compounds, vendor quality and verification matter more than hype. Compare AC-262 pricing → https://discountchems.com Anyone have labwork before/after on AC-262?
MK-677 (Ibutamoren) — The GH Secretagogue With Real Tradeoffs
What it is: A growth hormone secretagogue (not a SARM) that drastically increases GH and IGF-1 in humans. Research snapshot: There is human clinical research showing increases in GH/IGF-1 and changes in body composition markers, but outcomes vary and side effects are common. Mechanism: - Mimics ghrelin signaling → increases GH pulses → raises IGF-1 - Often increases hunger and can change water balance What users report (common): - Increased appetite (very common) - Better sleep quality (some), vivid dreams (some) - “Fuller” look / scale weight increases (often water + glycogen) - Improved recovery perception Common issues / risks reported: - Water retention / edema - Lethargy in some - Increased appetite can wreck fat loss - Glucose/insulin markers can worsen in susceptible people (a big one) - Blood pressure can creep via water retention Reality check: MK-677 is popular because it “feels” like something is happening (hunger + water + sleep). But the long-term win depends on whether you manage the tradeoffs. Compare MK-677 pricing → https://discountchems.com Did MK-677 help sleep/recovery—or did appetite and water retention outweigh the upside?
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DadBod2Fit - SARM and Peptide
skool.com/dadbod2fit
The Full Continuation of the Deleted DadBod 2.0 YouTube Channel
Protocols, Pricing Tools, Q&A, and 2 Free Ebooks — All in One Place
Leaderboard (30-day)
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