Meat Train said:
Fiber makes me hungry-- makes my stomach feel like it si ready for anything. For instance, I eat an apple-- and if it si not after a large meal, I am starving (or I at least feel that way). As long as your stomach feels hungry you will be motioned to eat.
I'm using EQ (among other things) LR3 IGF-1 and insulin and I swear my appetite has never been as voracious as it is now. Yesterday it was literally insatiable! I ate constantly and even if I filled up, an hour later I was raiding the refrigerator. I finally laid down and went to sleep otherwise there would have been no food for breakfast! My wife thinks I have a tapeworm, lol. Seriously, I think these are about the three best compounds for stimulating appetite.
I've seen research in the past that suggests that calcium or potassium pyruvate stimulates appetite, but it was a couple years ago and I can't even remember where I read it, so I have no way to recommend dosage and intake schedule.
Aspartame is eventually broken down into AMP, which is a spent fuel and has the paradoxical effect of stimulating appetite (just what you want from your low-cal/no sugar sweetener that's supposed to help you LOSE weight). But the detrimental effects of Aspartame ingestion (especially on the brain) preclude it as a wise choice, and not even an option for someone suffering from mild to moderately severe depression.
Kynoselen has AMP in it and I'm sure that's a reason why it stimulates the appetite. You might want to give that a shot, so to speak. The shit hurts like hell, though--at least for me. After I inject it it feels like I got shot with a 12 gauge for about 5 minutes; it's almost unbearable. This reaction doesn't occur in everone, though. Just a caveat.
I think the weed idea is bad for multiple reasons, not the least of which is that THC is a phenolated compound. This means it can bind with estrogen receptors and exhibit either a hormonal-mimicking or hormonal-blocking effect, blocking your own estrogens from binding with receptors. What makes it insidious is that because these xenoestrogens, or foreign estrogens, are not normally present in human biosynthetic pathways, it is very hard for the body to recognize, metabolize, and excrete these "estrogens". Their actions, therefore, are continuous, and for long periods of time. And because they are foreign, the "message" that they convey to cells is always differnet from their human counterparts, therein accounting for a portion of the alarming list of side-effects. The last thing we need is to add to an overall estrogen burden, especially estrogens that are more potent than our own!
Joker