Do you plan to live on GLP?

To those of you planning on using this long term. Are you able to stay on these compounds while adding mass? I can’t imagine bulking on these things.
 
Just checking in to tell all the haters I love cruising on GLP1's. :cool:

Had a brief few weeks where I ran out of supply and the awful belly rumbling came back. What a disgusting sensation. We're so lucky to live in a world where maladaptive physiological behaviours increasingly have band aid solutions or in the future CRISPR like permanent solutions.

Ah well, back on my cruise and loving every minute.

Peace to all the "put the fork down and get some self discipline"gobshites :cool:
 
Just checking in to tell all the haters I love cruising on GLP1's. :cool:

Had a brief few weeks where I ran out of supply and the awful belly rumbling came back. What a disgusting sensation. We're so lucky to live in a world where maladaptive physiological behaviours increasingly have band aid solutions or in the future CRISPR like permanent solutions.

Ah well, back on my cruise and loving every minute.

Peace to all the "put the fork down and get some self discipline"gobshites :cool:
On one hand I am very impressed and happy with the advancements in this area on the other hand I can’t help but hate that it’s another clutch for the weak minded that are now bragging about not having to have any self discipline. A society in free fall.
 
If you're doing steroids, do you plan on staying on them for the rest of your life?

For me, this answer is the same type of question.

You've two ways to go about it:
  1. Like with TRT, you stay on it long-term. Maybe for life. You might build up a tolerance over time, or maybe you won’t, we’re still not fully sure. Even if you do build up resistence, a short break, say three months, usually resets things well enough.

  2. Like with blasting, you run it till you hit your goal, then you stop or taper off. And when you start drifting too far from your goal, well, you jump back on.
We’ve seen it takes a fair bit of time to regain what’s lost after stopping Ozempic. Even after a year, those on the highest dose hadn’t put it all back on, only around two-thirds, give or take. And these were some of the laziest people on earth, not you lads.

As for me, I stick with option 1 around competitions, and 2 when I’m off-season. When I’m bulking, I go off it entirely. Then once I’ve put back on around 3 kilos of fat, I get back on, because I know I can drop that in two weeks with Reta and a VLCD. Half of it’s just bloat anyway.

  1. You can also swap between compounds, go from GLP-1 to Cargi and Tesofensine, whatever fits the phase you’re in.
It’s not that complicated, lad.
 
Live on...? No. I also won't use GLPs like a wheelchair, like some people outside of the BB community that refuse to change their diet or lift some weights / get some steps in.

However, I will use GLPs as a crutch to aid in my progression for whatever phase I am currently in (hard cut, lean bulk). This is especially true because of reta.

Initially, I used sema to curb some seriously destructive eating behavior. I built better food and exercise habits to complete the first 50% of my weight/fat loss journey.

Then, I titrated off sema, and maintained weight +/- 3lbs, for 6 months to prove that I learned a thing or two and built some discipline of my own. Accomplishing the maintenance phase on my own was a big achievement/stepping stone in my journey. It was important for me to see that sema enabled the outcome, but wasn't solely responsible for it.

I am now leveraging reta to attack the last 50% of my weight/fat loss phase, after which, I will do another 6 month recomp unassisted by any GLPs.

But...the reta will likely come back when it is time to bulk, eventually.

TL;DR - As great as the GLPs have been [and will continue to be] for me, they will always be a tool in the toolbag to achieve a certain short-term goal. A temporary crutch that enables a more efficient [and let's face it, an easier] path to the outcome.
 
Live on...? No. I also won't use GLPs like a wheelchair, like some people outside of the BB community that refuse to change their diet or lift some weights / get some steps in.

However, I will use GLPs as a crutch to aid in my progression for whatever phase I am currently in (hard cut, lean bulk). This is especially true because of reta.

Initially, I used sema to curb some seriously destructive eating behavior. I built better food and exercise habits to complete the first 50% of my weight/fat loss journey.

Then, I titrated off sema, and maintained weight +/- 3lbs, for 6 months to prove that I learned a thing or two and built some discipline of my own. Accomplishing the maintenance phase on my own was a big achievement/stepping stone in my journey. It was important for me to see that sema enabled the outcome, but wasn't solely responsible for it.

I am now leveraging reta to attack the last 50% of my weight/fat loss phase, after which, I will do another 6 month recomp unassisted by any GLPs.

But...the reta will likely come back when it is time to bulk, eventually.

TL;DR - As great as the GLPs have been [and will continue to be] for me, they will always be a tool in the toolbag to achieve a certain short-term goal. A temporary crutch that enables a more efficient [and let's face it, an easier] path to the outcome.
I'm liking the potential cardiovascular benefits. For me that's reason enough to stay on
 
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