When wil you call it quits?

HIGHRISK

Member
Just curious of everyone’s opinion. Either you have a number or an idea when you will quit blasting and just stick with prescribed trt,eating right and working out?

I think the worst part will be the mental part of knowing there’s no more of that “on” feeling. So is it an age number you have in mind? Or a physique goal you want to obtain?
 
Just curious of everyone’s opinion. Either you have a number or an idea when you will quit blasting and just stick with prescribed trt,eating right and working out?

I think the worst part will be the mental part of knowing there’s no more of that “on” feeling. So is it an age number you have in mind? Or a physique goal you want to obtain?
Good question. Kind of sad I've never thought about it. I believe having an actual goal instead of being huge would be motivating at least. I want to do a competition but I know I'd get destroyed by people in my weight class. Still working on getting squat up to 450 to even fathom the idea of competing. I believe a Lott of us just enjoy lifting with no specific goal in mind. To those who step on stage or do meets, kudos to y'all!!
 
Im going to keep at it till my joints just can’t handle it anymore. I have been dealing with joint issues for a while now, but I can still push through and get them feeling better with some rehab but when my joints stop hurting only in the gym, and start making everything outside the gym a hassle then I will be the old dude rocking the cardio and 10 pound dumbbells lol. I gave up on using a number though, when i was a little younger I said i was only going to lift hardcore till I was 50, but now that im 49 im not ready to stop now.
 
I’ve already begun to scale back on my lifts and intensity but still running the same PED regimens for now which have never been very large doses in the first place. I plan to keep training at a reasonable level until i just can’t do it anymore. I am no longer trying to gain every pound that I can though. That is when I really feel the effects of being an older lifter. The bloating is uncomfortable and I just don’t feel healthy. Keeping my diet at three decently large meals a day and one snack of potatoes and protein powder in the afternoon seems to be keeping my weight at 225 without even trying very hard and I feel great.....so far.
 
I'd say most guys that have been seriously competitive or living that lifestyle should be looking to back off around the 50 mark to avoid causing problems that can't be easily reversed. Not stop everything, just back off and decide what the new priority is going to be.

I think most young guys have the forever mentality but I'm here to tell you that when something finally goes wrong or a test pulls up something that isn't just going to go away and it'll kill you in a short amount of time then everything changes.

I've seen it on both sides. I've got good friends that look great for any age and are healthy that have transitioned successfully. I've also had a few die way too early needlessly as early as 41 years old that just couldn't see that it can be done in a way that doesn't put you at immediate risk.

The smarter, older guys that have been in the lifestyle a long time gradually back off across the board. Most of them find that middle ground where you're on trt"ish" doses, your labs are good, your diet is still mostly strict but with more emphasis on maintenance rather than growth, your BP is good and you focus on health but still looking great. Your training is intense but that intensity isn't primarily created via heavy weights so joints and injuries are spared.

The days of 1000+ mgs of gear weekly, a bunch of orals and running your weight up 30, 40+ pounds in the "off season" would be done. It's bad for your heart, your cholesterol and pretty much everything else. Protein comes down some and you eat less meals.

I will say that show prep experience minus the stimulants is actually very beneficial. Lower carbs, more good fats, some cardio and staying leaner is the way to go. Plus, you look bigger when you're leaner so it's a win win.

I just saw a video with John Meadows the other day where he was talking about eating less than 200 grams of protein daily to maintain his current size.
 
Gonna keep training till I either step into the pine box or my body breaks down.

Heard the gyms are good on the other side.
 
I have scaled back a long ways to just my TRT dose for now until I can get my head etc in the right place to take advantage of higher hormone levels... that aside, starting high dosage in middle age there is likely no real reason for me to quit.

Far more likely to die from something totally before any serious side effects become problematic for me.
 
I have scaled back a long ways to just my TRT dose for now until I can get my head etc in the right place to take advantage of higher hormone levels... that aside, starting high dosage in middle age there is likely no real reason for me to quit.

Far more likely to die from something totally before any serious side effects become problematic for me.
What is going on man? Hope all is well, haven't seen you post in ages
 
What is going on man? Hope all is well, haven't seen you post in ages
All good man... just job changing etc has kept me away from the board... Always nice to come back though.
 
Just curious of everyone’s opinion. Either you have a number or an idea when you will quit blasting and just stick with prescribed trt,eating right and working out?

I think the worst part will be the mental part of knowing there’s no more of that “on” feeling. So is it an age number you have in mind? Or a physique goal you want to obtain?
Alot of similar ideas in here courtesy of @Eman @fodsod @Iron Vett .
In the past yr i broke that barrier of where gear's place is in my life. It was a pretty abrupt realization and one i was suprisingly perfectly ok with. I broke the mental crutch with my first 10 month off break and im approaching that number again here shortly. I even came off entirely for a time to in part expedite my health but also to ensure i am still the master of my mind. Not a hormone. Mental toughness is paramount. That is the ENTIRE picture behind training anyway(its not vanity). Upon coming back on trt i am now running a legitimate trt regimen. 200mg every 14 days. 2 shots a month. Yes, for once in 4 or 5 yrs im honest with myself and im running bonified base model hormone lvls. Gear now fits my lifestyle. Not the other way around. Ive done and experimented a ton and i realize w/o a shadow of a doubt the reward(if u wanna call it that) for being the absolute biggest, most muscular and or strongest is NOT worth the risk. For the record i have not reached that lvl yet, for me any way, i think theres alot of ground left to cover. Im 100% about that. I think my dream goal can be achieved with time tho. Not mindless blasting. And the end game is a much healthier picture. Some day ill cycle again. Maybe here in 2019 some time. But im in no hurry...for once im in no hurry. Ive found more useful activities to occupy my competitive nature. Been training bjj and im earning a much broader perspective on what a useful masculine body can achieve. I think alot of BB or PL have this bloated view of their "skill set" that is unhealthy and entirely supported by what their physique looks like atm or what their numbers look like on a platform. It leads them (us) to pursue crazy pop dreamz bolstered by dangerous drugs/hormones protocols to enhance their self worth.

Find that balance. Balance is healthy
 
At 56 I've mostly stopped lifting heavy. The injuries were starting to get the upper hand. By the time one healed I would have two more. And the joint pain was becoming a constant annoyance. For a while I just added gear to avoid losing muscle, but then my BP started creeping up.

These days I'm starting to spend more time on the mountain bike than in the gym, and sticking to basic TRT. No guessing what my attitude will be by the summer, though. If I'm feeling good with no serious injuries, I could see myself doing another blast or two just because I like it. It sure beats eating and drinking myself to death as so many of my friends have done.
 
At 56 I've mostly stopped lifting heavy. The injuries were starting to get the upper hand. By the time one healed I would have two more. And the joint pain was becoming a constant annoyance. For a while I just added gear to avoid losing muscle, but then my BP started creeping up.

These days I'm starting to spend more time on the mountain bike than in the gym, and sticking to basic TRT. No guessing what my attitude will be by the summer, though. If I'm feeling good with no serious injuries, I could see myself doing another blast or two just because I like it. It sure beats eating and drinking myself to death as so many of my friends have done.
Yeah among the general population being in shape in your 20s is like 10% of the pop among age related peers. 30s most your peers are fat or skinny fat and drink alot. 40s and up and having a good useful, in shape body is truly rare. Im not necessarily fat shaming. Hell i like beer too. Were all humans. But most ppl are so singularly minded and quite frankly weak. Work, be lazy, drink beer. Rinse and repeat till you die. Being disciplined enough to adapt your training as you grow older to avoid or at least slow the degenerative process is good for the spartan soul. Our bodies are made to be used. Its also essential for males to keep their edge mentally. This is expressed thru physical prowess. Always has. Always will be.
 
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