Alexander Mcmullen
Alexander Mcmullen

Alexander Mcmullen

      |      

Subscribers

   About

Being a professional bodybuilder, I get up very early every single day. Loss of considerable weight, especially over a short period, may place significant strain on the body. As much as the physical gains and health hazards that such substances bring are directly talked about, their psychological impacts have also been largely ignored. Blasting and cruising can do miracles but it may take ages and it is a choice that has repercussions that would be at least for the rest of one’s life. However, concerns arise with the administration of frequent, prolonged intramuscular injections and the potential adverse effects cannot be dismissed. For any serious athlete or any bodybuilders who would wish to have a program that could actually allow incremental and consistent progress, this method will come in handy. All people interested in the use of this approach should consult medical experts and appreciate the constraint and risks involved in the practice.
My last blood work was 220 test only and all values were within acceptable ranges. Id say start at a dose that is your weight and rounded up. I’m just on TRT @ 26mg/day Test C and overdue to order bloodwork lol
However, taking testosterone can come with a number of risks, including heart problems, liver damage, and infertility. Discuss this information with your own physician or healthcare provider to determine what is right for you. The temptation to push further is natural, especially when you've already seen what optimized testosterone can do.
More established bodybuilders in the past preferred a "time on/off cycle", which really took several months to ensure low health risks when doing steroid cycles. If you’re new to performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) or testosterone use, you’ve probably heard the terms TRT, blast, and cruise. Others blast too often and never cruise, which increases health risks. A blast puts your testosterone levels way above normal, so you grow faster. The goal is to bring their testosterone levels back to a normal and healthy range. If you’re new to performance-enhancing drugs (PEDs) or testosterone use, you’ve probably heard the terms TRT, blast, and cruise. The goal is to retain as much muscle as possible between cycles without putting the body through the stress of high steroid dosages.
It's the approach many competitive bodybuilders use, and it's become increasingly popular among recreational lifters who are already on TRT. It's the baseline that maintains your health and wellbeing. Let's get the terminology straight. Welcome to the crossroads where therapeutic testosterone replacement meets performance enhancement. But lately, you've been scrolling through forums where guys are talking about their "blasts" and posting transformation photos that make your progress look pedestrian.
Some people will never be able to get back to a normal range of testosterone and will require hormone replacement therapy for the rest of their lives. Bringing a blast and cruise cycle to a halt, is however a very difficult affair. There are different blast and cruise cycles, which are adjusted by the size of the user, his aims, and pain threshold. Possible side effects include low mood and anxiety which can be prevented when it is used continually but has other short and long term health issues.
In theory, it's a more sustainable approach to using supraphysiological doses. Not exactly, but the results from a properly run blast can be dramatic. If 150mg per week makes you feel good and helps you build muscle at a normal rate, wouldn't 500mg make you feel amazing and build muscle five times faster?
Once you come back down to TRT doses, you're often fighting to keep tissue that your current hormone levels don't fully support. You're already managing your protocol, getting bloodwork, and you're past the mental barrier of "using steroids" since you're on doctor-prescribed testosterone anyway. Can you regain natural testosterone after years of blast and cruise? Oral steroids used during blasts can cause liver strain, elevated enzymes, and, in rare cases, long-term damage.

Gender: Female