Tirz underperforming? 🥺

RetaBoss659 said:
Lol, you all basically gave canned responses. What's there to reply to? I know how these meds function. My concern was with the recent reports of zero-peptide vials and wondered if, with such a huge difference between two vials from the same batch, I got one of those. That's why I'm halting and sending the vials for testing.

I saw one person mention something similar on a sub for weight loss drugs. They said they got their stuff tested and it came back legit. Their doctor told them that sometimes these drugs just don't work the same every week. It can depend on what you ate, how much you slept, stress levels, etc.
 
I saw someone else in a weight loss group raving about how much easier it is to wear regular clothes now that they've lost weight on sema. They said they used to have trouble with structured shirts because their arms were too big compared to their body, but now they can wear them without having to size up. That's a big win!
 
I would suggest you have a full thyroid panel and full labs. Sometimes thyroid conditions interfere with weightloss.
 
Thanks MixBro, that makes me feel a little better! It's just so frustrating when you think it's working and then suddenly it's like nothing happened. I should probably just chill and wait for Wednesday.
 
SS31 before Mots-c is solid, primes it. On Tesa 90 days, 5x2 schedule (2mg nightly before bed, 3hr fast). Started CJC/IPA but got sides so switched. Sleep's great, recovery up, energy better, muscle tone improved. Below 40? Secretagogues probably won't hit. Get bloodwork for IGF-1 levels first.
 
Can you get WFI in your area? Works like bac water but stays good for 28 days. Some add benzyl alcohol to make bac water DIY. Hospira in Europe is brutal — premium prices everywhere.
 
Topping out on tirz without reaching goal is one of the harder spots. Reta's ceiling is higher - that's usually the driver for the switch. People stalled on tirz often see a response.
 
The labeled-15mg-actually-1.6mg situation is the real-world version of why testing matters - the nominal dose on the label can be off by an order of magnitude without any visible indication. That level of discrepancy also explains why some people don't respond to compounded products when it's actually a concentration issue.
 
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