Anonymous#1
New Member
On test cycle vs without. Just wondering how much test helps in recovery when it comes to max attempts and how often could those be tested.
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The amount of time needed for recovery is proportional to the absolute load lifted. Generally, enhanced & very strong lifters need more time for recovery after a PB/new 1RM than a nonenhanced, weaker lifter. If your being on testosterone, as in your hypothetical, results in your maximal strength in the deadlift being far greater than you could achieve without AAS use in your lifetime, then you might need up to 3 weeks to recover.
This is a consequence of AAS primarily serving to directly enhance maximal strength. The term, "restoratives," as used by the Soviet practitioners to obfuscate the true nature of AAS, has really had an influence on how AAS are perceived, incorrectly, by many. Since AAS work primarily to directly enhance performance rather than merely augment recovery/restoration processes, this is a misnomer.
So would you say that testosterone mostly allows you to:
1) Reach your maximal strength potential FASTER than if you were natural
2) Recover faster from any kind of stress more than if you were natural
And
3) Does it increase your maximum strength potential overall?
And also wondering what is true for steroids compared to exogenous testosterone dosing.
I’ve heard naturals can get pretty damn strong but it is just usually going to mean the person will be fat AF rather than more ripped or athletic looking.
I am mostly asking because if all it does is make me stronger and not really recover faster. Life is still going to be a bitch for me LOL. And even more so because I’ll just be lifting more and needing more time to recover. But I thought it was both increased strength and recovery? Just surprised and interested in your comment and wanting to know the nuance about this.
I’ve heard naturals can get pretty damn strong but it is just usually going to mean the person will be fat AF rather than more ripped or athletic looking.
It does all 3. It does 1 & 3 > 2. Testosterone mostly enhances recovery by anticatabolic effects & increasing glycogen synthetase activity.So would you say that testosterone mostly allows you to:
1) Reach your maximal strength potential FASTER than if you were natural
2) Recover faster from any kind of stress more than if you were natural
And
3) Does it increase your maximum strength potential overall?
And also wondering what is true for steroids compared to exogenous testosterone dosing.
I’ve heard naturals can get pretty damn strong but it is just usually going to mean the person will be fat AF rather than more ripped or athletic looking.
I am mostly asking because if all it does is make me stronger and not really recover faster. Life is still going to be a bitch for me LOL. And even more so because I’ll just be lifting more and needing more time to recover. But I thought it was both increased strength and recovery? Just surprised and interested in your comment and wanting to know the nuance about this.
Without getting into the nuances and complexities of the etiology of CNS fatigue, I will tell you that the only supplement and/or drug solution would be to mitigate inflammatory responses subsequent to muscle damage. As such, antioxidants like vitamin C, E, B- 6, 12, etc., and other compounds like polyunsaturated phosphatidylcholine would reduce CNS fatigue, but also perversely by the same mechanism, when megadosed, reduce muscle damage, thereby blunting hypertrophy signaling and adaptive response.Are there any peptides or suplaments that could speed up cns recovery?
Also if one was going to max out on big 3 lifts would it be better to do it all on the same day or spread them out throughout the week?
It is definitely better during training to distribute maximal effort (1RM) structural exercises that require postural support across the week; but also to intersperse regular mock competitions and actual competitions at an appropriate frequency.Are there any peptides or suplaments that could speed up cns recovery?
Also if one was going to max out on big 3 lifts would it be better to do it all on the same day or spread them out throughout the week?
I've not found anything that speeds up CNS recovery, stimulants such as caffeine will still enable you to get it more activated while it is recovering but for true recovery the only things I find work is rest, time and sleep. Oh and as you get older this takes even longer - it sucks!!Are there any peptides or suplaments that could speed up cns recovery?
Also if one was going to max out on big 3 lifts would it be better to do it all on the same day or spread them out throughout the week?
Let me guess - a Sumo deadlifter that can probably bench about 315 lolThere’s a guy on T-nation who competes in tested feds and pulls 800+ and is very lean and could probably do extremely well in physique.
I wanna say he benches in the 400’s and squats in the 600’s. Can’t remember about sumo. Pretty sure he’s brought home some hardware from the Arnold classic in the amateur division. Idk. He’s impressive though, one of the few I’ve seen and genuinely been impressed.Let me guess - a Sumo deadlifter that can probably bench about 315 lol
The best drugs for recovery, especially for your nervous system come naturally when you sleep.Are there any peptides or suplaments that could speed up cns recovery?
Also if one was going to max out on big 3 lifts would it be better to do it all on the same day or spread them out throughout the week?
Wow. I thought AAS mostly worked by increasing the rate of recovery, therefore allowing more difficult training more often and that the strength increase was due to the the higher training capability stacking over time. I didn't think test increased strength much and only certain compounds like halo did it effectively or some CNS stimulating compounds to a milder degree.It does all 3. It does 1 & 3 > 2. Testosterone mostly enhances recovery by anticatabolic effects & increasing glycogen synthetase activity.
I think that the disconnect is that you are thinking about strength in more reductive terms than I am in this context, perhaps thinking about it in terms of neural drive & central motor command, recruitment, voluntary activation. Of course, testosterone does augment these too [1], but in this context I refer to strength as a product also of increased muscle size, because increased fCSA (fibre cross-sectional area) is an important contributor to increased strength. For that, just take Bhasin's 1996 study [2] showing effects of testosterone enanthate + training on muscle size & strength).Wow. I thought AAS mostly worked by increasing the rate of recovery, therefore allowing more difficult training more often and that the strength increase was due to the the higher training capability stacking over time. I didn't think test increased strength much and only certain compounds like halo did it effectively or some CNS stimulating compounds to a milder degree.
Do you know of a thread or resource that delves into this more that a layman can understand?
