Journey to the bottom of the food chain; Angus gains 0.33g of muscle!

Minor update, 10/08/2025
REFEED, BW at 76.80Kg


It's been a minute; I'm finally settled at home, it was a rough week.

Still dieting down some, expecting the be around 76.00Kg or under by Friday this week. I have decided to start the next growth phase on Saturday the 16th, regardless of bodyweight.

I had a refeed this past Friday at around 770g carbs and 4500 calories (I had a bowl of protein cookie dough at the end, so prob 5000 cals).

I also did 6iu of Humalog with every single meal (totaling 30 units of slin)

Meal 1
Egg sandwiches and oats
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This was HARD to eat on 6mg of Reta, but I later understood that it was hard because of the fat content + oats. Other meals or laughingly easy to get down and digest.

Meal 2
Pancakes!
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D E L I C I O U S

Meal 3
CoR with graham cracker cereal
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Meal 4
Pancakes, again (I made a double batch), with a protein bar
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Meal 5 (last)
Cereal
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Also, meal prepped some more chicken for the upcoming weeks
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Did a push workout on Saturday following the feast, and man the pump was INSANE
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Due to the images being gifs you won't be able to see all the details, but man everything was popping and striated, lol.

I'll be posting a progress phase plan just like I did with the first progress round, possibly in the next few days.

You guys feeling it? THE GAINS ARE COMING, AND THEY'RE COMING FAST
i love your pancakes!! They are my favorite picture you post, lol except for the "quad" shots,,
 
15/08/2025, current weight: 76.00Kg
WE'RE FINALLY HERE LADS, THE GREAT GREAT PROGRESS PHASE 2 OF 2025 STARTS

T O D A Y


Few things to go over first

Rosuvastatin 2.5mg VS Pitavastatin 2mg (5 weeks)

Before (Rosuva) > After (Pitava)
LDL: 41 > 51
HDL: 35 > 52 (unexpected, especially considering I have UPPED my Adex since)
Trig: 34 > 54

But most importantly, NO MORE CRAMPS; I used to think those were caused by an electrolyte imbalance, but they all stopped a week after I switched to Pitava. Verdict? It's good enough for me and the side effect profile is much nicer, it's here to stay.

RHR
My RHR dropped by a good chunk after losing some body fat and perhaps getting used to the GLP-1; I have been on 5mg of Ivabradine x2/day for a good two weeks now, down from 7.5 x2.

POSSIBLE ADDITITON: Jardiance
Threads about this drug have been popping up on various forums for some time now, local pharmacies carry here so I'll be trying it out starting tomorrow. Key note though; GPT says the drug dumps anywhere between 50g-80g of glucose via urination every day, so if all works out I'll be compensating for this and maybe some more starting week 2 (all depends on how I feel on the drug). If I like it I'll be staying on it year-long; the benefits are just insane.

Now the good stuff...

LAST SET OF PROGRESS PHOTOS (still learning how to pose right), TAKEN ON TUESDAY. I wanted to be a bit leaner, but ah well; I'll get shredded once I pack on another 5+kg of muscle.
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I don't know why I keep flexing my arms at a low angle like this; I CAN lift them up a bit higher, but this just happens if I don't concentrate hard enough.

This set was taken with the back camera, so better details
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Plan for phase 2

PEDs

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I'll be running a maintenance dose of BPC157 throughout.

Diet & training
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I'll be less strict with my fats this time around, but I'll still be keeping them rather low. No more 0% milk, but I won't be adding any additional fats either; at least not in any large amounts and definitely not in my pre and post meals.

I'll also be ramping up calories a bit more; I feel that I might have left some gains on the table last time by not ramping calories up when I should have. I'll be starting at 3800 this week, 4000 the following week and then we'll take it from there.

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PPL done x2 a week, so 6 days on 1 day off.

Health & supplements/meds
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BG was 74 at the lab today; hoping for a nice insulin value on Saturday; fingers crossed.

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Green is for drugs I either haven't used or might be using.
 
15/08/2025, current weight: 76.00Kg
WE'RE FINALLY HERE LADS, THE GREAT GREAT PROGRESS PHASE 2 OF 2025 STARTS

T O D A Y


Few things to go over first

Rosuvastatin 2.5mg VS Pitavastatin 2mg (5 weeks)

Before (Rosuva) > After (Pitava)
LDL: 41 > 51
HDL: 35 > 52 (unexpected, especially considering I have UPPED my Adex since)
Trig: 34 > 54

But most importantly, NO MORE CRAMPS; I used to think those were caused by an electrolyte imbalance, but they all stopped a week after I switched to Pitava. Verdict? It's good enough for me and the side effect profile is much nicer, it's here to stay.

RHR
My RHR dropped by a good chunk after losing some body fat and perhaps getting used to the GLP-1; I have been on 5mg of Ivabradine x2/day for a good two weeks now, down from 7.5 x2.

POSSIBLE ADDITITON: Jardiance
Threads about this drug have been popping up on various forums for some time now, local pharmacies carry here so I'll be trying it out starting tomorrow. Key note though; GPT says the drug dumps anywhere between 50g-80g of glucose via urination every day, so if all works out I'll be compensating for this and maybe some more starting week 2 (all depends on how I feel on the drug). If I like it I'll be staying on it year-long; the benefits are just insane.

Now the good stuff...

LAST SET OF PROGRESS PHOTOS (still learning how to pose right), TAKEN ON TUESDAY. I wanted to be a bit leaner, but ah well; I'll get shredded once I pack on another 5+kg of muscle.
dzAtiwR.jpeg

YkmtoAk.jpeg

H023NRV.jpeg

VHyzhjJ.jpeg

WbEgJev.jpeg

I don't know why I keep flexing my arms at a low angle like this; I CAN lift them up a bit higher, but this just happens if I don't concentrate hard enough.

This set was taken with the back camera, so better details
9D8CMX3.jpeg

TZVd0zp.jpeg

o2D6cRa.jpeg


Plan for phase 2

PEDs

4VbnZ1d.png

I'll be running a maintenance dose of BPC157 throughout.

Diet & training
jAQfKyx.png

I'll be less strict with my fats this time around, but I'll still be keeping them rather low. No more 0% milk, but I won't be adding any additional fats either; at least not in any large amounts and definitely not in my pre and post meals.

I'll also be ramping up calories a bit more; I feel that I might have left some gains on the table last time by not ramping calories up when I should have. I'll be starting at 3800 this week, 4000 the following week and then we'll take it from there.

JmN3YK3.png

7qELUXy.png

PPL done x2 a week, so 6 days on 1 day off.

Health & supplements/meds
W8cjgrJ.png

BG was 74 at the lab today; hoping for a nice insulin value on Saturday; fingers crossed.

62R2aWe.png


N9zS1HO.png

Green is for drugs I either haven't used or might be using.
looks like a solid program , i will be looking forward to this , ;)
 
Holy shit, you look bonkers dude! It's like you're coming down from a prep with that condition haha. You have so much room for weight/muscle gain you can do whatever you want with nutrition approach. Also tan is great.

I'm curious how jardiance will sit on you, it's a drug i might add in the near future for kidney protection but i need to do some research first because honestly i have no idea what's the mechanism of action, what does it do and alleviates the kidneys.
 
looks like a solid program , i will be looking forward to this , ;)
Always happy to have you. :)
Holy shit, you look bonkers dude! It's like you're coming down from a prep with that condition haha. You have so much room for weight/muscle gain you can do whatever you want with nutrition approach. Also tan is great.

I'm curious how jardiance will sit on you, it's a drug i might add in the near future for kidney protection but i need to do some research first because honestly i have no idea what's the mechanism of action, what does it do and alleviates the kidneys.
Thanks Eddie! I just did some "GPT" and here's what it gave me:

Certain drugs, especially SGLT2 inhibitors like Jardiance (empagliflozin), can protect the kidneys even in someone eating a high-carbohydrate diet.


Here’s why that’s relevant for you if you’re in a high-carb, high-calorie phase:




1. How it Protects the Kidneys


  • Reduces hyperfiltration stress: High carbohydrate intake (especially with PED use and higher insulin spikes) can lead to increased kidney filtration pressure. SGLT2 inhibitors reduce the amount of glucose reabsorbed in the kidney’s proximal tubule, which lowers intraglomerular pressure and reduces long-term strain.
  • Decreases kidney inflammation & fibrosis: Chronic high glucose levels, even in non-diabetics, can promote low-grade inflammation in kidney tissue; SGLT2 inhibitors show anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic effects.
  • Improves kidney oxygen balance: They shift kidney metabolism toward more efficient energy use, reducing oxygen demand in the renal cortex.



2. Why It’s Relevant for High-Carb Intake


  • Blunts glucose load exposure: Every high-carb meal raises blood glucose and insulin. While you may have good insulin sensitivity now, repeated glucose surges over years can stress the kidney’s filtration system. Jardiance helps reduce that exposure.
  • Helps counter “off-season” water retention: PED cycles and higher carb intake often increase sodium and water retention, which raises kidney filtration pressure; Jardiance’s mild diuretic effect can offset some of this.
  • May help prevent early silent kidney damage: Even without elevated creatinine or reduced GFR, kidney microstructure can be under stress. This drug helps protect before damage is measurable.



3. Synergy with PED Use


For someone enhanced and running high GH + insulin:


  • GH increases sodium and fluid retention → higher blood pressure → more kidney workload.
  • Insulin increases renal sodium reabsorption → same problem.
  • Jardiance offsets both by promoting mild sodium and water excretion, lowering pressure on the kidneys.



If you want, I can also give you the specific data from studies in non-diabetic, high-insulin athletes showing renal protection benefits, so we know this isn’t just theoretical.

I asked it to provide the exact mechanism of action:

Got it — you’re asking specifically about the mechanisms by which Jardiance (empagliflozin) improves kidney health.
Here’s the breakdown in a clear, mechanistic way:




1. Lowers Intraglomerular Pressure (Main Protective Mechanism)


  • Normal problem: In high-carb or high-insulin states, more glucose and sodium get reabsorbed in the kidney’s proximal tubule.
  • This reduces sodium delivery to the macula densa (part of the nephron’s sensing system), tricking the kidney into thinking filtration is too low → afferent arteriole dilates → increases glomerular pressure (hyperfiltration).
  • What Jardiance does: It blocks SGLT2 transporters in the proximal tubule, preventing sodium and glucose reabsorption there.
  • More sodium reaches the macula densa → triggers tubuloglomerular feedback → constricts afferent arteriole → reduces pressure inside the glomerulus → less mechanical stress on the filter.



2. Reduces Kidney Oxygen Demand


  • The kidney burns a lot of energy reabsorbing glucose and sodium.
  • Jardiance cuts reabsorption workload → lowers ATP demand in the proximal tubule → reduces cortical hypoxia (a driver of kidney damage over time).



3. Improves Kidney Hemodynamics


  • Mild diuretic effect → lowers extracellular fluid volume → reduces venous congestion and renal venous pressure.
  • Reduces renal interstitial edema → improves microcirculation inside kidney tissue.



4. Lowers Inflammation and Fibrosis


  • Chronic hyperfiltration and oxidative stress activate pro-inflammatory pathways (e.g., NF-κB, TGF-β).
  • Jardiance has been shown to downregulate these pathways, reducing mesangial expansion and fibrosis in glomeruli.



5. Stabilizes Podocytes


  • Podocytes are the “foot cells” that wrap around the glomerular capillaries, crucial for the filtration barrier.
  • Hyperglycemia and high intraglomerular pressure cause podocyte injury and detachment.
  • By lowering pressure and oxidative stress, Jardiance preserves podocyte structure.



6. Improves Systemic Factors That Affect the Kidney


  • Blood pressure: Modestly lowers BP without causing hypotension.
  • Glycemic variability: Less post-meal glucose spiking → less glycation end-product damage to kidney microvessels.
  • Weight & uric acid: Slight reduction in both, lowering kidney metabolic load.



If you want, I can also make you a diagram of the kidney showing exactly where Jardiance acts and how it changes the sodium-glucose flow to protect the glomerulus. That would make the mechanism crystal clear visually.

Diagram
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________________________

Jardiance does some amazing things for the heart, too. All in all it looks like an absolute no brainer, given that the sides are reasonable tolerated.

It'also one of the strongest (if not strongest) ways to control BG. Multiple people report dropping their baseline BG from high 90s to high 70s in two weeks, which is insane.
 
Thanks a lot for your Pita data - I am just in the midst of considering swapping to it and this has helped my decision.

as for SGLT2's, I too have been researching whether to add them. Let me provide my GPT summary to support yours - as it adds some extra info ontop of yours, particularly regarding HCT:

My prompt was:

'Are SLG2 medications like Jardiance valuable for AAS users? i know they have kidney protective properties, however I have also heard they restructure muscle morphology and deplete it of glycogen.'

GPT (Model GPT 5-Thinking):

Short answer: probably “sometimes,” not “routinely.”

TL;DR​


SGLT2 inhibitors (e.g., empagliflozin/Jardiance) are genuinely kidney- and heart-protective—even in many people without diabetes. That’s the upside. The trade-offs for lifters are: a small daily energy leak via glycosuria (often ~60–90 g glucose/day), a fuel-shift toward fat/ketone use (less glycolysis), a modest rise in hematocrit (bad if AAS already pushes Hct high), mild diuresis, and higher rates of genital yeast infections. Evidence for “muscle remodeling” is real but subtle: more intramyocellular lipid droplets and a tilt toward fat oxidation rather than frank muscle loss; meta-analyses do show a small average lean-mass drop unless diet/training offset it. Net: if you have albuminuria/CKD or HF risk, they can be very valuable; if you’re a healthy, high-Hct, high-intensity athlete chasing a pumped look, they’re usually not worth it prophylactically. New England Journal of Medicine+1Lippincott Journals

The upside (why lifters consider them)​


1) Real kidney protection, even without diabetes.
Large RCTs (DAPA-CKD, EMPA-KIDNEY) show slower eGFR decline and fewer renal/CV deaths in CKD across etiologies. Mechanistically they restore tubuloglomerular feedback, reduce intraglomerular pressure, and improve tubular energetics. Benefits extend to non-diabetics. New England Journal of Medicine+1PMCLippincott Journals


2) Heart-failure protection and BP/weight effects.
They reduce HF hospitalization across EF ranges, lower systolic BP a few mmHg, and trim weight mostly via fat+water. Uric acid also falls (less gout risk). PMC+1PubMed

Heuristic: If you’ve developed albuminuria or early CKD (which AAS, high BP, and high Hct can aggravate), an SGLT2 inhibitor is one of the few interventions with hard outcome data.

The trade-offs that matter to AAS users​


A) Fuel shift, not “muscle wipe-out.”
In humans, short-term SGLT2 use reduced glycolytic flux markers and increased intramyocellular lipid droplet size/number, with higher acyl-carnitines and gene expression favoring fat oxidation. That’s a “fasting-like” metabolic tilt, not muscle damage. In training terms: a nudge toward fat/ketone use and away from high-rate glycolysis. PubMedJCI Insight

B) Lean-mass signal is small but real on average.
Meta-analyses show modest reductions in fat-free mass (~0.9–1.5 kg over months), typically ~25–35% of total weight loss. In resistance-trained lifters eating enough, this is likely attenuated, but it’s a signal you’d plan around. PMC

C) Glycogen & “flatness.”
Typical glycosuria runs ~60–90 g/day, i.e., ~240–360 kcal/day. If you don’t replace those carbs/calories and fluids, you may look flatter (less glycogen + water). That’s fixable by eating/drinking more; there’s no strong human evidence of chronic muscle glycogen depletion at rest, just a substrate shift. PMCDiabetes Journals

D) Hematocrit goes up.
SGLT2 inhibitors commonly raise Hct ~2–4% via increased erythropoiesis. Great for HF/CKD outcomes; not great if you’re already polycythemic from AAS. If your Hct rides ≥52–54%, this can push you into the red zone. Annals of Palliative MedicineAmerican Heart Association JournalsNew England Journal of Medicine

E) Volume & electrolytes.
Mild osmotic diuresis means more peeing and a small plasma-volume dip. Combine that with contest-prep restrictions or sauna sessions and you’re courting lightheadedness and performance hits if you don’t compensate. Lippincott Journals

F) Infections & rare events.
Genital mycotic infections are 2–3× more common; absolute rates in men are typically a few percent per year (higher with prior history). UTIs aren’t clearly increased. Rarely, euglycemic ketoacidosis can occur—even without diabetes—especially with low-carb diets, fasting, illness, or peri-op states. Naturedrc.bmj.comPMC+1

Do they “restructure muscle morphology” and “deplete glycogen”?​

  • Morphology: Human biopsy/MRS work shows more/larger lipid droplets inside muscle fibers and a shift toward fatty-acid use after ~5 weeks of dapagliflozin; mitochondrial function didn’t worsen. That’s metabolic re-programming, not sarcomere loss. Animal data sometimes show fiber-type shifts toward oxidative phenotypes. PubMed
  • Glycogen: The drug increases urinary glucose loss; if you don’t replace it, you’ll run slightly “carb-poorer.” Studies emphasize reduced glycolysis rather than measured muscle glycogen depletion in healthy athletes. Practically: the look/performance downsides are preventable with extra carbs, sodium, and fluids. PubMedDiabetes Journals

Where they make sense for AAS users (big-picture framework)​


Green light (strong rationale):
  • You have CKD signals: ACR ≥30 mg/g or a clear downward eGFR trend despite controlling BP. Run ARB/ACEi at target dose plus consider SGLT2 (empagliflozin 10 mg) and monitor Hct closely. This mirrors trial populations and guideline logic; benefits likely outweigh physique downsides. New England Journal of Medicine+1KDIGO

Yellow light (case-by-case):
  • Borderline albuminuria or long AAS history + hypertension, but normal Hct and no dehydration-heavy prep → plausible kidney insurance, but manage the carbohydrate/water gap and watch Hct trends. Lippincott Journals

Red light (generally avoid prophylactically):
  • Hct already high (≥52–54%), frequent dehydration/cutting, low-carb/fasting phases, or recurrent genital candidiasis. Here the SGLT2 liabilities (Hct, diuresis, euDKA risk) can outweigh a speculative renal gain in an otherwise normal kidney. AHA Journalsdrc.bmj.com

Practical heuristics if you do use one​

  • Dose used in trials: empagliflozin 10 mg daily (may titrate to 25 mg in diabetes; kidney/HF trials often used 10 mg). You’ll see a small eGFR dip in the first weeks (hemodynamic), then a flatter slope. New England Journal of Medicine+1
  • Pumps & performance: Add ~60–90 g carbs/day (and water + sodium) to offset glycosuria and diuresis; expect a slightly “drier” look otherwise. PMC
  • Hematocrit: Recheck CBC after 4–8 weeks; if you already flirt with 52–54%, this might tip you over—plan accordingly. Annals of Palliative Medicine
  • Sick-day/low-carb rule: Hold the drug during illness, surgery preps, prolonged fasting, or very low-carb phases to reduce euDKA risk. Resume when eating normally. PMC
  • Hygiene & risk reduction: Rinse/dry after training; treat early symptoms of candidal balanitis; prior infections predict recurrence—if that’s you, consider avoiding. drc.bmj.com

Bottom line for your use-case​

  • Kidney protection: Real and clinically meaningful—if you have documented CKD/hyperfiltration, this is one of the rare pills with outcome wins. New England Journal of Medicine+1
  • Physique/performance: Expect a fuel shift (less glycolysis, more fat/ketone use) and a small, preventable tendency toward “flatness.” No good human data show pathologic glycogen depletion in healthy athletes. PubMed
  • AAS-specific caution: The hematocrit rise is the main clash with AAS. If your Hct already runs high, SGLT2s are usually a bad add unless the kidney/HF indication is compelling and you’re managing Hct proactively. Annals of Palliative Medicine

'​

 
Awesome, thanks man! There's a big thread i think on PM about jardiance, i'll take a look there too. If it actually lowers BP though i'll have to avoid it because mine is currently 110/53. I think some guys said it makes them flat and combined with Reta that i'm running now which supposedly makes you flat too, i guess i'll have to take more test and more carbs to feel FULL..not bad lol
 
If it actually lowers BP though i'll have to avoid it because mine is currently 110/53.

I asked it for details for you; I used a standard prompt and then followed up with your particular blood pressure. You should find the bits towards the end particularly useful. BTW you can also use Jardiance - it gives Dapagliflozin dosing because that's the one I could get at half the price and it has banked in memory.

Prompt 1: 'Can you expand on the interaction between SGLT2 meds and their impact on blood pressure?'

Model: GPT-5-Thinking

TL;DR​

SGLT2 inhibitors (dapagliflozin/empagliflozin, etc.) lower blood pressure modestly—typically ~3–5 mmHg systolic and ~1–2 mmHg diastolic on average, with 24-hour ABPM showing similar drops and some benefit at night. The initial BP fall is mostly from a small plasma-volume contraction (osmotic diuresis + natriuresis). With continued use, BP stays lower even as natriuresis wanes—likely via reduced sympathetic tone, better endothelial function, and less arterial stiffness. Effects are additive to ACEi/ARB and CCB/BB regimens, but you should watch for volume depletion if you’re also using thiazides/loops or cutting water/sodium for aesthetic reasons. One curveball for AAS users: SGLT2s raise hematocrit a bit, which can tug BP upward if you’re already polycythemic—so manage fluids and Hct deliberately. PMC+2PMC+2BioMed CentralKDIGO

How they lower BP (think “early vs. late”)​

  • Early (days–weeks): small plasma-volume drop from glycosuria/osmotic diuresis and a transient natriuresis. This reduces preload/afterload and lowers SBP within ~1–2 weeks. PMC
  • Later (weeks–months): BP reduction persists even after natriuresis fades, pointing to lower sympathetic activity and vascular effects (endothelial function ↑, arterial stiffness ↓). Central aortic systolic pressure and pulse pressure improve as well. PMCBioMed Central
Heuristic: “Diuretic-ish at the start, vascular over time.”

How much do they lower BP?​

  • Meta-analyses and RCTs: about 3–5 mmHg drop in SBP and ~1–2 mmHg DBP on office or 24-hour monitors; nocturnal and central pressures also improve. Effects tend to be larger when baseline BP is higher. PMC+1

Interactions with current antihypertensives​

  • ACEi/ARB (e.g., telmisartan): Additive BP lowering and synergistic kidney protection. Expect a small, expected eGFR dip at start (hemodynamic), then a flatter long-term decline. KDIGO
  • CCB/β-blocker: Trials show solid SBP reductions when SGLT2s are added on top of these. PMC
  • Thiazide/loop diuretics: Higher risk of volume depletion/orthostasis. Guidelines suggest considering a diuretic dose reduction when starting an SGLT2, plus patient education on dizziness, cramps, and sick-day rules. KDIGO
  • MRAs: Fine together; monitor potassium (standard MRA caveats). KDIGO

Specifics that matter for AAS users​

  1. Plasma volume vs. look/performance: you’ll lose a bit of water; if you don’t replace fluids + sodium, pumps can feel “flatter.” This is manageable—treat it like a permanent, tiny cut. PMC
  2. Hematocrit rises ~2–4% (via EPO). That can nudge BP up if you’re already polycythemic from AAS. Plan CBC checks and an Hct “stop line” (e.g., 52–54%). PMC
  3. Sympathetic tone: SGLT2s don’t drive reflex tachycardia; longer-term they may lower SNS activity, which plays nicely against AAS-related sympathetic drive. (Still, don’t count on them to neutralize tren.) PMC
  4. Central pressure/arterial stiffness: Improvements here are useful if your BP problem is “stiff-artery” dominant (wider pulse pressure with age/androgens). BioMed Central

Quick analogy​

Think of SGLT2s as a smart, mild “volume-and-vasculature” tuner: they turn the faucet down a notch at first (less circulating volume), then re-wire the plumbing a bit (less SNS push, less pipe stiffness). That’s why the BP effect is modest but durable.

Prompt 2: 'My current BP is 110/53'

Got it — 110/53 is low-normal SBP with a low DBP. Quick math: pulse pressure (PP) = 110 − 53 = 57 mmHg (a bit wide), and MAP ≈ 53 + ⅓·57 ≈ 72 mmHg (acceptable at rest). On this baseline, an SGLT2 will usually push BP lower by ~3–5/1–2 mmHg. Translation: you could drift toward ~105/51 with a small plasma-volume dip in the first weeks — easy to tolerate for some athletes, light-headed for others.

What this means for you​

Traffic-light call (BP-only lens)​

  • Red (avoid starting unless there’s a strong renal indication): DBP <55 or you get orthostatic symptoms (dizzies, “graying out,” brain fog when you stand). You’re at 53 right now → red.
  • Yellow (cautious start): SBP 110–119 or DBP 55–59 and you’re asymptomatic, with a plan to adjust other meds/fluids.
  • Green (routine start): SBP ≥120 and DBP ≥60, or you have clear CKD/HF indications and stable hemodynamics.
If you do have kidney flags (albuminuria or falling eGFR) and still want the SGLT2 for protection, you can make it work — just engineer around the BP drop.

How to start safely at your numbers (if there’s a renal indication)​

1) Pick the dose & timing
  • Dapagliflozin 10 mg once each morning. Morning avoids stacking the nadir with nocturnal BP dips.
2) Pre-empt the volume hit (first 1–2 weeks)
  • Fluids: +0.5–1.0 L/day water on top of usual.
  • Sodium: +1–2 g/day (e.g., add ¼–½ tsp salt across meals or a sodium tablet around training).
  • Carbs: Replace the glycosuria leak (~60–90 g/day) so you don’t feel “flat.”
3) De-stack other BP-lowering levers (temporarily)
  • If you’re on an ARB/CCB ± thiazide/“water pill”, ask your prescriber about reducing or pausing the thiazide/loop diuretic for 1–2 weeks after SGLT2 initiation. That’s the combo most likely to tip you into symptomatic hypotension.
  • Keep ARB onboard (kidney synergy), but consider moving CCB/β-blocker doses to earlier in the day if you notice nighttime lows.

4) Orthostatic safety drill (home test)
  • For the first 7–10 days, measure seated BP/HR, then stand and re-check at 1 min and 3 min.
    • Concerning: drop ≥20 SBP or ≥10 DBP, HR spike >30 bpm, or symptoms → increase fluids/salt, review other meds, or pause the SGLT2.

5) Labs & numbers to watch
  • CBC (hematocrit) at 4–8 weeks (SGLT2s nudge Hct up 2–4%; tren can do the same). Pick a “stop line” Hct (commonly 52–54%) with your clinician.
  • BMP/eGFR + UACR: baseline → 2–4 weeks (expect a small eGFR dip), then 8–12 weeks.
  • Home BP log (AM/PM + a few standing values); if DBP persistently <50 or symptomatic, re-tune the stack.

6) Training-day tweaks
  • Pre-session: 300–500 mL water + electrolytes.
  • Ease off sauna/hot-yoga and aggressive water cuts during the first two weeks.
  • If pumps feel off: another 20–30 g carbs pre-lift often fixes it.

7) Sick-day rule
  • Hold the SGLT2 during illness, prolonged fasting, or hard keto/cutting phases; restart when eating and hydrated normally.

Bottom line​

  • With 110/53, you’re starting below the DBP comfort zone. If your kidney labs are clean, I’d hold on SGLT2 and keep renal risk low via BP control, Hct management, and ACEi/ARB.
  • If you have CKD signals and want the proven kidney protection, start 10 mg in the morning, buffer fluids/sodium, de-stack diuretics, and monitor as above. That keeps the benefits while minimizing the “flat/dizzy” tax.
 
I asked it for details for you; I used a standard prompt and then followed up with your particular blood pressure. You should find the bits towards the end particularly useful. BTW you can also use Jardiance - it gives Dapagliflozin dosing because that's the one I could get at half the price and it has banked in memory.

Prompt 1: 'Can you expand on the interaction between SGLT2 meds and their impact on blood pressure?'

Model: GPT-5-Thinking

TL;DR​

SGLT2 inhibitors (dapagliflozin/empagliflozin, etc.) lower blood pressure modestly—typically ~3–5 mmHg systolic and ~1–2 mmHg diastolic on average, with 24-hour ABPM showing similar drops and some benefit at night. The initial BP fall is mostly from a small plasma-volume contraction (osmotic diuresis + natriuresis). With continued use, BP stays lower even as natriuresis wanes—likely via reduced sympathetic tone, better endothelial function, and less arterial stiffness. Effects are additive to ACEi/ARB and CCB/BB regimens, but you should watch for volume depletion if you’re also using thiazides/loops or cutting water/sodium for aesthetic reasons. One curveball for AAS users: SGLT2s raise hematocrit a bit, which can tug BP upward if you’re already polycythemic—so manage fluids and Hct deliberately. PMC+2PMC+2BioMed CentralKDIGO

How they lower BP (think “early vs. late”)​

  • Early (days–weeks): small plasma-volume drop from glycosuria/osmotic diuresis and a transient natriuresis. This reduces preload/afterload and lowers SBP within ~1–2 weeks. PMC
  • Later (weeks–months): BP reduction persists even after natriuresis fades, pointing to lower sympathetic activity and vascular effects (endothelial function ↑, arterial stiffness ↓). Central aortic systolic pressure and pulse pressure improve as well. PMCBioMed Central
Heuristic: “Diuretic-ish at the start, vascular over time.”

How much do they lower BP?​

  • Meta-analyses and RCTs: about 3–5 mmHg drop in SBP and ~1–2 mmHg DBP on office or 24-hour monitors; nocturnal and central pressures also improve. Effects tend to be larger when baseline BP is higher. PMC+1

Interactions with current antihypertensives​

  • ACEi/ARB (e.g., telmisartan): Additive BP lowering and synergistic kidney protection. Expect a small, expected eGFR dip at start (hemodynamic), then a flatter long-term decline. KDIGO
  • CCB/β-blocker: Trials show solid SBP reductions when SGLT2s are added on top of these. PMC
  • Thiazide/loop diuretics: Higher risk of volume depletion/orthostasis. Guidelines suggest considering a diuretic dose reduction when starting an SGLT2, plus patient education on dizziness, cramps, and sick-day rules. KDIGO
  • MRAs: Fine together; monitor potassium (standard MRA caveats). KDIGO

Specifics that matter for AAS users​

  1. Plasma volume vs. look/performance: you’ll lose a bit of water; if you don’t replace fluids + sodium, pumps can feel “flatter.” This is manageable—treat it like a permanent, tiny cut. PMC
  2. Hematocrit rises ~2–4% (via EPO). That can nudge BP up if you’re already polycythemic from AAS. Plan CBC checks and an Hct “stop line” (e.g., 52–54%). PMC
  3. Sympathetic tone: SGLT2s don’t drive reflex tachycardia; longer-term they may lower SNS activity, which plays nicely against AAS-related sympathetic drive. (Still, don’t count on them to neutralize tren.) PMC
  4. Central pressure/arterial stiffness: Improvements here are useful if your BP problem is “stiff-artery” dominant (wider pulse pressure with age/androgens). BioMed Central

Quick analogy​

Think of SGLT2s as a smart, mild “volume-and-vasculature” tuner: they turn the faucet down a notch at first (less circulating volume), then re-wire the plumbing a bit (less SNS push, less pipe stiffness). That’s why the BP effect is modest but durable.

Prompt 2: 'My current BP is 110/53'

Got it — 110/53 is low-normal SBP with a low DBP. Quick math: pulse pressure (PP) = 110 − 53 = 57 mmHg (a bit wide), and MAP ≈ 53 + ⅓·57 ≈ 72 mmHg (acceptable at rest). On this baseline, an SGLT2 will usually push BP lower by ~3–5/1–2 mmHg. Translation: you could drift toward ~105/51 with a small plasma-volume dip in the first weeks — easy to tolerate for some athletes, light-headed for others.

What this means for you​

Traffic-light call (BP-only lens)​

  • Red (avoid starting unless there’s a strong renal indication): DBP <55 or you get orthostatic symptoms (dizzies, “graying out,” brain fog when you stand). You’re at 53 right now → red.
  • Yellow (cautious start): SBP 110–119 or DBP 55–59 and you’re asymptomatic, with a plan to adjust other meds/fluids.
  • Green (routine start): SBP ≥120 and DBP ≥60, or you have clear CKD/HF indications and stable hemodynamics.
If you do have kidney flags (albuminuria or falling eGFR) and still want the SGLT2 for protection, you can make it work — just engineer around the BP drop.

How to start safely at your numbers (if there’s a renal indication)​

1) Pick the dose & timing
  • Dapagliflozin 10 mg once each morning. Morning avoids stacking the nadir with nocturnal BP dips.
2) Pre-empt the volume hit (first 1–2 weeks)
  • Fluids: +0.5–1.0 L/day water on top of usual.
  • Sodium: +1–2 g/day (e.g., add ¼–½ tsp salt across meals or a sodium tablet around training).
  • Carbs: Replace the glycosuria leak (~60–90 g/day) so you don’t feel “flat.”
3) De-stack other BP-lowering levers (temporarily)
  • If you’re on an ARB/CCB ± thiazide/“water pill”, ask your prescriber about reducing or pausing the thiazide/loop diuretic for 1–2 weeks after SGLT2 initiation. That’s the combo most likely to tip you into symptomatic hypotension.
  • Keep ARB onboard (kidney synergy), but consider moving CCB/β-blocker doses to earlier in the day if you notice nighttime lows.

4) Orthostatic safety drill (home test)
  • For the first 7–10 days, measure seated BP/HR, then stand and re-check at 1 min and 3 min.
    • Concerning: drop ≥20 SBP or ≥10 DBP, HR spike >30 bpm, or symptoms → increase fluids/salt, review other meds, or pause the SGLT2.

5) Labs & numbers to watch
  • CBC (hematocrit) at 4–8 weeks (SGLT2s nudge Hct up 2–4%; tren can do the same). Pick a “stop line” Hct (commonly 52–54%) with your clinician.
  • BMP/eGFR + UACR: baseline → 2–4 weeks (expect a small eGFR dip), then 8–12 weeks.
  • Home BP log (AM/PM + a few standing values); if DBP persistently <50 or symptomatic, re-tune the stack.

6) Training-day tweaks
  • Pre-session: 300–500 mL water + electrolytes.
  • Ease off sauna/hot-yoga and aggressive water cuts during the first two weeks.
  • If pumps feel off: another 20–30 g carbs pre-lift often fixes it.

7) Sick-day rule
  • Hold the SGLT2 during illness, prolonged fasting, or hard keto/cutting phases; restart when eating and hydrated normally.

Bottom line​

  • With 110/53, you’re starting below the DBP comfort zone. If your kidney labs are clean, I’d hold on SGLT2 and keep renal risk low via BP control, Hct management, and ACEi/ARB.
  • If you have CKD signals and want the proven kidney protection, start 10 mg in the morning, buffer fluids/sodium, de-stack diuretics, and monitor as above. That keeps the benefits while minimizing the “flat/dizzy” tax.

Thanks for the detailed search brother, it gives some pretty nice info. I'm planning to do a quite big bloodwork panel in couple weeks and a urine test too. If something's off with my kidneys i'll probably schedule an appointment with a nephrologist and take it from there.
 
Thanks for the detailed search brother, it gives some pretty nice info. I'm planning to do a quite big bloodwork panel in couple weeks and a urine test too. If something's off with my kidneys i'll probably schedule an appointment with a nephrologist and take it from there.
Hope all is well, brother.

I'm still concerned about the glucose lost per day and how it may interfere with my carb count for the day later on, so I asked GPT to help me understand how exactly it works. It gave me this answer (pretty impressive):
_______________________________________________________
Yep—think of it as a simple “rate while above threshold” model. Use this to estimate glucose dumped (g/min) at a given blood glucose (BG, mg/dL). Pick either the Conservative or Upper-bound model; reality will fall between them.

Piecewise rule of thumb​

Threshold: assume 90 mg/dL (≈Jardiance-lowered renal threshold).
Below 90 mg/dL:0 g/min (negligible loss).

Model A — Conservative​

  • Rate: r = 0.006 × max(0, BG − 90) g/min
  • Cap: 0.25 g/min (don’t go higher even if BG is very high)

Model B — Upper-bound​

  • Rate: r = 0.010 × max(0, BG − 90) g/min
  • Cap: 0.40 g/min

Quick reference (examples)​

BG (mg/dL)Conservative r (g/min)Per hour (g)Upper-bound r (g/min)Per hour (g)
950.031.80.053.0
1000.063.60.106.0
1100.127.20.2012.0
1200.1810.80.3018.0
1300.2414.40.40 (cap)24.0
1400.25 (cap)15.00.40 (cap)24.0

How to use it (step-by-step)​

  1. For each time block (e.g., each 10–15 min of your post-meal curve), note your average BG.
  2. Compute r with either model.
  3. Multiply by the minutes in that block.
  4. Sum across blocks and meals → daily grams dumped (×4 = kcal).
Notes
  • These rates assume 10 mg empagliflozin. If you use 25 mg, bump the rate ~10–15% at most (effect is not double).
  • Hydration and kidney function shift the real rate a bit; staying well-hydrated makes the model track reality better.
  • If your BG sits in the 90–100 range, loss is small but not zero; most of the dump happens as you linger ≥110–120.
_______________________________

I even had it calculate a crazy cheat day where I'd end up dumping close to 200g of carbs simply due to very long elevation of BG throughout the day.
 
Awesome, thanks man! There's a big thread i think on PM about jardiance, i'll take a look there too. If it actually lowers BP though i'll have to avoid it because mine is currently 110/53. I think some guys said it makes them flat and combined with Reta that i'm running now which supposedly makes you flat too, i guess i'll have to take more test and more carbs to feel FULL..not bad lol
i'm waiting to pull labs next week after 2 months of jardiance use,, will update
 
15/08/2025, current weight: 76.00Kg
WE'RE FINALLY HERE LADS, THE GREAT GREAT PROGRESS PHASE 2 OF 2025 STARTS

T O D A Y


Few things to go over first

Rosuvastatin 2.5mg VS Pitavastatin 2mg (5 weeks)

Before (Rosuva) > After (Pitava)
LDL: 41 > 51
HDL: 35 > 52 (unexpected, especially considering I have UPPED my Adex since)
Trig: 34 > 54

But most importantly, NO MORE CRAMPS; I used to think those were caused by an electrolyte imbalance, but they all stopped a week after I switched to Pitava. Verdict? It's good enough for me and the side effect profile is much nicer, it's here to stay.

RHR
My RHR dropped by a good chunk after losing some body fat and perhaps getting used to the GLP-1; I have been on 5mg of Ivabradine x2/day for a good two weeks now, down from 7.5 x2.

POSSIBLE ADDITITON: Jardiance
Threads about this drug have been popping up on various forums for some time now, local pharmacies carry here so I'll be trying it out starting tomorrow. Key note though; GPT says the drug dumps anywhere between 50g-80g of glucose via urination every day, so if all works out I'll be compensating for this and maybe some more starting week 2 (all depends on how I feel on the drug). If I like it I'll be staying on it year-long; the benefits are just insane.

Now the good stuff...

LAST SET OF PROGRESS PHOTOS (still learning how to pose right), TAKEN ON TUESDAY. I wanted to be a bit leaner, but ah well; I'll get shredded once I pack on another 5+kg of muscle.
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I don't know why I keep flexing my arms at a low angle like this; I CAN lift them up a bit higher, but this just happens if I don't concentrate hard enough.

This set was taken with the back camera, so better details
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Plan for phase 2

PEDs

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I'll be running a maintenance dose of BPC157 throughout.

Diet & training
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I'll be less strict with my fats this time around, but I'll still be keeping them rather low. No more 0% milk, but I won't be adding any additional fats either; at least not in any large amounts and definitely not in my pre and post meals.

I'll also be ramping up calories a bit more; I feel that I might have left some gains on the table last time by not ramping calories up when I should have. I'll be starting at 3800 this week, 4000 the following week and then we'll take it from there.

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PPL done x2 a week, so 6 days on 1 day off.

Health & supplements/meds
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BG was 74 at the lab today; hoping for a nice insulin value on Saturday; fingers crossed.

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Green is for drugs I either haven't used or might be using.
You’re looking razor sharp, especially at 76 kg - damn, like a machine. Reading your log feels like reading my own; I even recently ordered pitavastatin to replace rosuvastatin. What’s interesting is that to look and progress like you do, it seems all you really need is testosterone, GH, and insulin. If you don’t mind me asking, why not add EQ, Deca, Mast, or something else? Though judging by your progress, I guess you don’t need it. I’ve got a feeling this time your physique is going to explode, I’ll be waiting for the next updates.
 
i'm waiting to pull labs next week after 2 months of jardiance use,, will update
Please do! Really interested in your overall experience as well, if you could share.

You’re looking razor sharp, especially at 76 kg - damn, like a machine. Reading your log feels like reading my own; I even recently ordered pitavastatin to replace rosuvastatin. What’s interesting is that to look and progress like you do, it seems all you really need is testosterone, GH, and insulin. If you don’t mind me asking, why not add EQ, Deca, Mast, or something else? Though judging by your progress, I guess you don’t need it. I’ve got a feeling this time your physique is going to explode, I’ll be waiting for the next updates.
Thanks brother! It seems that a lot of people have been making the switch lately and I can see why; it's a much milder, yet still highly effective statin with potential benefits for insulin sensitivity.

On using testosterone only
I'm not actually against using most other compounds, but I have decided to primarily stick to test for various reasons...
1) I tolerate it VERY well, and the sides are easily manageable
2) Has been researched extensively
4) I truly believe that it's all you really need to grow, which is all I'm currently after; I have no need for compounds that offer additional cosmetic enhancement right now (I'm not competing), so I'm sticking to the golden trio: test, GH, and insulin.
5) Cheap and widely available (I have a drawer full of this stuff, haha)

I have a feeling I'll blow up even more this time around too; I can FEEL it in my body, it's priiiiiiimed. WE'RE GON' MAKE IT BOYS.

Also, I've been on Jardiance a day now; peed slightly a bit more, nothing else to note.
 
On using testosterone only
I'm not actually against using most other compounds, but I have decided to primarily stick to test for various reasons...
1) I tolerate it VERY well, and the sides are easily manageable
2) Has been researched extensively
4) I truly believe that it's all you really need to grow, which is all I'm currently after; I have no need for compounds that offer additional cosmetic enhancement right now (I'm not competing), so I'm sticking to the golden trio: test, GH, and insulin.
5) Cheap and widely available (I have a drawer full of this stuff, haha)

Not that my opinion is worth much but I do want to add something here because it's something I've been trying to reconcile for a few months whilst experimenting. Seeing you post this has triggered another thought, so figured I'd share it in a post. An internal ramble out loud...

More and more, as I read logs over time, expand my own experience etc and merge it all together in a framework, I really think adding compounds outside of testosterone **for building phases**, either for mitigating testosterone sides, or attempting to outmatch its potency, isn't a good risk/reward or cost/reward benefit for either goal. Especially if HGH is in the mix.

Mitigating Test sides would obviously include EQ/Mast/Primo, which is ironic because testosterone sides are easy to mitigate anyway (E2/RAAS/DHT) and the ancilliary injectibles usually causes more ambiguity - e.g EQ with the E1 conversion etc. Cheaper to use an AI than rely on Primo for AI reduction. And many report Mast/Primo just provides them foul mood irrespective of E2 levels etc.

Examples of the attempt to outmatch potency would be Nand/Tren or megadosing EQ. These undoubetly work but outside of just adding ambiguity, they also add potentially dopamine signaling sides, PR receptor issues, an RHR management problem etc.

Again it's important not to think this means these compounds are NO USE EVER!!!! and go to the extreme. I think it's just worth clearly segmenting them out to understand the main lever they add to is **visuals**, or provide some potential side benefits if look is the goal - but I just don't think they are adding what people think they do to growth phases. HGH will keep you leaner on these phases than trens contribution. AI and occasional SERM would safeguard on the gyno front.

A lifestyle guy complaining that testosterone only isn't good and test/DHTs are better because of moonface and bloat etc isn't a justified response either, because again, different goal. Talking about looks, not anabolism.

Unless you really, truly can't tolerate testosterone higher but can the other compounds for some reason, at some point it just gets tiring trying to fight the ambiguity of the add-ons, when the return doesn't justify upping testosterone and tighter AI/RAAS control when building. Ancilliaries like Telm+AI are cheaper than Primo.
 
Not that my opinion is worth much but I do want to add something here because it's something I've been trying to reconcile for a few months whilst experimenting. Seeing you post this has triggered another thought, so figured I'd share it in a post. An internal ramble out loud...

More and more, as I read logs over time, expand my own experience etc and merge it all together in a framework, I really think adding compounds outside of testosterone **for building phases**, either for mitigating testosterone sides, or attempting to outmatch its potency, isn't a good risk/reward or cost/reward benefit for either goal. Especially if HGH is in the mix.

Mitigating Test sides would obviously include EQ/Mast/Primo, which is ironic because testosterone sides are easy to mitigate anyway (E2/RAAS/DHT) and the ancilliary injectibles usually causes more ambiguity - e.g EQ with the E1 conversion etc. Cheaper to use an AI than rely on Primo for AI reduction. And many report Mast/Primo just provides them foul mood irrespective of E2 levels etc.

Examples of the attempt to outmatch potency would be Nand/Tren or megadosing EQ. These undoubetly work but outside of just adding ambiguity, they also add potentially dopamine signaling sides, PR receptor issues, an RHR management problem etc.

Again it's important not to think this means these compounds are NO USE EVER!!!! and go to the extreme. I think it's just worth clearly segmenting them out to understand the main lever they add to is **visuals**, or provide some potential side benefits if look is the goal - but I just don't think they are adding what people think they do to growth phases. HGH will keep you leaner on these phases than trens contribution. AI and occasional SERM would safeguard on the gyno front.

A lifestyle guy complaining that testosterone only isn't good and test/DHTs are better because of moonface and bloat etc isn't a justified response either, because again, different goal. Talking about looks, not anabolism.

Unless you really, truly can't tolerate testosterone higher but can the other compounds for some reason, at some point it just gets tiring trying to fight the ambiguity of the add-ons, when the return doesn't justify upping testosterone and tighter AI/RAAS control when building. Ancilliaries like Telm+AI are cheaper than Primo.
Couldn't have said it any better.
 
Glorious progress phase 2, W1D1, 16/08/2025
Bodyweight: 77.35Kg


Weight already climbing up! IT'S HAPPENING BOYS, I AM GETTING THICK AGAIN.

That said, I noticed that I'm not as watery (yet), Jardiance is definitely keeping some of the water retention down. I'm peeing a bit more but nothing too crazy.

GOOD NEWS, NEW HOMA-IR SCORE
This is almost hilarious at this point; my fasting insulin came out at 0.31!

ZERO POINT THREE ONE. Kek. This puts my Homa-IR at 0.058

I guess we are in fact, VERY SENSITIVE! :cool:

It's almost insane that one can go from 3 to 0.058 in 3 weeks, it's probably all thanks to the addition of Reta (I really only dieted for about 3 weeks, with 3 massive cheat days factored in).

Anyways, this pleases the bodybuilder.

Breakfast
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Used buttermilk pancake batter in place of flour this time (pretty much the same macros) and they turned out even better! Added maple extract and some caramel powder, so good!

Pre
MY FAVORITE COR, WITH TONS OF SAFFRON
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10iu Humalog, no issues. Doesn't seem like Jardiance messed with this one here; might try 11ius tomorrow.

Training
Push A


I had so much energy today it was CRAZY; I was pumped and psyched at the same time.

Does it look like I'm filling up boys? DOES IT? HUH????
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Incline machine press x2
Flat machine press x2
Pec deck machine x2

Supersets
DB press x3
DB side laterals x3
Machine press x3
Machine laterals x3

NOTICE SOMETHING? I'm back doing dumbbell work cause' my arms are almost fully healed! Left is actually 100% healed and right is at 90%, I can pretty much do whatever pain free but I'm still keeping up with the rehab until I feel confident enough tennis elbow won't be coming back.

Damn, it's been MONTHS.

Single arm cable tricep extension x3
Overhead cable tricep extension x3

Cable crunch x2

ZERO CRAMPS. just good vibes.

30 minutes Z2 cardio.

Post
I'll be honest guys I initially liked this cereal milk protein with cereal but now I find it very disgusting.
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Did not enjoy this, unfortunately. 8iu Humalog, but I slightly hypo'd at the 2 hour mark because I decided to walk 5000 steps (was at 65 for 10 minutes, but I guess liver pumped some glucose and put me at 77 15 minutes later, I did not eat).

Chicken sammiches, this round with LITE CHEESE
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I dip these in ketchup but I don't do it on camera because it doesn't look nice, lol. That's pomegranate molasses.

Today was a great day. Might add a bit more food tomorrow or over the next few days, we'll see.
 
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How TF bro?? lol..this is absurd but i'm really happy for you. Your body needs food man, treat it accordingly haha. I'm impressed with your paperthin skin given the phase you're in. Awesome.

Also, some extra info on sglt2 from a doctor i trust for anyone who's interested.


 
Also, some extra info on sglt2 from a doctor i trust for anyone who's interested.
great find Eddie. Going to check this vid out. Used to follow his channel a while back but missed this.

@FuriousAngus Would you mind sharing your Chest measurement? unpumped. Navel too if you're willing :D I find it useful knowing the ratio for physiques that look good, because it helps me steer my own goals. Sort of sets body weight aside, to a degree. I prioritise my own training based on keeping ratios a certain rate, e.g chest > midsection.

And if you've looked at luki's log on PM today, yes, this was triggered by him showing what his was LOL, which I found mega useful.
 
How TF bro?? lol..this is absurd but i'm really happy for you. Your body needs food man, treat it accordingly haha. I'm impressed with your paperthin skin given the phase you're in. Awesome.

Also, some extra info on sglt2 from a doctor i trust for anyone who's interested.



Haha, thanks Eddie. I think Jardiance is actually keeping me a bit drier, but it's too soon to tell. I am peeing more and more, though...

But now that you mention it, I definitely feel like I need more food, I pretty much stalled at 3800-4000 last time, so accounting for this new addition I'll probably have to be closer to 4500 fairly soon...

I'll be watching the video tonight, this is a great find (I know this guy is legit, seen some of his other stuff before). Thanks for sharing brother.


great find Eddie. Going to check this vid out. Used to follow his channel a while back but missed this.

@FuriousAngus Would you mind sharing your Chest measurement? unpumped. Navel too if you're willing :D I find it useful knowing the ratio for physiques that look good, because it helps me steer my own goals. Sort of sets body weight aside, to a degree. I prioritise my own training based on keeping ratios a certain rate, e.g chest > midsection.

And if you've looked at luki's log on PM today, yes, this was triggered by him showing what his was LOL, which I found mega useful.
Chest sitting at 44" (just shy of), and waist (naval) at 31", although a bit bloated so maybe closer to 30" in the morning? I'll measure it again when I wake up tomorrow.

Luki's log (and ig) is always on my list of things to check often, haha.
 

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