Welcome to Unchained Caleb, where I talk about living the lifestyle of the Alpha Male 2.0 and the Unchained CEO as covered in my primary book, The Unchained Man, which has sold over 150,000 copies.
This is why I use quads, yes it hurts at first but after the first week or so its an excellent site just because of the area, I stay around the bottom of the pocket area so it far enough away from the knee, and always hit a new spot, 3 times a week, 50mg each injection, 7 years now based on your advice.
Testosterone doesn't need to be injected intramuscularly. I switched to subcutaneous T injections (in the fat pad on my stomach) and I haven't noticed any change in effectiveness at all.
Intramuscular injections get into your bloodstream faster, which is great when you're getting started, but once you've been doing TRT for a week or two, subcutaneous injections give you the same average T levels, and also smooth out the levels over time. Intramuscular injections give you more pronounced peaks and troughs of T; subcutaneous gives you more stable levels.
There are studies to back this up. If you want references, type "Is there any difference between the effectiveness of intramuscular testosterone injections and subcutaneous testosterone injections?" into perplexity.ai
BTW, thank you Caleb for introducing me to TRT and Dr. Faler all those years ago!
I'd have to think about that, but off the top of my head it would be 1. Never going to college/university, 2. Getting divorced from my monogamous marriage.
This is why I use quads, yes it hurts at first but after the first week or so its an excellent site just because of the area, I stay around the bottom of the pocket area so it far enough away from the knee, and always hit a new spot, 3 times a week, 50mg each injection, 7 years now based on your advice.
Testosterone doesn't need to be injected intramuscularly. I switched to subcutaneous T injections (in the fat pad on my stomach) and I haven't noticed any change in effectiveness at all.
Intramuscular injections get into your bloodstream faster, which is great when you're getting started, but once you've been doing TRT for a week or two, subcutaneous injections give you the same average T levels, and also smooth out the levels over time. Intramuscular injections give you more pronounced peaks and troughs of T; subcutaneous gives you more stable levels.
There are studies to back this up. If you want references, type "Is there any difference between the effectiveness of intramuscular testosterone injections and subcutaneous testosterone injections?" into perplexity.ai
BTW, thank you Caleb for introducing me to TRT and Dr. Faler all those years ago!
That's a very good point.
What are the other 2 in the top 3 best decisions of your life? I’m 39 soon and have already started to engage with a TRT Doc, thanks for the advise.
I'd have to think about that, but off the top of my head it would be 1. Never going to college/university, 2. Getting divorced from my monogamous marriage.