MakeNoPeaceWithEvil
GLP-1 Apprentice

What vitamin supplement y'all taking while on Reta? Also, I need a grey vendor for freaking electrolytes. That sh*t's getting expensive lol


I got some GRAY market Gatorade!! meet me behind Walmart tonight! you know the place. and this time turn off your mini van lights when creeping up to our rendezvous.... I take BTC.MakeNoPeaceWithEvil said:What vitamin supplement y'all taking while on Reta? Also, I need a grey vendor for freaking electrolytes. That sh*t's getting expensive lol




Goddamn, this guy supplements!Tbagger said:I’m on about as many vitamins and supplements as I am peptides lol
Men’s one a day multivitamin
Protein 50g-100g
Creatine 5g-10g
Collagen peptide 10g-15g
EEA 1200mg
Calcium HMB 1000mg
DHM 350mg
Lions Mane 500mg
Cod Liver Oil 1000mg
Methylene Blue 10mg
Ashwaganda 600mg
B complex
TMG 750mg
CoQ10 200mg
L-Methylfolate 1000mcg
NAC 600mg
Vitamin C 1000mg
Vitamin E 400IU
Zinc 45mg
HMB 1000mg



It’s a close call, but I still think it goes to the peps.Ruckus4519 said:@Tbagger
@theoretical_maximum
so what cost more? the pep stack or the supp stack![]()

While I agree to some extent, maximizing supplementation while cycling peptides is a bit more nuanced. For example, NAD+ depletes methyl groups so it is benifical to take TMG and L-Methylfolate. Glutathione needs NAC, Vitamin C, and Vitamin E support to work effectively. Mitochondrial stacks like SS-31 and Mots-c are enhanced with the addition of CoQ10 and Methylene Blue. And Reta is aided my things like HMB, Omega-3, and DHM.theoretical_maximum said:Friendly reminder that most people don't need vitamin supplementation, it's pretty hard to be deficient in most things if you live in a developed nation


In general I pretty much entirely agree with that including both the fact that supplements are not needed and that I too am a hypocrite in this.theoretical_maximum said:Friendly reminder that most people don't need vitamin supplementation, it's pretty hard to be deficient in most things if you live in a developed nation, with the exception being Vitamin D. But vit D levels should be tested, because it's fat soluble and can accumulate. If your levels are normal, you don't need it, and if your levels are low, the 400-2000iu you're getting at the store aren't gonna be enough anyway, so you need to know if you need it, and how much you need if you do.
This goes double for electrolytes, our bodies are, at the most basic level, just a system for moving electrolytes around, and because of this, the body is really really good at managing electrolyte balance. You're not working out hard enough to need electrolyte replacement. The vast majority of marathon runners do not get electrolyte abnormalities requiring supplementation, you don't start to see problems until you're talk about ultra distance athletes. So stop wasting your money on expensive salt.
ALL OF THAT SAID, I"M A HYPOCRITE.
My stack: Multivitamin, Omega-3 fish oils, mag glycinate (only every other day, because my mag levels are actually on the high end of normal), glucosamine (because my joints are shot), ashgawanda, boron, creatine, and protein. No vit d because there's 400iu in my MVI and my vit d levels are optimal.

lessthanhalf said:based usually on a smallish number of small studies, and for many supplements the results are mixed showing high levels of heterogeneity.

