A measured, harm-reduction look at testosterone enanthate, what to monitor on TRT or a cycle, and the bloodwork that actually matters.
Cypionate behaves almost identically to enanthate. Here is what to monitor, the bloodwork that matters, and the mistakes to avoid.
Propionate clears fast, which means frequent injections and sharper fluctuations. Here is what that changes about tracking.
A four-ester testosterone blend with a tricky release curve. Why the mixed esters complicate tracking and what to monitor.
A long-ester 19-nortestosterone with a real medical history and serious suppression. What to monitor, including the things people miss.
NPP is nandrolone on a faster ester. Same compound, same risks, more frequent injections. What to track.
A potent 19-nor anabolic with a heavy side-effect load. This is a harm-reduction tracking guide, not an endorsement.
Same potent, high-risk compound as the enanthate version, on a short ester. What the faster clearance changes for tracking.
A long-acting veterinary steroid sometimes used by humans. What it does, the slow timeline, and what to monitor.
A DHT-derived anabolic associated with cutting and "hardening." What that means, what it does not do, and what to monitor.
The longer-acting version of Masteron. Same DHT-derived profile, fewer injections, slower kinetics. What to track.
Often called gentle, but still suppressive and not risk-free. What "mild" actually means and what to monitor.
An oral with a real medical history and a gentle reputation - but real liver, lipid, and suppression concerns. What to monitor.
Fast mass and strength, heavy water retention, and real liver and blood-pressure costs. What to monitor on this classic oral.
A DHT-derived steroid known for a "dry" look - and for hammering cholesterol and joints. What to monitor closely.
Big, fast mass and red-cell effects with heavy liver, blood-pressure, and side-effect load. What to monitor carefully.
A non-aromatising oral known for steady lean gains and a long detection window. What to track and the liver and lipid costs.
A breast-cancer drug with boxed warnings, sometimes used off-label for gynecomastia or HPTA recovery. What to monitor and respect.
A SERM used for fertility and to raise testosterone via LH and FSH. What to track, including the visual-disturbance warning.
A non-steroidal AI that lowers estrogen. Useful in the right context, harmful if you over-suppress. What to monitor.
A steroidal aromatase inhibitor that binds irreversibly. How it differs from anastrozole and what to monitor.
The strongest of the common AIs - and the easiest to crash estrogen with. Why low doses and labs matter most here.
What triptorelin is, its clinical uses, and what self-experimenters tracking off-label post-cycle restarts should log honestly.
What vasopressin is, where it is used clinically, and the honest framing for any self-experimenter considering tracking it.