HouseLivesMatter

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HouseLivesMatter

HouseLivesMatter

@EndBigPharmaNow

higga (house/home)

Katılım Şubat 2020
115 Takip Edilen39 Takipçiler
HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@DrPinyaPlomer @DrJosefWD How can you QUANTIFIABLY prove someone has a chemical imbalance? Oh wait, you can’t 😉 it’s all “observation of symptoms”
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Dr. Josef
Dr. Josef@DrJosefWD·
The biggest lie in psychiatry.
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@ericawriter @DrJosefWD Find me one piece of empirical evidence that proves a chemical imbalance exists in the brain of the depressed. You can’t. It’s merely “theory”. There is zero way to quantifiably measure seretonin activity in the brain.
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@BigDave @intensityjt @BowTiedYukon You have to be legitimately slow to think he’s aiming to do real pushups here. JT is right they are targeting triceps. Still somewhat retarded imo but it’s not a real pushup. I think Yukon’s tweet was bait
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Big Dave
Big Dave@BigDave·
“Come on man” I don’t know, I’m not talking about what he CAN do, dumbass. Not once have I said anything about abilities. That’s what YOU keep focusing on, running defense harder than an NFL lineman for some reason. I’m talking about what he IS doing. On camera. And showing off with. And what that would be are dogshit pushups. Plain and simple. I don’t give a fuck what he CAN do, it’s not changing what he IS doing, especially since that is not how you train a weakness in a range of motion. Just because a talented athete decides to do something does not mean it’s magically some 10,000IQ training method. Sometimes smart and talented people just do dumb shit. It happens. You’re not around very many of them if you don’t understand that.
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BowTiedYukon
BowTiedYukon@BowTiedYukon·
Stephan Diggs out here doing zero pushups like it’s impressive
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@punishedfounder @MelRoBuilds @tryspikehealth This is so confusing because I took 50mg for a year straight and all that happened was I felt like a god with natty test of 942. Maybe it wasn’t the zinc but more being stress free + copious food but it’s just funny how I had zero reaction
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c
c@punishedfounder·
@MelRoBuilds @tryspikehealth or even if you take both, going over 30mg zinc a few times will still f*ck you up for like 25 days via acute metallothionein upregulation which will then sequester a whole host of minerals for no good reason
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Melissa Rose
Melissa Rose@MelRoBuilds·
Hey... guys... this is a PSA Please be careful about supplementing solo copper or zinc If you dont know what youre doing, either get it from whole foods or from a balanced combo supplement, like from @tryspikehealth
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@ThePepGuy What made you personally go with Tesa over real GH? Most guys I ask just say to run real GH but I’ve always wondered if there’s any special benefits
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ThePepGuy 🔋
ThePepGuy 🔋@ThePepGuy·
I think the Tesa is really kicking in. Gained about 6-8 pounds in a matter of 3 weeks. (Probably some water retention but cant tell) Tesamorelin Protocol: - 1mg before bed fasted for 2 hours Supporting factors: - 3000 cals per day of whole foods - Over 200 grams of protein per day - Electrolytes and Celtic Sea Salt - Push Pull Legs + Hot Yoga Side effects: - First night was the best sleep ever, but for about 2 weeks I switched to mornings because it actually destroyed sleep for a bit. - Definitely noticing a bit of acne which may be stress related. Although, elevated IGF-1 can lead to acne so it makes sense. - When I first started, I had a boys trip and had about 20 surf sides. My feet were literally swollen like balloons! I assumed it was from the Tesa as that never happened before 🤣 Any questions about my experience, let me know! -ThePepGuy
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S6BER
S6BER@s6berr·
Clavicular EXPLAINS Ozempic side effects and REVEALS his Retatrutide protocol for the BEST results 😳👀 "The thing about Ozempic is it's like... it's only a single agonist and it hits the GLP-1 super hard, so all you get is nausea, uh, indigestion, and GI issues." "Whereas Reta is a lot more selective, right? It's going to hit those three receptors... you don't actually feel physically nauseous. You just have no appetite..." "I'm on Reta. Like I'm on 10 mg every five days... It blunts my appetite entirely, uh, and I'm—I'm completely used to it at this point."
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@TakeThiamine I read this article and started out with an (admittedly cheap) b complex / 125 thiamine I got from Bronson. I started waking up w a racing heart and had a rosacea flare. Did some research and apparently this could point to MTHFR or something- do you have any idea if that’s true?
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J͎Λ͎Y͎
J͎Λ͎Y͎@TakeThiamine·
High dose thiamine therapy changed my life. I have recommended this versatile B vitamin to many people for many different reasons. Throughout my own experience with it, I have learned a lot and received a lot of questions, so I have taken the time to organize all the answers here. Disclaimer: I am not a doctor and this is not medical advice. Thiamine Therapy FAQs 1. What is thiamine? Thiamine, or vitamin B1, is a water-soluble vitamin and, as the "1" implies, the first water-soluble vitamin ever discovered. It was found in 1910 by Japanese agricultural chemist Umetaro Suzuki but it wasn't until 1934 that its structure was determined by Robert Runnels Williams. It was named by the Williams team as a portmanteau of "thio" (sulfur-containing) and "vitamin". Modern spellings of thiamine often omit the "e" since it is not an amine as was previously thought, but still the spelling with the "e" remains the most common. Thiamine is necessary for: • Energy metabolism • Nervous system function • Cardiovascular health • Cellular function • Digestive health • Muscle function • Immune function • Hormone health • Detoxification Conditions improved with thiamine supplementation include: • Beriberi • Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome • Depression • Shingles • Cataracts • IBS • IBD • POTS • CFS • MS • MCAS • Sleep apnea • Parkinson's • Alzheimer's • Autism • Fibromyalgia • Diabetes • Dysautonomia • Cancer These are all metabolic illnesses, or illnesses which have a major metabolic component, and thiamine is crucial for metabolism. 2. What is the difference between the different forms? The active form of thiamine is thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP), and it is this form that makes its way into the cell. The most common forms of supplemental thiamine are thiamine hydrochloride (B1 HCl) and thiamine mononitrate (TMN)—these are low-bioavailability salt forms. More potent forms of thiamine were developed in Japan in the '50s, and these consist of TTFD, benfotiamine, sulbutiamine, allithiamine, and prosultiamine, among others. Some of these are naturally occurring (allithiamine), while others are synthetic (TTFD, benfotiamine, sulbutiamine, and prosultiamine). These potent forms are often considered "fat-soluble", although this classification is not entirely accurate. Technically, these forms are still water-soluble, but their chemical structure allows for greatly increased permeability through the cell membrane as if they were fat-soluble. What makes these "fat-soluble" forms so unique is their ability to bypass the need for transporter proteins (ThTR1, ThTR2), making them effective in people who have thiamine transport issues. 3. What can cause a thiamine deficiency? • Refined carbohydrate intake* • High intake of coffee, teas, and raw fish** • Alcoholism • Kidney disease • Diabetes • Diarrhea • Metformin • Antibiotics (Flagyl) • Diuretics • Metabolic disease • Digestive issues • Surgery • Stress *This does not make carbohydrates inherently bad, it is simply a metabolic reality that carbohydrate metabolism needs thiamine. **These contain thiaminases, or enzymes that break down thiamine. This does not make coffee, tea, or raw fish inherently bad, but it is something to keep in mind if one is consuming these regularly. 4. Why such a high dose? Because of the generality of potential symptoms, thiamine deficiency is greatly underdiagnosed. Thiamine deficiency can be brought on by a "functional deficiency", where oxidative stress and inflammation block enzymes that use thiamine or destroy the molecule entirely. There are also regional deficiencies that are localized to just the brain, the heart, or the digestive system. In some people, transport proteins can be deficient or defective. In such a circumstance, either larger doses or more potent forms are necessary. Part of the high-dose therapy is the aspect of total saturation—using the vitamin in supraphysiological doses, making it drug-like, and helping the body to "remember" how to use this crucial nutrient. Unlike pharmaceuticals, however, this "drug-like" use of thiamine is much safer than patented drugs. 5. Which enzymes need thiamine? • Pyruvate dehydrogenase, a rate-limiting step in glucose oxidation and the "key" for entry into the Krebs cycle from glycolysis (a crucial step in breaking down carbs) • α-Ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, another rate-limiting step, this time in the Krebs cycle, which involves the metabolism of the 3 main fuel substrates (carbs, fats, and proteins) • Branched-chain ketoacid dehydrogenase, needed to process branched-chain amino acids from protein • Transketolase, the enzyme which connects the pentose phosphate pathway to glycolysis, crucial for antioxidant defenses and damage repair 6. How bioavailable are the different forms? • Thiamine hydrochloride (B1 HCl), 3-10%* • Thiamine mononitrate (TMN), 3-10%* • TTFD (thiamine tetrahydrofurfuryl disulfide, also known as fursultiamine), 50-90% • Sulbutiamine, 50-90% • Benfotiamine, 50-90% *Due to passive diffusion, doses above 500 mg will increase the bioavailability, however, opting for B1 HCl over TMN due to the latter's nitrate content would be preferable. 7. Which forms cross the blood-brain barrier? • B1 HCl*, limited entry • TMN*, limited entry • TPP**, limited entry • TTFD, crosses BBB • Sulbutiamine, crosses BBB • Benfotiamine, crosses BBB *While B1 HCl and TMN cannot cross the BBB, bolus doses can increase bioavailability due to passive diffusion. People with serious neurological issues like Parkinson's have been shown to get relief from 2 - 4 grams of B1 HCl, so it should not be written off for being "low bioavailability". **TPP is the active form of thiamine but when supplemented orally, it reaches the intestine and is converted back into normal thiamine. However, phosphorylated forms of thiamine such as TMP and TDP can cross the BBB. 8. What is the best form? There is no best form of thiamine; it is entirely dependent on a person’s individual needs. A good form to start with is B1 HCl: it’s cheap, least likely to provoke a "paradoxical reaction", and can accustom one to thiamine so that one feels more ready to try potent forms. 9. What is the best dose? This is another impossible question to answer. Not only regarding thiamine, but with most any supplement that is correcting a metabolic problem. The amount of thiamine needed to fix metabolic problems is so widely variable that it would be useless to know how much helped someone else. However, there are effective dose ranges: • B1 HCl, 500 mg - 4,000 mg • TTFD, 100 mg - 800 mg • Benfotiamine, 300 mg - 1,000 mg Use common sense: start low and titrate up slowly. Never take more than one new supplement at a time to keep track of what is doing what. Additionally, the upper ranges listed for TTFD and benfotiamine will rarely need to be reached. 10. When is the best time to take thiamine? At least 30 minutes after the first meal of the day with plain or sparkling mineral water. If taking a second dose, 30 minutes after lunch. Some find that thiamine helps with sleep, but taking it at night is less common due to it being mentally stimulating. 11. Is there a dosage-equivalence between different forms? There is not enough available data to answer this question. Based on bioavailability estimates, one can assume benfotiamine and TTFD are similar, but these are not equivalent in their action. Elliot Overton has observed lower doses of TTFD achieving similar effects to higher doses of benfotiamine. Although this is anecdotal, it is worth keeping in mind. 12. How long to take thiamine for? Yet again, it is entirely dependent on the person’s unique physiology and circumstances! Some take a high dose for 3 - 6 months and find that they can taper down to nothing; others use thiamine on an as-needed basis for mentally or physically demanding tasks; and still others need to take it for life, as in the case of serious neurological illnesses like Parkinson's. Still, taking a relatively inexpensive and widely available B vitamin is preferable to relying on a patented pharmaceutical with a concerning list of side effects. 13. Does high-dose thiamine therapy increase the need for other nutrients? Yes. HDT therapy may increase the need for: • B2 • B3 • B5* • B6 • B7* • B9 • B12* • Salt • Magnesium* • Potassium • Copper • Selenium • Molybdenum* • CoQ10* • Glutathione* *These tend to be the nutrients put under the most pressure by thiamine. Is the solution to panic and start taking all of these supplementally? Definitely not. Eat a balanced diet, start with a B complex, add in magnesium, and go from there. Additional troubleshooting may or may not be required down the line. Thiamine HCl is the easiest to titrate up and typically involves the least troubleshooting. Disulfide derivatives (TTFD, allithiamine, sulbutiamine, and prosultiamine) may put pressure on sulfur metabolism which may be remediated with CoQ10 and/or molybdenum. 14. What about brewer's yeast? Nutritional yeast? Nutritional yeast and brewer's yeast both contain phytoestrogens and can cause gut upset when used supplementally at the frequency needed for high dose thiamine therapy due to their probiotic content. It is possible to boil off the phytoestrogens and probiotics, but it would be more practical to use a quality B complex supplement. 15. Can thiamine deficiency be tested for? Currently, there are five methods to measure thiamine status, however, not all or accurate or practical: • Blood thiamine • Urinary thiamine excretion • Pyruvate and lactate • Whole blood high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) • Erythrocyte transketolase activity/thiamine pyrophosphate effect (ETKA/TPPE) Blood thiamine is the most common thiamine test and is useless because it only shows whether or not thiamine was ingested recently. The blood contains only 0.8% of total body free thiamine, making this test not at all reflective of tissue levels. Concentration of thiamine in the blood or plasma can be completely normal even in an advanced deficiency. It is likely a doctor's first choice if their patient tells them they are concerned about a thiamine deficiency, though. Urinary thiamine excretion is a similar story. Since thiamine is required for pyruvate metabolism, elevated pyruvate and lactate can be a sign of thiamine deficiency. HPLC is one of the newest methods of testing and it is used to measure thiamine, TPP, and its esters in the erythrocytes. HPLC is more accurate than blood or urine tests and more able to identify the early stages of a thiamine deficiency, however, it is costly and not easy to order. The most accurate thiamine test available to the general public, therefore, is the ETKA/TPPE: a pair of tests which assess thiamine usage and reflect stores at the tissue level. • First, baseline transketolase activity (TKA) is measured in international units per liter of blood per unit of time (normal ranges being between 42-86 mU/L/min). • Next, TKA is repeated after active thiamine (TPP) is added to the reaction medium. • If TKA increases, it is taken as proof that the enzyme was not saturated with its cofactor. • This is reported as the percentage increase over base activity and is known as the “thiamine pyrophosphate effect”, or TPPE (normal ranges being 0% - 18%). Derrick Lonsdale and Chandler Marrs have made some useful observations on ETKA/TPPE results: • Sometimes the TKA is low while the TPPE is normal and this would suggest abnormality in the TKA enzyme. • In most cases of thiamine deficiency, the TPPE is increased, sometimes remarkably so, while the TKA is in the normal range. • In a more severe deficiency state, the TKA is low, but in the normal range, and the TPPE is high. "Correlating the patient's symptoms with a fall in the TPPE and a rise in TKA (remaining within the normal range) is an excellent way of proving the clinical effect of thiamine supplementation," they conclude. While the ETKA/TPPE is the best test for thiamine deficiency, even this test is imperfect. With this in mind, it is best to try thiamine regardless because of how low risk it is. 16. How to tell if thiamine is working? Generally, whether thiamine is working or not is obvious. For many—especially when higher doses are reached—the difference is night and day. For others, they may have paradoxical reactions or need to dial in other nutrients which thiamine may put undue pressure on. If someone wanted to be sure thiamine was helping, buying an at-home lactate meter (such as the Nova Biomedical Lactate Plus Meter) to see whether thiamine raises or lowers lactate would be reasonable. 17. Which products to take? • B1 HCl - Pure Bulk, Dr. Clark Store • TTFD - Objective Nutrients ThiaMax* • Mixed - Objective Nutrients ThiaMega* • Benfotiamine - Bulk Supplements • B Complex - Objective Nutrients ThiActive methylated B complex, Premier Research Labs Complete B, -Pure Encapsulations B-Complex Plus, Dr. Clark Store Super B100 *If you feel you are ready to try the most potent forms of thiamine, use code "TAKETHIAMINE" for 10% off your order at Objective Nutrients. The only quality TTFD product without excipients on the market is ThiaMax, and I trust it enough to take daily. 18. Additional resources? • Dr. Antonio Costantini's YouTube channel • Elliot Overton's YouTube channel • Elliot Overton's protocols for addressing thiamine deficiency & the paradoxical reaction PDF • Hormones Matter blog • "Thiamine Deficiency Disease, Dysautonomia, and High Calorie Malnutrition" by Derrick Lonsdale and Chandler Marrs • Chris Masterjohn's Energy Metabolism Masterclass
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@tjgallyjr Teej- as an opener tell her you would love to put your fishing rod in her tackle box. Best of luck
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@MattWalshBlog He’s not a true anti ager. He literally only cares about his appearance . He masquerades it as being a picture of “health” because it sells lol…
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Matt Walsh
Matt Walsh@MattWalshBlog·
No, sorry. You’re going to die. Very soon actually, in the grand scheme of things. You have several decades at most. In 70 or 80 years, tops, nobody reading these words right now will be alive. Most will not even be remembered. This fact is so terrifying to some people that they live every second in denial, clinging to the insane hope that somehow “science” will come along and rescue them from mortality. Even if it could — which it definitely can’t — then what? You live to watch all of your friends and loved ones die and even their tombstones decay while you linger on, trembling in fear and grasping desperately onto a life that, no matter how long it lasts, you’ve already wasted? And then you get to see the Earth decay around you and the Sun burn out ? Wow. Sounds like a lot of fun. But no thanks. I don’t need to live for a million years. I just want the time I have, however long or short, to be meaningful.
Andrew Côté@Andercot

Avoiding sun is being extremely bearish on the longevity/ biotech thesis Assume we will have peptides for everything. Retroviral DNA upgrades. Nanobot healing glands. Nature wants us dead at 35. Science will have us live to see the stars burn out.

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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@AlenaDaOG And they can’t exactly repo the home if I’m chilling in the house so….
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@AlenaDaOG Apparently you can just not pay them or something idk I saw a post like that one time. I mean imagine. They implant a 200k electronic heart or some shit in you. You chill in your house while the wagie IRS guy soyjaks outside your door. Wtf is he gonna do? Rip the heart out?
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anon
anon@AlenaDaOG·
why do we the people allow the government to let healthcare put so many people into crippling debt ? when they are at the hands of most people’s sickness ??? seriously whats up with that
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@CastlesAddict @SM92436401 @alexaaronlab And he put on 50-60 pounds since then. Not happening naturally. I’m not even a hater or anything I’m speaking scientifically. There’s a point where it levels off. By the way his face is swollen af compared to his body… that’s a sure fire sign of gear use
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Alex Aaron
Alex Aaron@alexaaronlab·
Fuck enhanced games. I don’t care abt a swimmer on gear. Make the nfl untested. That would be the most entertaining thing on TV. EVER Imagine Derrick Henry on 180mg test, nandrolone, cardarine, Wolverine stack, DSIP, 5 IU GH, and adderal. Come on
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@TwonXBT This is his Reddit account dude is deadass the Ronnie Coleman of this shit and there’s a ton of posts from him so you’d have to be kinda gay and look thru a bunch but long story short aJelqForYou and gettingbigger have some good guides. It’s crazy on there niggas spending 2hrs
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@SM92436401 @alexaaronlab He already is under heart stress. I’m a ravens fan so I watch their games. He is coming off the field after 1st down literally gasping, hands on hips. He is 260 pounds lean. No one does that without gear. And the shot cardio is frankly enough evidence
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Johnmoe
Johnmoe@SM92436401·
@alexaaronlab He'd die of heart failure within 10 years but it'd be a hell of a show
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HouseLivesMatter
HouseLivesMatter@EndBigPharmaNow·
@chooserich Also not sure if you can cancel yet or if you can afford another pair (aren’t you rich?) but powerblocks are WAYYY better
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Nick O’Neill
Nick O’Neill@chooserich·
First purchase from solana:5hiLgyybrAYPpUwNFa38agfZ8iEtnahWKAPixcfspump proceeds… Staying physically active increases survival rates over 60% during treatment P.S. Don’t want this to become a cancer account so launching something soon…
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