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Girlfriends found my peptides

ScarFace

GLP-1 Novice
Member Since
Sep 3, 2025
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London
Hello, I’m hoping for some advice…
As the title says my girlfriend has found all my peptides in the back of the fridge while I was at work and sent me a photo of them asking what they are. Because I was at work and didn’t want to have that conversation over the phone I just told her they are amino acids for certain things and I’ve tried one but It didn’t do much so I’m going to sell them. Which at the time was half true because I had only tried the Reta but it’s done quite the opposite of not much (lost 11KG in 5 weeks) but when I got home she didn’t ask anything about it so I decided not to mention it myself until the next day when I thought I better say something to give her the opportunity to ask any more questions she might have so I simply said did you put them back in the fridge after looking at them and she said yeah and went on to say that she thought they was steroids to which I replied no no their amino acids the body naturally produces but they help you along with the natural production blah blah blah. She then asked how I took them and I told her injection but left it at that. The reason I’m telling you this is because recently I’ve started GHK CU and TB500 aswell which are daily pins + wanting to try even more aswell which makes it’s harder to hide as it’s not just once a week anymore. So I need some advice on how to tell her I’m continuing to take them… she briefly mentioned them this morning saying that they can’t be good for you because it’s not naturally made and whatnot to which I just said that’s debatable and left it there. She’s not a controlling person and understands that what I want to do I will do regardless of what anyone thinks and I think she respects me for it but she knows I still value her opinion. Basically I just could use some advice on how to approach her about it and let her know without seeming like a d**k. Thanks
 
Show her when you actually ordered them to give her assurance that they aren't steroids. If the vendor sent a picture before shipping, that should also help. You can send her one or two articles or studies about the peptides. Even better if any of them might be useful for her so you can recommend them for her.

What to not do: Panic, say just trust me, ignore the issue.
 
“I’m pursuing this to improve my overall health and achieve specific weight loss and fitness goals. There’s solid science behind this despite some skepticism on the part of the traditional medical establishment. We all know how that bunch failed us all during COVID, so I’m making my own decisions based on my research. I hope you can understand that and support me in this.”
 
“I’m pursuing this to improve my overall health and achieve specific weight loss and fitness goals. There’s solid science behind this despite some skepticism on the part of the traditional medical establishment. We all know how that bunch failed us all during COVID, so I’m making my own decisions based on my research. I hope you can understand that and support me in this.”
Have you said this before? 😂 well said now I just have to recite my lines before I tell her tomorrow
 
Yeah that’s fine if she decides to not get all opinionated on it and actually sits down to read them what do I do if she don’t want to do that
She's your girlfriend, not lava. Smile at her and she should get mildly disarmed. I know I do when my boyfriend smiles.

But really just keep sending articles. If she's opinionated, she's likely to read them eventually.
 
Give her simplest education possible: https://www.webmd.com/a-to-z-guides/what-are-peptides

Many of our medications, including medications that save lives are peptide. Including insulin. Point her to the most basic information possible, then point out that the makeup and skincare she uses is positively filled with peptides.
This is spot-on. After a lot of the squinty-eye from she-who-shares-the-address, I reduced my ranting and manifesto-sharing to just that point: "I'm addressing my health condition with a peptide treatment, which uses a series of aminos to instruct the body to do the correct thing instead of directly forcing a change. For example, the first synthetic peptide was Insulin."
The response was still a squinty look, but also grudging agreement that it made sense.
 
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