I would expect that most of the warnings are geared towards newbies that don't know anything about TRT or other PEDs. No doom or gloom, but do your research.
Let's face it, most people on the GLP-1 journey would be better just adding resistance training to their regime before ever taking up test or SARMS, unless your levels are truly testing low.
I'll say it again, take what you want. Everything comes with risk, but educate yourself on what you're taking. I haven't seen anyone advocating recurring labs for tirz/sema etc., but you definitely should get them done if you are using PEDs. You don't need a PCT protocol to get off tirz/sema. There's factors to take into consideration before starting a PED cycle.
Yes, going to a clinic and getting TRT is infinitely safer, but is that what we're really talking about here?
It’s a fair approach, but the default medical disclaimer for both peptides, steroids and most other stuff is a bit over the top.
So repeating that as a first response, is not very nuanced, nor good practical advice.
Saying you shouldn’t consider trt because it might be permanent. Is leading with the extremes, which is unfortunate in my opinion, others that have the same viewpoint will agree with you. A teenager or kid in his early 20s will be more likely to think you’re full of shit and ignore the advice, exactly because you are leading with the extremes, and statistically speaking - it’s fear-mongering.
I’d compare it to me telling you not to take paracetamol because you might get an ulcer. While it’s true, it’s not really a very likely scenario, and you would chose to kill the headache without fearing an ulcer.
By all means, if you don’t need medication - you shouldn’t take it, we completely agree. But in reality, we make a lot of bad choices for various reasons, so practice is different from theory here. I very much agree with you that you should go into it fully informed.
But fully informed also means to include upsides and positives, weighing potential risk vs reward.
I had an interesting argument with ChatGPT yesterday, I wanted it to scan some studies and do some research for me. But it kept refusing to generate a response. And in the end more or less confirmed that it was censoring factual medical information because it was against it’s ethical guidelines to supply the information??
I would hope that anyone considering steroids actually do go to a specialist (not a GP), and get regular blood work done. I downplay a lot of the side effects because I feel that people are generally overly cautious, but if you are unlucky it could get real bad - so better safe than sorry, safe use over gambling any day of the week.
I think the argument
@mostlydamp was making wasn’t specifically about trt being safe. But that the risk assessment people do when ordering peptides (Chinese or research), might be a bit lacking.
There are quite a few risk factors being blatantly ignored. And the market over in China isn’t as straight forward as it might seem.
That said, the issue with quality in steroid raws is bigger than with peptides since they are more actively doing something about it.
There is a lot of bunk and bad product going out from china. It’s not a nice and clean market. So you are taking some risk when ordering, though it is likely to be perfectly safe.