If u ever thought about using T3

iced

Banned, had no choice
Thyroid Hormone for Weight Loss:
Physiologic and Metabolic Effects
by Nandi



Editors Note: We are extremely pleased to have Nandi contributing an article for us this month (and, hopefully, many to come). One of the main things Mind and Muscle was missing was a regular "anabolics guy" -- and, now, assuming things go as expected for all parties, we have found ourselves one of the very best out there.

For those who are unaware, Nandi, in addition to being what I consider a top 5 mind in this arena, is the owner of Cutting Edge Muscle, the premiere Anabolics board on the internet. It is far and away the closest thing to our forums as far as quality of info, atmosphere, etc. - I had, in fact, approached Nandi to run our anabolics board, before he formed CEM, but got busy and dropped the ball).

If any of you have not seen it, I strongly, strongly recommend that you head over to their website and do a good deal of reading (but only after you have finished reading M&M and our forums, of course :)



Introduction


It has been over 100 years since the discovery by Magnus-Levy that thyroid hormones play a central role in energy homeostasis, and 75 years since the hormones were first used for weight loss. Despite this great length of time, the precise mechanisms by which thyroid hormones exert their calorigenic effect are not completely characterized, and still actively debated. Despite numerous clinical studies having shown that the administration of thyroid hormone induces weight loss, it is not currently indicated as a weight loss agent. This is probably due to the number of side effects observed during thyroid hormone use at the relatively high doses used in the majority of obesity treatment studies. These deleterious effects include cardiac problems such as tachycardia and atrial arrhythmias, loss of muscle mass as well as fat, increased bone resorption and muscle weakness. Nevertheless, thyroid hormones, particularly triiodothyronine (T3) are a mainstay in the arsenal of drugs used by bodybuilders for fat loss. The widespread underground use of T3 warrants an understanding of its mechanism of action, as well as a knowledge of how it is most effectively and safely used, with an eye to minimizing side effects.



Thyroid Function and Physiology


Before jumping right into a discussion of the use of thyroid hormone for fat loss, a little review of thyroid function and physiology might be in order. The thyroid gland secretes two hormones of interest to us, thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3). T3 is considered the physiologically active hormone, and T4 is converted peripherally into T3 by the action of the enzyme deiodinase. The bulk of the body's T3 (about 80%) comes from this conversion. The secretion of T4 is under the control of Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH) which is produced by the pituitary gland. TSH secretion is in turn controlled through release of Thyrotropin Releasing Hormone which is produced in the hypothalamus. This is analogous to testosterone production, where GnRH from the hypothalamus causes the pituitary to release LH, which in turn stimulates the testes to produce testosterone.

In addition to T3, it has recently been recognized that there exist two additional active metabolites of T3: 3,5 and 3,3' diiodothyronines, which we will collectively call T2. Studies have shown that 3,3'-T2 may be more effective in raising resting metabolic rate when hypothyroid subjects are treated with T3, than when normal (euthyroid) subjects are given T3. Therefore in normal subjects 3,5-T2 may be the principal active metabolite of T3 (1)

Like the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis, the thyroid gland is under negative feedback control. When T3 levels go up, TSH secretion is suppressed. This is the mechanism whereby exogenous thyroid hormone suppresses natural thyroid hormone production. There is a difference though between the way anabolic steroids suppress natural testosterone production and the way T3 suppresses the thyroid. With steroids, the longer and heavier the cycle is, the longer your natural testosterone is suppressed. This is not the case with exogenous thyroid hormone.

An early study that looked at thyroid function and recovery under the influence of exogenous thyroid hormone was undertaken by Greer (2). He looked at patients who were misdiagnosed as being hypothyroid and put on thyroid hormone replacement for as long as 30 years. When the medication was withdrawn, their thyroids quickly returned to normal.

Here is a remark about Greer's classic paper from a later author:


"In 1951, Greer reported the pattern of recovery of thyroid function after stopping suppressive treatment with thyroid hormone in euthyroid [normal] subjects based on sequential measurements of their thyroidal uptake of radioiodine. He observed that after withdrawal of exogenous thyroid therapy, thyroid function, in terms of radioiodine uptake, returned to normal in most subjects within two weeks. He further observed that thyroid function returned as rapidly in those subjects whose glands had been depressed by several years of thyroid medication as it did in those whose gland had been depressed for only a few days" (3)

These results have been subsequently verified in several studies.(3)(4) So contrary to what has been stated in the bodybuilding literature, there is no evidence that long term thyroid supplementation will somehow damage your thyroid gland. Nevertheless, most bodybuilders will choose to cycle their T3 (or T4 which in most cases works just as well) as part of a cutting strategy, since T3 is catabolic with respect to muscle just as it is with fat. As previously mentioned, long term T3 induced hyperthyroidism is also catabolic to bone as well as muscle.

The proviso about T4 vs T3 for weight loss alluded to above needs some elaboration. There have been a number of studies that have shown that during starvation, or when carbohydrate intake is reduced to approximately 25 to 50 grams per day, levels of deiodinase decline, hindering the conversion of T4 to the physiologically active T3.(5) From an evolutionary standpoint this makes sense: during periods of starvation the body, teleologically speaking, would like to reduce its basal metabolic rate to preserve fat and especially muscle stores. However, a recent study demonstrating the effectiveness and safety of the ketogenic diet for weight loss recorded no change in circulating T3 levels.(6) So this issue not completely settled. Nevertheless, persons contemplating thyroid supplementation during ketogenic dieting might prefer T3 over T4 since the bulk of the research does suggest a decline in the peripheral conversion of T4 to T3 during low carb dieting.

Now that we have reviewed a little about thyroid function, let's consider just how it is that thyroid hormone exerts its fat burning effects.



Increased Oxidative Energy Metabolism


Thyroid hormone has long been recognized as a major regulator of the oxidative metabolism of energy producing substrates (food or stored substrates like fat, muscle, and glycogen) by the mitochondria. The mitochondria are often called the "cell's powerhouses" because this is where foodstuffs are turned into useful energy in the form of ATP. T3 and T2 increase the flux of nutrients into the mitochondria as well as the rate at which they are oxidized, by increasing the activities of the enzymes involved in the oxidative metabolic pathway. The increased rate of oxidation is reflected by an increase in oxygen consumption by the body.

T3 and T2 appear to act by different mechanisms to produce different results. T2 is believed to act on the mitochondria directly, increasing the rate of mitochondrial respiration, with a consequent increase in ATP production. T3 on the other hand acts at the nuclear level, inducing the transcription of genes controlling energy metabolism, primarily the genes for so-called uncoupling proteins, or UCP (see below). The time course of these two actions is quite different. T2 begins to increase mitochondrial respiration and metabolic rate immediately. T3 on the other hand requires a day or longer to increase RMR since the synthesis of new proteins, the UCP, is required (1).

There are a number of putative mechanisms whereby T2 is believed to increase mitochondrial energy production rates, resulting in increased ATP levels. These include an increased influx of Ca++ into the mitochondria, with a resulting increase in mitochondrial dehydrogenases. This in turn would lead to an increase in reduced substrates available for oxidation. An increase in cytochrome oxidase activity has also been observed. This would hasten the reduction of O2, speeding up respiration. These and a number of other proposed mechanisms for the action of T2 are reviewed by Lannie et al.(7)

What is the fate of the extra ATP produced during hyperthyroidism? There are a number of ways by which the increased ATP promotes an increase in metabolic activity, including the following:

Increased Na+/K+ATPase. This is the enzyme responsible for controlling the Na/K pump, which regulates the relative intracellular and extracellular concentrations of these ions, maintaining the normal transmembrane ion gradient. Sestoft(7) has estimated this effect may account for up to to 10% of the increased ATP usage.


Increased Ca++-dependent ATPase. The intracellular concentration of calcium must be kept lower than the extracellular concentration to maintain normal cellular function. ATP is required to pump out excess calcium. It has been estimated that 10% of a cell's energy expenditure is used just to maintain Ca++ homeostasis. (1)


Substrate cycling. Hyperthyroidism induces a futile cycle of lipogenesis/lipolysis in fat cells. The stored triglycerides are broken down into free fatty acids and glycerol, then reformed back into triglycerides again. This is an energy dependent process that utilizes some of the excess ATP produced in the hyperthyroid state (8). Futile cycling has been estimated to use approximately 15% of the excess ATP created during hyperthyroidism (8)


Increased Heart Work. This puts perhaps the greatest single demand on ATP usage, with increased heart rate and force of contraction accounting for up to 30% to 40% of ATP usage in hyperthyroidism (9)



Mitochondrial Uncoupling


As mentioned, the mitochondria are often characterized as the cell's powerhouse. They convert foodstuffs into ATP, which is used to fuel all the body's metabolic processes. Much research suggests that T3, like another much more potent agent DNP, has the ability to uncouple oxidation of substrates from ATP production. T3 is believed to increase the production of so called uncoupling proteins. Uncoupling protein (UCP) is a transporter family that is present in the mitochondrial inner membrane, and as its name suggests, it uncouples respiration from ATP synthesis by dissipating the transmembrane proton gradient as heat. Instead of useful ATP being produced from energy substrates, heat is generated instead. There are conflicting studies about the importance of T3 induced uncoupling. Animal studies have demonstrated an actual increase in ATP production commensurate with increased oxygen consumption as we discussed above. Other studies in humans have shown that in fact uncoupling in skeletal muscle does occur. This would contribute to T3 induced thermogenesis, with a resulting increase in basal metabolic rate.(10)

To make up for the deficit in ATP production (as well as provide fuel for the extra ATP production discussed above) more substrates must be burned for fuel, resulting in fat loss. Unfortunately, along with the fat that is burned, some protein from muscle is also catabolized for energy. This is the downside of T3 use, and the reason many people choose to use an anabolic steroid or prohormone during a T3 cycle to help preserve muscle mass. Studies have shown this to be an effective strategy (11). (Muscle glycogen is also more rapidly depleted, and less efficiently stored during hyperthyroidism. This may account for some of the muscle weakness generally associated with T3 use.)

Countering T3 induced muscle loss with Anabolic Androgenic Steroids (AAS) or prohormones makes sense from a physiological viewpoint as well. Thyroid hormone muscle protein breakdown is mainly mediated via the so-called ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. (12). (There are several independent metabolic pathways of protein breakdown in the body. For instance, another pathway, the lysosomal pathway, is responsible for the accelerated rate of muscle protein breakdown during and after exercise.) Testosterone administration has been shown to decrease ubiquitin-proteasome activity. (13) So Anabolic Androgenic Steroids (AAS) specifically target the muscle protein breakdown process stimulated by T3.

What may not be an effective strategy to maintain muscle mass during a T3 cycle is the use of exogenous growth hormone (GH). Studies have shown that when GH and T3 are administered concurrently, the increased nitrogen retention normally associated with GH use is abolished. This has been attributed to the observation that T3 increases levels of insulin like growth factor binding protein, reducing the bioavailability of igf-1 (14). Nevertheless, GH has fat burning properties independent of igf-1, so using GH with T3 would act additively to speed fat burning, but with little if any preservation of lean body mass. So again, if GH is used in conjunction with T3, anabolic steroid/prohormone use would be indicated.



Andregenic Receptor Modulation


Administration of T3 has been shown to upregulate the so-called beta 2 adrenergic receptor in fat tissue. What is the significance of this effect for fat loss? Before fat can be used as fuel, it must be mobilized from the fat cells where it is stored. An enzyme called Hormone Sensitive Lipase (HSL) is the rate-controlling enzyme in lipolysis, or fat mobilization. The body produces two catecholamines, epinephrine and norepinephrine, which bind to the beta 2 receptor and activate HSL. The upregulation of the beta 2 receptor due to T3 results in an increased ability of catecholamines to activate HSL, leading to increased lipolysis.

Bodybuilders often use drugs like clenbuterol, which bind to the beta 2 receptors and activate them in the same way as the body's endogenous catecholamines. The use of clenbuterol along with T3 can produce an additive lipolytic effect: T3 increases the number of receptors, while clenbuterol binds to the receptors activating HSL and increasing lipolysis. Since clenbuterol itself downregulates the beta 2 receptor, most bodybuilders use clenbuterol in a two week on/ two week off cycle, the rationale being that this minimizes downregulation and allows receptor recovery. Another option is to use the antihistamine ketotifen concurrently with the clenbuterol. Studies have shown that ketotifen attenuates the beta 2 receptor downregulation caused by clenbuterol (15). Moreover, research in AIDS patients has shown that ketotifen blocks the production of the proinflammatory and catabolic cytokine TNF-alpha (16). This may be of relevance to bodybuilders since there is evidence showing TNF lowers both testosterone and IGF-1 levels quite significantly (17) (18), while strenuous exercise elevates TNF levels. (19)

Besides increasing beta 2 receptor density in adipose tissue, T3 upregulates this receptor in human skeletal muscle (12). This has some very intriguing if somewhat speculative implications for the combined use of clenbuterol and T3. Animal studies have shown that catecholamines, particularly clenbuterol, inhibit Ca++ dependent skeletal muscle proteolysis (20). Like the lysosomal and ubiquitin-proteasome pathways discussed above, Ca++ regulated proteolysis is yet another way for the body to degrade muscle protein. Again the implications are enticing: Increased beta 2 receptor density from T3 use, coupled with the beta 2 agonist clenbuterol, could slow this pathway of muscle catabolism.

Another adrenergic receptor important to lipolysis is the alpha 2 receptor, which impedes fat mobilization by counteracting the effects of the beta 2 receptor. There are some conflicting studies about the effects of T3 on the alpha 2 receptor, with studies showing either a downregulation (21) or no effect (22). If T3 does in fact downregulate alpha 2 receptors, this would further aid lipolysis.

Studies in rats have shown that inducing hyperthyroidism increases the lipolytic beta 3 receptor density in white adipose tissue by 70% (23). Beta 3 receptors are abundant in human white adipose tissue as well, and if T3 administration has the same effect in humans, this could could contribute significantly to T3 induced fat loss. This might also argue for taking a currently available beta 3 agonist such as octopamine along with T3 and perhaps clenbuterol.

Decreased Phosphodiesterase Expression


In hyperthyroid patients as well as in normal subjects given T3, levels of the enzyme phosphodiesterase are lowered in fat cells (20). When lipolytic hormones like epinephrine (adrenaline) bind to the beta 2 receptor described above, they initiate a signaling cascade mediated by the so called “second messenger” cyclic AMP (cAMP). cAMP in turn acts on other cellular enzymes to initiate and maintain lipolysis. The original signal is terminated when cAMP is degraded by the enzyme phosphodiesterase. Clearly, maintaining elevated cAMP levels, by lowering phosphodiesterase concentrations with T3, will prolong lipolysis.

As an aside, caffeine is thought to exert at least a portion of its lipolytic action by lowering phosphodiesterase in fat cells. Interestingly, Viagra and Cialis are also phosphodiesterase inhibitors but their action seems to be limited to relaxing vascular smooth muscles.



Increased Growth Hormone Secretion


In vitro, animal, and human studies have all demonstrated that T3 administration increases growth hormone production. (24)(25) Since GH is calorigenic aside from any increase in igf-1, elevated GH may contribute to some of the fat burning associated with T3 administration. This effect may obviate the need for the use of expensive recombinant HGH, as mentioned above.



Decreased Insulin Secretion


Insulin is well known as a lipogenic hormone. It promotes fat storage by facilitating the uptake of fatty acids by adipocytes, and reducing lipid oxidation in muscle tissue. Several studies have shown that thyroid hormone is associated with glucose intolerance resulting from decreased glucose stimulated insulin secretion (26).

This defect in insulin secretion is believed to result from an increase in the rate of apoptosis (programmed cell death) of pancreatic beta cells as a direct effect of thyroid hormone excess.(27) This process is reversible, since when thyroid hormone is withdrawn the rate of beta cell replication increases until homeostasis returns. However, there are conflicting studies regarding the effects of T3 on insulin. For example, Dimitriadis et al (28) showed a decrease in glucose stimulated insulin secretion, consistent with (25), but an increase in basal insulin. They also observed increased insulin clearance, with a compensatory increase in basal insulin secretion.

So if in fact the hyperthyroid state is associated with lower insulin levels, this could explain a portion of hyperthyroid stimulated lipolysis. The obvious downside here is that insulin is also an anabolic hormone. Basal insulin concentration is thought to limit the action of the ubiquitin-proteasome degradative pathway of muscle protein breakdown (29). Of course supplementing with insulin during T3 use would be counterproductive. However, as mentioned above, anabolic steroids inhibit ubiquitin-proteasome activity, so their use could counter any loss in muscle anabolism resulting from a drop insulin levels.



The Future


As mentioned at the beginning of this article, a major roadblock in the adoption of T3 by the medical community as an antiobesity agent is its deleterious effect on the heart. Recent research has identified two isoforms of the thyroid hormone receptor, TRalpha and TRbeta. The TRalpha-form may preferentially regulate the heart rate, and an experimental agent, GC-1, has been developed that selectively binds the TRbeta receptor, with minimal effects on the heart (30). The distribution and actions of TRalpha and TRbeta throughout the body are not yet well characterized. However should it turn out that TRalpha is specific to the heart, then drugs like GC-1 may turn out to be effective fat burning agents with a much safer profile that T3 or T4.

One alleged “futuristic” agent that is here now is T2, or 3,5-Di-iodo-L-thyronine, the T3 metabolite discussed above. Unfortunately, this product does not live up to its hype. It has been claimed to be as or more effective that T3 for fat burning with minimal suppression of endogenous thyroid production. Regarding the relative effectiveness of T2 as a lipolytic agent, and its effect on TSH, this topic was thoroughly covered in a recent article by Bryan Haycock in Muscle Monthly:




All of my research into this subject has led me to the same conclusion reached by Mr. Haycock. That is, T2 is only slightly less suppressive of TSH than is T3, and only packs a portion of the lipolytic punch of T3, with no ability to increase the expression of the UCPs, which is a major determinant of the action of thyroid hormone.



Summary


We have discussed a number of ways by which T3, and its active metabolite T2 act to increase resting energy expenditure. Also discussed were some drawbacks of T3 use, such as cardiac stress, as well as the potential loss of muscle mass. It is ironic that the latter may be of more concern to many bodybuilders that the other more serious potential impacts on health. Nevertheless, used moderately and for short periods (a couple of months or less) in people with no preexisting cardiovascular disease T3 has a relatively safe medical profile, compared to other lipolytic agents like DNP. Perhaps most importantly we have presented substantial evidence that even the long-term use of supraphysiological levels of T3 does not damage the thyroid gland.
 
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didn't see the t3 article, but I did find and enjoy this writing:

The Burning Wings of Icarus
by Dante E. Battista


A Philosophical Justification for the Use of Drugs



The Kingdoms Fall


“……and their voice carries the gravity of sand swept away in the face of the tide. Their false morality crumbles in the face of logical scrutiny.”

The moral and the rational are one and the same. To rationally use any given substance, is to be justified morally. To those that separate the moral from the rational and put the use of drugs beyond the critique of logical incision, your Kingdom will now be laid to waste. This is not a discourse dealing with statistics or concrete instances of drug use. This will be a philosophical discourse as to the ideas that lie behind such numbers and drugs. To those that pose numbers and pose assertions without a logical (philosophical) justification, your voice carries the gravity of sand swept away in the face of the tide. The tide comes now upon you: I give you, a moral justification for the use of drugs.



Moral Man


“… and yet we call those beggars that set their eyes upon the heavens, yet know nothing of this world in which we live in, Moral. Man in his proper sense is the rational animal and progress is the crux of human existence; therefore, the presence of progress is the crux of the Moral Man. Progress does not come about blindly and so as such, only the rational shall achieve their proper goals. The Moral is the rational, and the rational man in his proper sense, is then the Moral Man.”

What feeble notions we hold of who the moral man is, and what images do we conjure when we think of such men. Who is the moral man? A quiet man sitting in a corner of this world, almost Stoic, waiting for this life to take him away just as swiftly as he came to be? Who else? A pacifist who starts wars with the imposition of their spurious ideals, and then claims that they do not wish to fight? (And “pacifists” are almost always those that plant the seeds of discontent, and then care not to eat the fruit of such an ill-harvest; consider the state of this world, and consider those that wish for “peace” and you shall see what I mean if you care to reason).

Reason and morality, seem to have been presented as though they had no relation to one another. To some, the Moral Man could be an irrational fool who is “kind” and “unselfish.” They do not relate this man’s mind (his conceptual faculty), to his morality. Apparently (to some) the existence of reason and of morality, only coincides in moments of happenstance. The joys and the wonders of this World, and indeed the beauty of life itself are held within the hands of the Rational Man. The imposition of War, the plaques born from an unchained Nature that overcome men, can only be conquered by Rational Man. Logic is the sword of Humanity.

The moral man in his proper sense is the rational man. He, who enters the realm of the irrational deviates from the realm of reason; and therefore in the converse, he who enters the kingdom of reason then enters the realm of the moral. The moral man is the rational man. The rational use of drugs is then a moral justification for such use. The man, escaping reality by poisoning his mind with a substance is not rational and therefore is immoral. But, drugs themselves do not impart an intrinsic sense of morality; that is to say, a drug is impartial. It is a man’s use of such a substance, that then serves to name the man, not the drug, as being moral or not; rational or not.

There is quite a difference, if one cares to reason, between a man using a substance in order to perform at a higher level (and taking this substance in an amount not detrimental to his overall health), and a man drowning himself in his indulgence in order to escape the throes of this World.

On one hand, one man moves toward progression (and progression is indeed, the crux of rational human existence), and on the other hand another man regresses to the primitive state of an Evolutionary regressed beast. To properly judge the moral use of a drug, one must consider the user, the substance, the effect that this substance will impart, the reason for this person in using this substance, the overall effect upon this person’s health, and the overall benefits upon this persons goals (be they rational).

Therefore a man using a moderate cycle of Steroids in order to perform (in any given activity) at a higher level, without using such a substance in a manner of overall detriment to his health cannot be considered the moral (rational) equivalent of a dreg injecting heroin in order to escape reality to make his miserable subhuman existence more tolerable. One man is the rational standard of human ambitions, the other, a fiend spawned from a gene pool that is running dry.



Veils of Mystique


“…what they pose as ‘mysteries’, would not remain so if those that wonder would choose to think…”

What lies in the realm of mystery lies beyond the realm of rational comprehension. With this, we bear the mention of the dangers of “drugs” as though the mere use of that word should be taken at face value, without logical incision (as though a mere word, is an adequate substitution for a rational explanation). Like a Communist who merely thought that hurling the appellation of “Bourgeoisie” at someone was enough to incriminate their target, we live in a society that uses the words such as “drug” without rational explanation. Words convey convictions and explanations; they do not replace them.

We cannot understand that which we can not logically comprehend (and investigate); so, if the mere mention of the word “drug” is enough to connote wrongdoing (and harm), then it should not be a surprise that the intrinsic benefits of certain drugs are entirely misunderstood, and that a false sense of morality is put forth in opposition to the use of “drugs”. Ask such “Activists,” what is wrong with using “drugs,” and you will see the emptiness of their thoughts. The consummate Revolutionaries; all pomp and no substance. The grandness of words without the power of conceptual thought. Such is a society, which separates the use of words from their relation to reality.

How powerful is mystique, to such an extent that it hinders rational inquiry into the true nature of that which hinds behind the veil. To this day, the greatest “minds” seek to uncover the mysteries of Egypt: their Gods, their customs, and the antiquated fortifications to such irrational beliefs. If one’s neighbor were to build a monument to their chosen “God” in their backyard and habitually participate in ceremonies of gratuitous worship, they would rightfully be regarded as a lunatic. Three-thousand years from now, if the runes remained of your neighbor’s ceremonial altar this would be regarded as a “mystery,” Mankind’s present ignorance of reality becomes the provocative “mystery” of the future.

As long as one cannot logically assert their ideas, pro or con, within objective arguments, our ideas will lay behind logical understanding. An argument is not made, when one merely mentions that something is a “drug,” is “natural”, is “safe”, is “dangerous”, and other words that do not rationally define the context of your arguments. Define your contexts when you speak, or speak not at all. Mystery is nothing more than the lack of objective understanding.

It is often said, that the Devil’s greatest trick is to fool men into believing that He does not exist. The greatest trick of a Demagogue is to put the objective understanding of an issue (drugs, peace, equality, etc,), beyond rational inquiry and into the realm of mystery so that the pre-conceived notions that surround such issues are taken at face value, without question. Blind repetition is incremental destruction. The further the repetition, the further Humanity is destroyed by such blind notions and false “Moral” impositions.




The Linguistic Axe


“there is one word in our lexicon of use, that is capable of devastating an argument and destroying a man, by mere mention of it……”

… and that word is “Why.” “Why” is the linguistic axe that serves to show the greater, or lesser extent of someone’s reasoning. To speak with emotion is to speak without reason. For every “Is” there is a “Why”.

Hollow winds flow from the mouths of those that speak with smoke and not with Reason. Many Philosophers have mused as to how the problems of this World could be attributed to the indigestion of man, and how the rumbling in his belly disrupts the cogency of his thoughts. However the indigestion that we may speak of is not one of rotting particles of food upsetting the balance of the mind, but rather the rotting of undigested notions that putrefy in the minds of men. If we were to seek the agitator that so caused the rumblings in the Belly of the Beast, we would see that it was “Repetition.”

Whether we speak of “tradition,” “convention,” and other such notions that speak not of reason but of indigestion, we speak of repetition. Our Politics, our Economics, our World, and indeed the minds of Men have come times forth from repetitive pre-conceived notions rather than the Moral process of Reasoning. Thus, we hear of the supposed dichotomy of “natural” versus “enhanced,” and in such terms this is put before our ears to divide the moral from the immoral (and hence the rational from the irrational). But to ask the question of “why,” would put such an “understanding” into the open air as we see the smoke dissipate. The stomach of Mankind rumbles with the rot of undigested notions. In an Epistemological sense, repetition is the equivalent of indigestion.

What is “unnatural”? Those things that are not needed by the body? But I ask then, why it is immoral to still use such things assuming that they do indeed impart a benefit if used properly? Or those things that are needed by the body, but not from exogenous sources? But again, I would ask why this is irrational in such regards of use?

The moral is the rational, and thus, one can not speak of immorality unless they speak of the irrational. And if one asserts the dangers of “abuse” then I shall retort by saying that the man in question is immoral, and not the drug. The same drug used by a Rational mind, would be an issue of a different regard. Yet, you seek to categorically damn the use of “drugs.” How is it that your life is more “natural”? Do you seek to say that you “do not need a synthetic crutch”? But then why must such a drug be used as a “crutch”?

Again, the issue is one the manners of use, and not the use itself. But, there most certainly are drugs that do not impart a benefit upon a Moral (rational) existence, and such drugs serve no purpose beyond crippling man intellectually and physically. This is a Philosophical groundwork, and such an understanding of the philosophical matter will make the understanding of the concrete instances easier. If you cannot understand the issues of Philosophy that lay beneath the issues of Concretes, then your thoughts upon such matters carry no gravity. The power of a thought is the power of understanding. One does not build his Structures without a foundation, and in such regards a man should not dare to build an argument without a logical (philosophical) foundation. Philosophy is the groundwork of Life.

To be “Natural” is by no means to be “Moral.” And you shall so deceive yourself when you believe the use of drugs to be morally damning categorically, just as you will deceive yourself into believing that you are “moral” for your abstenance of “drugs.” Progress is the crux of Humanity, and you somehow fathom that your state of primitive simplicity is the essence of Morality when rather it is the antitheses of Reason.

So, we shall not speak of “natural” versus “synthetic,” as that indeed is irrelevant. The only issue of relevance it the action of the substance, and man’s use of it. And we shall not speak of “natural” versus “enhanced” as the only issue of Moral regard is whether or not the person is rational or not in their choices of substance, and how they implement such substances.

No longer shall we seek to speak of “drugs” or “natural” versus other “unnatural “ states. The issue will properly be one only of contexts. False dichotomies will crumble in the face of our understanding. Man achieves his Humanity to the greater or lesser extent toward which he progresses. Nature is yours to harness, and only strong arms can wield heavy swords.

Man seeks equality be damning others to their level of ignorance, and you would have us believe that your false sense of Morality is the standard of measurement against which all Mankind shall be weighed. Your morality cannot stand the incision of “Why,” since you do not know. You mistake the repetition of notions with the assertion of reason.

“Why” is the line of demarcation that serves to separate those that speak with reason from those that speak with smoke.




The Burning Wings of Icarus


“The power and the glory of the Sun cannot be met with wings of wax. Waxen wings melt in the face of this overpowering heat, and Man falls to this Earth in disgrace”

Matters of athletics are truly a unison of the mind and the body. To some, the substance of the mind (via science), and the substance of the body (via athletics) are not related. Nonsense. Achievement is the goal of a rational person, and high achievement presupposes intelligence in pursuit. One’s training methods and one’s use of substances is indicative of their mind. Thus, athletics are the synthesis (and the existential bridge) between the mind and the body. He who uses his mind in order to rationally choose his training methods and his use of substances, will conquer heights unknown to a man who blindly pursues the path of training, and haphazardly consumes his substances without rational contemplation.

Perhaps, if one were to look at athletics as an intellectual endeavor instead of a mere physical one, the general perception of the moral use of drugs would be far different. The Stoic Epictetus said that we are a ‘breath carrying a corpse’; to some, we are a “body” that just happens to carry a mind. To them, there is no relation. Achievement is intelligence. And thus, in the endeavors of athletics, one’s intelligence in training and supplementation is morally justified.

Marble is sculpted and formed by the hands of the Sculptor. A piece of malformed Marble stands before him, and he sets his mind upon the Form that will come to be with the imposition of his ideals. His hands are merely the intermediaries between his mind and his actions. He must choose his tools wisely, as a precise incision made with one tool will produce a different result as opposed to a haphazard stroke invoked by another one. And even if his tool is perfect in itself, he must use it wisely, with the use of reason. Maladroit hands wielding chisels will deform the structures that stand before them.

Our bodies are given to us from birth. From one to another, no man stands in equal proportion to another. From the training methods that he so chooses, to the supplements and drugs that he uses to a greater or less extent of Reason, man sculpts his body with the dictates of his mind.

For those drugs that make their effect know with the precise use by a Rational mind, we expect a certain result. That same drug used by a fool, will produce a result of a different regard. We will not blame the drug but we shall blame the man, just as we would blame an ass that took a wild swing at a piece of Marble in the name of “Art,” and not the tool itself.

Drugs are tools to be used by strong hands and rational minds; a mind of solid standing will use the tools before him to perfect his existence whereas a blind man will deform himself with the decrepit vision that he holds within his mind. Some tools are not proper, as their use is not subject to precision and thus they serve no purpose to a Moral man seeking to better himself. Some drugs are less forgiving than others and therefore require powerful minds to harness the power of the drug.

There are those drugs, which serve not as proper tools as they serve not a proper (rational) existence. But it is not the category of drugs that should be damned, but rather the men who use such things. Whether our goals are of a physical nature and thus, an athletic one, or our goals are to enhance our general existence via the substance of our minds, drugs are the tools for progress to those that choose them accordingly, and then implement them wisely. To those malformed minds that seek to poison themselves, drugs are the tools of destruction wielded by the hands of a Sculptor that destroys the Marble put before him.

Our goals in this life must be met with equal force. A goal more grand will require an effort of greater proportion than a goal less ambitious. To those that wish to reach the Sun with waxen wings, you will fall short of the Ideal that you set before yourself, and your wings will burn with the disgrace of your spurious understanding of the World. The conquest of the glorious Sun will only be met by those that fly with wings of steel.

Some strive to achieve more than those set before them, and some damn themselves to fall to this Earth in the arms of disgrace. Those that fly with the wings of Icarus burn before our eyes in their conquest of Penance.



The Ashen Empire


“…and what was once a mystery, now lies before all to see. Let fall your Kingdom, let others see the ruins of your spurious Empire, let the new understanding come now upon us.”

To you, Derelict, you pathetic dreg of humanity that spends his time huddled in a corner seeking to escape reality by drowning himself in his indulgence: you may hide in the corners of your room, you may dwell in the corners of this Earth with your friends seeking an escape from existence, and therefore escaping and abandoning the title of a rational human being. Your existence is not justified and as such it is not the drug that I condemn, rather, it is you. You seek your stand as your Wings burn in opposition to the fiery storms of Evolution.

To you, Moral Activist, that seeks to put the reality of this world beyond rational comprehension and speaks with only the power of words and not with the power of ideas: You convince no one, save the fools who are moved by the “power” and the “glory” of your words, but can not be swayed by the power and the glory of understanding since it is not in your possession. You speak of the “evils” of drugs, and the immorality of it’s use, yet you can not (properly) define morality and you as well are often the epitome of the slothful fiend that abnegates the realm of morality by being (intellectually) stagnant in their lives. As a friend put it to me, the issue is one of “cogitation,” versus “regurgitation.”

You seek to repeat spurious notions, yet you cannot justify such beliefs (since you have never contemplated them). You mistake the unwavering repetition of notions with the ceaseless assertion of Reason. Man spiritually defiles himself when he abandons Logic (the mark of a proper Man); your mouths are more corrupt than any whore’s genitals.

To those among us that understand the true meaning of this life, and understand the power of human ambitions that drive us in our pursuit of higher goals, we can now see with clarity as to how our existence and use of such substances is justified, not only in a practical sense, but more importantly in a philosophical and a moral sense. Reason comes upon us, and we now see that human existence is progress and that the moral man is the rational man. What we use within a rational context to achieve such goals that we put before ourselves, is then justified morally. One man seeking to better himself in his endeavors is not the same as a man poisoning himself in his indulgence. But, some wish not to accept such a difference. As it was once said, “ To a blind man: a piece of gold, a piece of coal, and a piece of excrement look all the same.”

Let those among us that seek progress with the dictates of our mind understand how our existence and our use of the tools before us are morally justified; let those before us that deform themselves with the corrupt infestations of their mind burn with the wings of disgrace.


Authors Note: With great gratitude, I wish to thank my friend, Jordan Jethwa, who saw this article through several drafts, and whose kind words and incisive recommendations made this come to a head during hard times. I am in your debt.
 
Confirms what I beleived from personal use..................It states that even people that were on t3 for several years bounced back to normal after 2 weeks.
 
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