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It is yes.
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It is yes.
I believe it makes you tired and stressed if your body is not ready for it. And in case of uncoupling dosage I think you need a steady supply of energy as long as uncoupling concentration presents in your body. I my own case I just needed to get over it and continue to use. I mentioned above side effects I got for a long time from aspirin. Matter of acclimatization. Try to do it every third day for now and focus on other aspects of healing especially thyroid.Whenever I do a higher dose of aspirin I get big bags under my eyes, like it shifts water dramatically and makes me look tired or stressed. Any idea why? @Hans @methylenwhite
Haha thanks man. Really glad you're doing better and feeling great.@Hans
My dude. I think you've done it. You deserve an award.
I took CoQ10 the other day and then yesterday (100 mg soft gel, once per day) as well and I haven't had symptoms of cold hands or feet. Today I was able to allow the temperature in my apartment to drop significantly lower than usual and I wasn't cold! I usually have to keep it around 70 - 71 F in order for my hands and feet or ankles to not get cold, but ever since I started taking CoQ10 I've not gotten cold ankles and I've lowered the temperature of my apartment and I didn't get any symptoms of cold extremities!
You are the man.
I'm going to keep up this experiment, but I wanted to provide a little follow up to my initial update. It seems that the CoQ10 is really working. I feel much better, too.
So, to recap: I take K, E, D, Magnesium, coffee, Aspirin (thanks to your suggestion), and CoQ10 (again, thanks to you).
The other uncouplers you listed on your website would be: DHEA, Progesterone, Thyroid hormones (T3, T4), Beriberine, Forskolin, and Methylene blue. You also mentioned Pyrucet in this thread (earlier, [Discussion] Raising Body Temperature), but in the post on your website you don't mention Pyrucet or Pyruvate.
What should I try adding next? Any in particular you would recommend next as most important--or--cheapest to source so I'm getting a good bang for the buck? All these other supps seem about in the $30 - $40 range, so they all seem about the same price. I don't see anything as simple as Aspirin on here (the remainder list). Are there any that might be argued as more important than the others? You did mention MB a lot. I've never tried Progesterone--sounds hormone-y, so that seems good to me (I'm a complete neanderthal when it comes to this).
Thanks again @Hans! I feel like a million bucks today!
You can try it. Some people do better with the natural one and others with the synthetic one, so you can maybe try out the tyromix and see how you feel. I would recommend to start with small doses and take only as needed.@Hans
In your post on your website, when discussing Thyroid hormones, you recommend TyroMax which is derived from natural desiccated thyroid (NDT). Do you have an opinion on synthetic thyroid hormone versus NDT? I am currently not taking any thyroid hormones. My thinking is to take the synthetic stuff to get the right ratio of T3:T4. Would you recommend that?
TyroMix: TyroMix - Liquid T3/T4 Mix For Lab/R&D
Thanks for sharing your opinion