N
narcissus
Guest
Ok, I've read on many boards that bold prop makes people sick, but I had to ascertain it myself. Here's my own experience :
On Saturday I shot 1ml of a bold prop/npp mixture into my right delt. The mixture contained 66.66mg bold prop and 33.33mg npp (bold:npp = 2:1, I got this ratio by brewing 4g bold and 2g npp into a 60ml injectable solution, 4%BA, 18%BB).
The results :
I did the injection around 15:00. At first, I really didn't feel anything, almost as though I hadn't done an injection. Around 18:30 it had started to hurt slightly, but it was so mild a pain that I neglected it and went to the gym. Around 21:00 I came back home, ate my meals and sat on the sofa to watch TV. That's when I noticed that I was feeling a bit cold, although it wasn't cold in my house. I immediately thought "that's the fever coming", and I was right. In the next couple of hours the feeling of coldness continued, accompanied by some weakness. Then the coldness was followed by warmth, which meant I had got fever. At 1:30 I took one Ponstan and one Ceclor tablet and went to sleep. Next day I woke up without fever but with a lot of pain around my delt. I couldn't touch it or move it at all. The pain continued all day. I also took another Ponstan in the afternoon for good measure (to avoid the fever bouncing back after Ceclor's action would had faded away). The pain continued throughout Monday, and indeed the skin over my delt and bicep had become red. The pain was so big that I hardly could move my arm. I spent most of that day lying in bed.
And today, all of a sudden the pain disappeared. I woke up and was surprised it went away so quickly.
There's still some slight pain and redness, but it doesnt't hinder me from moving my arm.
Now there are two questions :
1. WHY does boldenone propionate make most people ill ? Are the powders that are currently available of bad quality, or is this an inherent property of boldenone propionate, which contradicts to the common belief that different esters attached to the same base drug (boldenone in this case) only affect its half life, and all other biochemical properties stay the same.
2. If one continues taking it, will the body adapt to it and stop becoming ill, or will the same scenario repeat every time ?
On Saturday I shot 1ml of a bold prop/npp mixture into my right delt. The mixture contained 66.66mg bold prop and 33.33mg npp (bold:npp = 2:1, I got this ratio by brewing 4g bold and 2g npp into a 60ml injectable solution, 4%BA, 18%BB).
The results :
I did the injection around 15:00. At first, I really didn't feel anything, almost as though I hadn't done an injection. Around 18:30 it had started to hurt slightly, but it was so mild a pain that I neglected it and went to the gym. Around 21:00 I came back home, ate my meals and sat on the sofa to watch TV. That's when I noticed that I was feeling a bit cold, although it wasn't cold in my house. I immediately thought "that's the fever coming", and I was right. In the next couple of hours the feeling of coldness continued, accompanied by some weakness. Then the coldness was followed by warmth, which meant I had got fever. At 1:30 I took one Ponstan and one Ceclor tablet and went to sleep. Next day I woke up without fever but with a lot of pain around my delt. I couldn't touch it or move it at all. The pain continued all day. I also took another Ponstan in the afternoon for good measure (to avoid the fever bouncing back after Ceclor's action would had faded away). The pain continued throughout Monday, and indeed the skin over my delt and bicep had become red. The pain was so big that I hardly could move my arm. I spent most of that day lying in bed.
And today, all of a sudden the pain disappeared. I woke up and was surprised it went away so quickly.
There's still some slight pain and redness, but it doesnt't hinder me from moving my arm.
Now there are two questions :
1. WHY does boldenone propionate make most people ill ? Are the powders that are currently available of bad quality, or is this an inherent property of boldenone propionate, which contradicts to the common belief that different esters attached to the same base drug (boldenone in this case) only affect its half life, and all other biochemical properties stay the same.
2. If one continues taking it, will the body adapt to it and stop becoming ill, or will the same scenario repeat every time ?








