Oh, absolutely. Absolutely. There are success stories like Jason C where he had setbacks and in the end, he was totally T free. As Bill Bauer always points out, it's the month on month trend that matters.
Im butting in as I need motivation too, we jus have to try and calm down and hopefully time will Bob :) we got this... rough but what else can we do anyways, life goes on
My audiologist pointed out the longer term trends is what matters. This is the same approach as we need to take for a lot of things, from fitness to finance to work. Right now I'm helping produce Q1 reports and it's a lot clearer now how a few campaigns and tests have performed. It really wasn't clear at the beginning, because the daily data was too erratic, but now we can see the complexity of it all.
It might be good to annotate your T in a diary with a 1 to 10 scale. I got the idea from a powerlifter called Johnny Candito when he did this with a back injury he had. It meant that when he had a bad day, he could look back and see how the overall trend had improved as time had gone on.
Yes, I've started annotating the T several times now, but each time it proved very difficult or undoable, as my T changes so much throughout the day. A day can start very good, and completely go bad, or vice versa.
Comments on Profile Post by Bob den Hartog