I said I would be back, short on time again but this time I actually read yer post instead of looking just looking at the pic quickly.Ha, I am tool. I don't even have the drugs right. I am on 0.25mg post injection day so 0.5mg weekly of ANASTRAZOLE. I'm a mess fellas.
@Oldguyjiujitsu that bloodwork with E2 at 220 and free T 803 was before I started taking the anastrazole. I'm curious to see on my next bloodwork what my E2 is at now.
I honestly don't think bodyfat is this issue here. I know I'm a littler thicker than I was in the summer but not by a lot. This photo was a couple months ago around the time of my reassessment and 220 e2
I don't know if you are a tool (yet lol) but can confirm you are a mess - Arimidex is Anastrazole.
As I said before I think you'll be fine once you wrap your head around this shit.
My advice-
Take a breath. Settle right down and start from the beginning (re)learning what you need to know.
This is the most basic stuff so just completely nail it. Take it one step at a time. Never make more than one change at a time.
You feel good now right? Don't change a thing.
Timing of bloodwork is extremely important if you want to learn anything from it. Best time by far IMO luckily happens to be with a every 3.5 days inj schedule and blood drawn at the lowest point (the trough) right before the next inj. Hopefully that is what you have done. Even if it wasn't the likely best move here is to start doing it that way EVERY TIME from now on.
Hopefully you will get bloods through them at 6 months, if not find another way to get it anytime from now till then. Again don't change a thing until you get bloods which is hopefully in the next month or so, reason being it would muddy whatever you could learn about how this protocol works for you.
Meanwhile start the education. Everything you need for now is right on this site, get a notebook for notes and get reading, look at all the info in the sub forums. Get a grasp, don't overcomplicate shit then start using the search function. Get educated enough to ask good questions. If you are polite about it and don't expect to be endlessly spoon fed you will get a shit ton of help here.
Yes there is a lot more too it but all you need to do first is dial it in. A very common mantra for TRT is "treat the symptoms not the numbers". You said you feel good so you are already dialed in. Get up to speed on the terminology and how shit all works because some changes will come over time and eventually you will need to make adjustments.
You look like you either know how to train and eat well or you are genetically gifted physically, there is only one more piece to the success for health equation here and you're at a great place to complete the equation.