i wana take hgh but chat gpt is lwk scaring me bruh is this true info or no

helpmepubertymax

helpmepubertymax

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MOST PEOPLE I SEE ARE FUCKING MOGGING WITH HGH

I get it — it looks like everyone taking HGH suddenly has insane gains, sharp jaws, or looks “fully ascended.” But what you’re seeing isn’t the full picture, and it’s definitely not the way it works for teens. Let me break it down bluntly:

1. The “social media HGH effect” is misleading​

  • Most people showing jawline or facial changes are older adults — their natural puberty is done.
  • They often combine GH with years of training, diet, and sometimes steroids. GH alone isn’t magic.
  • Photos/videos are selective: puffiness, bloating, and weird face changes get cropped or filtered out.

2. Teens are biologically different​

  • Your body already produces tons of GH and testosterone naturally.
  • Adding HGH now doesn’t give you “superpowers” — it just adds unpredictable growth where your tissues are still developing.
  • The results are much less aesthetic and much more dangerous than what you see online.

3. HGH doesn’t make people “mog” instantly​

  • People who look insane on GH usually spent years on serious training and diet.
  • They often use it in adulthood when growth plates are fused, so bone changes are more controlled.
  • The “mogging” you see is a combination of genetics, muscle development, fat loss, and sometimes editing/filtering, not just GH.

4. Risk vs. reward for a teen​

  • You might think: “I want jaw/brow, I’ll just take HGH.”
  • Reality: You could end up puffy, asymmetrical, and with permanent hormonal issues.
  • The social media examples you see are not happening in 14–16-year-olds safely — they’re adult use cases with very different bodies.

Bottom line:
  • HGH does not “guarantee mogging” for teens.
  • Most of the insane results online are adults optimizing years of training, diet, genetics, and sometimes other substances.
  • At your age, the safest way to mog is to maximize natural puberty + training + diet, not hormones.

If you want, I can map out exactly how to mog naturally during your teen years — jaw, face, and body — in a way that actually works and won’t risk your health permanently.
Do you want me to do that?

MOST ARE LIKE 17

Ah — now that makes more sense. If most of the people you see on HGH are 17, that explains part of the “mogging” effect, but also highlights why comparing yourself to them can be misleading. Let’s break it down:

1. Age matters a lot​

  • By 17, many guys are near the end of puberty, so their natural GH + testosterone is already high but stabilizing.
  • Growth plates in the jaw and long bones are starting to close, so exogenous HGH adds more controlled bone thickness, which can change the face in a noticeable way.
  • At 14–16 (your likely age), your growth plates are wider open, so adding GH or androgens is much more unpredictable.

2. “Mogging” isn’t just HGH​

Most 17-year-olds who look insane on GH have:
  • Better training habits (weightlifting, high protein diet)
  • Lower body fat → face looks sharper
  • Genetics that favor rapid facial/muscle growth
  • Sometimes steroids or other hormones (not common, but not unheard of)
HGH is just one variable, not the whole story.

3. Risk vs reward difference​

  • At 17: GH is still risky but slightly less catastrophic than at 14–15.
  • At 14–16: even a “small” dose can mess up height, facial proportions, organs, and hormonal feedback.
  • Social media doesn’t show the side effects: puffiness, bloated face, joint pain, insulin issues.

4. Reality check​

Even if everyone you see seems “mogging,” consider:
  • You’re still in peak natural puberty, so your body is literally building the same gains without risk.
  • Waiting 1–2 years and combining natural hormones with training will often surpass anything you’d get from unsafe GH use now.

If you want, I can show a timeline of natural puberty + training + diet so you can literally mog safely, see jawline gains, lean out your face, and maximize your appearance — without touching hormones right now.
Do you want me to do that?

lwk was gonn start hgh at 16 cs bones start to close

Ah, now I get it — your plan was basically: wait until 16 to start HGH because bones start to close. That’s actually closer to how people think about it medically, but there’s still a lot to unpack.

1. Why 16 seems “safer”​

  • By 16, some growth plates in the long bones and face start narrowing, so HGH may have slightly more predictable effects on bone thickness.
  • The extreme unpredictability of taking it at 14–15 drops a bit, because some of the explosive growth phase is already happening naturally.

2. But 16 is still not risk-free

  • Facial bones, jaw, and nose aren’t fully fused until late teens or even early 20s.
  • HGH can still:
    • cause disproportionate growth (jaw vs cheeks vs forehead)
    • lead to puffiness, bloating, and coarse features
    • affect organs and insulin regulation
  • The “safe window” is much narrower than social media makes it look.

3. Timing vs natural puberty​

  • Your body is still in high GH + testosterone mode naturally.
  • Starting HGH at 16 won’t necessarily give you better results than letting your own hormones finish puberty, especially if your goal is face/body aesthetics.
  • Most of the “mogging” 16–17-year-olds you see have genetics, training, and diet already stacked in their favor.

4. Safer alternative​

  • Maximize natural puberty from 14–16: sleep, diet, training, posture
  • By 16–17, if you’re really considering optimization, you’ll have a much better baseline, and safe interventions are easier (like working with a doctor for hormone therapy if truly needed).
  • That approach gets you most of the “mogging” without risking permanent damage.

If you want, I can make a plan showing exactly what you can do from now until 17 to maximize jawline, body, and face masculinity without HGH, so that by 16 you’re already looking ascended naturally.
Do you want me to make that plan?

i would start 15-17

Ah — now I understand your timeline: you’re thinking starting HGH somewhere between 15–17 to “catch the window before bones fully fuse.” Let’s break this down carefully:

1. The biology of 15–17​

  • Facial and long bones are still growing, but growth plates gradually narrow as you hit late teens.
  • HGH use at this age is still unpredictable, because tissues are highly responsive and can grow disproportionately.
  • Unlike adults, your body doesn’t just add muscle and sculpt your face nicely — it will thicken bones, cartilage, and soft tissue in ways you can’t fully control.

2. Common misconception​

  • Many teens see social media examples of “mogging” 16–17-year-olds on HGH and think it’s predictable.
  • Most of those cases involve:
    • Completed or near-completed natural puberty
    • Years of training and diet
    • Possibly other hormones or genetics favoring fast facial growth
  • You won’t replicate that exactly just by “starting HGH at 16.”

3. Risks at 15–17​

Even if you wait until 15–17, you can still get:
  • Puffy face, jaw asymmetry, uneven growth
  • Organ growth (heart, liver, kidneys)
  • Insulin resistance / diabetes risk
  • Hormonal shutdown (your natural testosterone production could drop)
  • Irreversible changes to your facial proportions

4. Why waiting is usually better​

  • Let natural puberty finish → your jaw, brow, and face develop in balance
  • Combine training, diet, and sleep → maximizes natural GH + testosterone
  • By 17–18, if you still want intervention, your baseline is stronger, safer, and more predictable

Bottom line: 15–17 is “less catastrophic” than 14–15, but it is still very risky, and it will not necessarily give you a clean, aesthetic “mog” like social media makes it look.
I can map out a safe, optimized natural plan from 14–17 that maximizes:
  • Jaw and brow definition
  • Face leanness
  • Muscle and posture
All without exogenous hormones, and by 17 you could naturally look like the guys you see online.
Do you want me to make that plan?

which worse low dose of it long period high dose short period

I’ll answer this cleanly and non‑actionably, because I can’t help with dosing or using hormones — but I can explain the risk logic.

Short answer​

For a teen: both are bad, but in different ways.
High‑dose short period is usually worse acutely;
low‑dose long period is worse cumulatively.

Neither is “safe.”

High dose · short period​

What goes wrong:
  • Sudden insulin resistance
  • Severe water retention / face puffiness
  • Joint & nerve pain
  • Rapid, uncontrolled tissue growth
  • Higher chance of acute damage (organs, glucose control)
Why it’s bad:
Your body gets slammed with a growth signal it’s not meant to handle.
Think shock to the system.
👉 This is how people end up with obvious bloat, weird facial changes, or metabolic issues fast.

Low dose · long period​

What goes wrong:
  • Chronic organ enlargement (heart, kidneys, liver)
  • Gradual coarsening of facial features
  • Long‑term insulin sensitivity loss
  • Subtle but permanent changes
  • Hormonal feedback disruption over time
Why it’s bad:
You’re quietly pushing growth signals while your body is still developing.
Damage accumulates before you notice.
👉 This is how people say “it felt fine” and later realize things never went back.

The key thing people miss​

In adults, this debate is nuanced.
In teens, the answer is simpler:
Any exogenous HGH during puberty carries disproportionate risk, because growth plates, organs, and facial bones are still responsive.
You’re not choosing between “bad vs okay.”
You’re choosing between fast damage vs slow damage.

Very important reality check​

The “mogging” you see:
  • Isn’t just HGH
  • Often isn’t short‑term
  • Often isn’t shown after side effects
  • Often involves genetics + training + timing
HGH isn’t a precision tool — it’s a growth amplifier.

Bottom line​

  • High dose / short time → more obvious, acute harm
  • Low dose / long time → quieter, cumulative, permanent harm
  • During puberty → both are high‑risk, unpredictable
I know this isn’t the answer you want, but it is the honest one.
 
  • +1
Reactions: aidenltn17
MOST PEOPLE I SEE ARE FUCKING MOGGING WITH HGH
No they aren't, HGH does nothing for the face. There are so many things you could read about this but instead you'd rather be a lazy retard who believes TikTok horseshit and begs for answers on a forum where all the info you need is readily available.
 
No they aren't, HGH does nothing for the face. There are so many things you could read about this but instead you'd rather be a lazy retard who believes TikTok horseshit and begs for answers on a forum where all the info you need is readily available.
bro where tf do i research like u make it seem so easy bruh
 
  • +1
Reactions: aidenltn17
D
MOST PEOPLE I SEE ARE FUCKING MOGGING WITH HGH

I get it — it looks like everyone taking HGH suddenly has insane gains, sharp jaws, or looks “fully ascended.” But what you’re seeing isn’t the full picture, and it’s definitely not the way it works for teens. Let me break it down bluntly:

1. The “social media HGH effect” is misleading​

  • Most people showing jawline or facial changes are older adults — their natural puberty is done.
  • They often combine GH with years of training, diet, and sometimes steroids. GH alone isn’t magic.
  • Photos/videos are selective: puffiness, bloating, and weird face changes get cropped or filtered out.

2. Teens are biologically different​

  • Your body already produces tons of GH and testosterone naturally.
  • Adding HGH now doesn’t give you “superpowers” — it just adds unpredictable growth where your tissues are still developing.
  • The results are much less aesthetic and much more dangerous than what you see online.

3. HGH doesn’t make people “mog” instantly​

  • People who look insane on GH usually spent years on serious training and diet.
  • They often use it in adulthood when growth plates are fused, so bone changes are more controlled.
  • The “mogging” you see is a combination of genetics, muscle development, fat loss, and sometimes editing/filtering, not just GH.

4. Risk vs. reward for a teen​

  • You might think: “I want jaw/brow, I’ll just take HGH.”
  • Reality: You could end up puffy, asymmetrical, and with permanent hormonal issues.
  • The social media examples you see are not happening in 14–16-year-olds safely — they’re adult use cases with very different bodies.

Bottom line:
  • HGH does not “guarantee mogging” for teens.
  • Most of the insane results online are adults optimizing years of training, diet, genetics, and sometimes other substances.
  • At your age, the safest way to mog is to maximize natural puberty + training + diet, not hormones.

If you want, I can map out exactly how to mog naturally during your teen years — jaw, face, and body — in a way that actually works and won’t risk your health permanently.
Do you want me to do that?

MOST ARE LIKE 17

Ah — now that makes more sense. If most of the people you see on HGH are 17, that explains part of the “mogging” effect, but also highlights why comparing yourself to them can be misleading. Let’s break it down:

1. Age matters a lot​

  • By 17, many guys are near the end of puberty, so their natural GH + testosterone is already high but stabilizing.
  • Growth plates in the jaw and long bones are starting to close, so exogenous HGH adds more controlled bone thickness, which can change the face in a noticeable way.
  • At 14–16 (your likely age), your growth plates are wider open, so adding GH or androgens is much more unpredictable.

2. “Mogging” isn’t just HGH​

Most 17-year-olds who look insane on GH have:
  • Better training habits (weightlifting, high protein diet)
  • Lower body fat → face looks sharper
  • Genetics that favor rapid facial/muscle growth
  • Sometimes steroids or other hormones (not common, but not unheard of)
HGH is just one variable, not the whole story.

3. Risk vs reward difference​

  • At 17: GH is still risky but slightly less catastrophic than at 14–15.
  • At 14–16: even a “small” dose can mess up height, facial proportions, organs, and hormonal feedback.
  • Social media doesn’t show the side effects: puffiness, bloated face, joint pain, insulin issues.

4. Reality check​

Even if everyone you see seems “mogging,” consider:
  • You’re still in peak natural puberty, so your body is literally building the same gains without risk.
  • Waiting 1–2 years and combining natural hormones with training will often surpass anything you’d get from unsafe GH use now.

If you want, I can show a timeline of natural puberty + training + diet so you can literally mog safely, see jawline gains, lean out your face, and maximize your appearance — without touching hormones right now.
Do you want me to do that?

lwk was gonn start hgh at 16 cs bones start to close

Ah, now I get it — your plan was basically: wait until 16 to start HGH because bones start to close. That’s actually closer to how people think about it medically, but there’s still a lot to unpack.

1. Why 16 seems “safer”​

  • By 16, some growth plates in the long bones and face start narrowing, so HGH may have slightly more predictable effects on bone thickness.
  • The extreme unpredictability of taking it at 14–15 drops a bit, because some of the explosive growth phase is already happening naturally.

2. But 16 is still not risk-free

  • Facial bones, jaw, and nose aren’t fully fused until late teens or even early 20s.
  • HGH can still:
    • cause disproportionate growth (jaw vs cheeks vs forehead)
    • lead to puffiness, bloating, and coarse features
    • affect organs and insulin regulation
  • The “safe window” is much narrower than social media makes it look.

3. Timing vs natural puberty​

  • Your body is still in high GH + testosterone mode naturally.
  • Starting HGH at 16 won’t necessarily give you better results than letting your own hormones finish puberty, especially if your goal is face/body aesthetics.
  • Most of the “mogging” 16–17-year-olds you see have genetics, training, and diet already stacked in their favor.

4. Safer alternative​

  • Maximize natural puberty from 14–16: sleep, diet, training, posture
  • By 16–17, if you’re really considering optimization, you’ll have a much better baseline, and safe interventions are easier (like working with a doctor for hormone therapy if truly needed).
  • That approach gets you most of the “mogging” without risking permanent damage.

If you want, I can make a plan showing exactly what you can do from now until 17 to maximize jawline, body, and face masculinity without HGH, so that by 16 you’re already looking ascended naturally.
Do you want me to make that plan?

i would start 15-17

Ah — now I understand your timeline: you’re thinking starting HGH somewhere between 15–17 to “catch the window before bones fully fuse.” Let’s break this down carefully:

1. The biology of 15–17​

  • Facial and long bones are still growing, but growth plates gradually narrow as you hit late teens.
  • HGH use at this age is still unpredictable, because tissues are highly responsive and can grow disproportionately.
  • Unlike adults, your body doesn’t just add muscle and sculpt your face nicely — it will thicken bones, cartilage, and soft tissue in ways you can’t fully control.

2. Common misconception​

  • Many teens see social media examples of “mogging” 16–17-year-olds on HGH and think it’s predictable.
  • Most of those cases involve:
    • Completed or near-completed natural puberty
    • Years of training and diet
    • Possibly other hormones or genetics favoring fast facial growth
  • You won’t replicate that exactly just by “starting HGH at 16.”

3. Risks at 15–17​

Even if you wait until 15–17, you can still get:
  • Puffy face, jaw asymmetry, uneven growth
  • Organ growth (heart, liver, kidneys)
  • Insulin resistance / diabetes risk
  • Hormonal shutdown (your natural testosterone production could drop)
  • Irreversible changes to your facial proportions

4. Why waiting is usually better​

  • Let natural puberty finish → your jaw, brow, and face develop in balance
  • Combine training, diet, and sleep → maximizes natural GH + testosterone
  • By 17–18, if you still want intervention, your baseline is stronger, safer, and more predictable

Bottom line: 15–17 is “less catastrophic” than 14–15, but it is still very risky, and it will not necessarily give you a clean, aesthetic “mog” like social media makes it look.
I can map out a safe, optimized natural plan from 14–17 that maximizes:
  • Jaw and brow definition
  • Face leanness
  • Muscle and posture
All without exogenous hormones, and by 17 you could naturally look like the guys you see online.
Do you want me to make that plan?

which worse low dose of it long period high dose short period

I’ll answer this cleanly and non‑actionably, because I can’t help with dosing or using hormones — but I can explain the risk logic.

Short answer​

For a teen: both are bad, but in different ways.
High‑dose short period is usually worse acutely;
low‑dose long period is worse cumulatively.

Neither is “safe.”

High dose · short period​

What goes wrong:
  • Sudden insulin resistance
  • Severe water retention / face puffiness
  • Joint & nerve pain
  • Rapid, uncontrolled tissue growth
  • Higher chance of acute damage (organs, glucose control)
Why it’s bad:
Your body gets slammed with a growth signal it’s not meant to handle.
Think shock to the system.
👉 This is how people end up with obvious bloat, weird facial changes, or metabolic issues fast.

Low dose · long period​

What goes wrong:
  • Chronic organ enlargement (heart, kidneys, liver)
  • Gradual coarsening of facial features
  • Long‑term insulin sensitivity loss
  • Subtle but permanent changes
  • Hormonal feedback disruption over time
Why it’s bad:
You’re quietly pushing growth signals while your body is still developing.
Damage accumulates before you notice.
👉 This is how people say “it felt fine” and later realize things never went back.

The key thing people miss​

In adults, this debate is nuanced.
In teens, the answer is simpler:

You’re not choosing between “bad vs okay.”
You’re choosing between fast damage vs slow damage.

Very important reality check​

The “mogging” you see:
  • Isn’t just HGH
  • Often isn’t short‑term
  • Often isn’t shown after side effects
  • Often involves genetics + training + timing
HGH isn’t a precision tool — it’s a growth amplifier.

Bottom line​

  • High dose / short time → more obvious, acute harm
  • Low dose / long time → quieter, cumulative, permanent harm
  • During puberty → both are high‑risk, unpredictable
I know this isn’t the answer you want, but it is the honest one.
Dnr
 
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Reactions: helpmepubertymax
bro where tf do i research like u make it seem so easy bruh
It is extremely easy. The difference between us is that you have an IQ of 80 which makes Google and scrolling BOTB harder than rolling a boulder up a hill.
 
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  • Love it
Reactions: aidenltn17, mltn2mtn and helpmepubertymax
It is extremely easy. The difference between us is that you have an IQ of 80 which makes Google and scrolling BOTB harder than rolling a boulder up a hill.
bro my iq is defenitly higher than 80 its 130 but maybe im js retarted
 
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Reactions: aidenltn17

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MOST PEOPLE I SEE ARE FUCKING MOGGING WITH HGH

I get it — it looks like everyone taking HGH suddenly has insane gains, sharp jaws, or looks “fully ascended.” But what you’re seeing isn’t the full picture, and it’s definitely not the way it works for teens. Let me break it down bluntly:

1. The “social media HGH effect” is misleading​

  • Most people showing jawline or facial changes are older adults — their natural puberty is done.
  • They often combine GH with years of training, diet, and sometimes steroids. GH alone isn’t magic.
  • Photos/videos are selective: puffiness, bloating, and weird face changes get cropped or filtered out.

2. Teens are biologically different​

  • Your body already produces tons of GH and testosterone naturally.
  • Adding HGH now doesn’t give you “superpowers” — it just adds unpredictable growth where your tissues are still developing.
  • The results are much less aesthetic and much more dangerous than what you see online.

3. HGH doesn’t make people “mog” instantly​

  • People who look insane on GH usually spent years on serious training and diet.
  • They often use it in adulthood when growth plates are fused, so bone changes are more controlled.
  • The “mogging” you see is a combination of genetics, muscle development, fat loss, and sometimes editing/filtering, not just GH.

4. Risk vs. reward for a teen​

  • You might think: “I want jaw/brow, I’ll just take HGH.”
  • Reality: You could end up puffy, asymmetrical, and with permanent hormonal issues.
  • The social media examples you see are not happening in 14–16-year-olds safely — they’re adult use cases with very different bodies.

Bottom line:
  • HGH does not “guarantee mogging” for teens.
  • Most of the insane results online are adults optimizing years of training, diet, genetics, and sometimes other substances.
  • At your age, the safest way to mog is to maximize natural puberty + training + diet, not hormones.

If you want, I can map out exactly how to mog naturally during your teen years — jaw, face, and body — in a way that actually works and won’t risk your health permanently.
Do you want me to do that?

MOST ARE LIKE 17

Ah — now that makes more sense. If most of the people you see on HGH are 17, that explains part of the “mogging” effect, but also highlights why comparing yourself to them can be misleading. Let’s break it down:

1. Age matters a lot​

  • By 17, many guys are near the end of puberty, so their natural GH + testosterone is already high but stabilizing.
  • Growth plates in the jaw and long bones are starting to close, so exogenous HGH adds more controlled bone thickness, which can change the face in a noticeable way.
  • At 14–16 (your likely age), your growth plates are wider open, so adding GH or androgens is much more unpredictable.

2. “Mogging” isn’t just HGH​

Most 17-year-olds who look insane on GH have:
  • Better training habits (weightlifting, high protein diet)
  • Lower body fat → face looks sharper
  • Genetics that favor rapid facial/muscle growth
  • Sometimes steroids or other hormones (not common, but not unheard of)
HGH is just one variable, not the whole story.

3. Risk vs reward difference​

  • At 17: GH is still risky but slightly less catastrophic than at 14–15.
  • At 14–16: even a “small” dose can mess up height, facial proportions, organs, and hormonal feedback.
  • Social media doesn’t show the side effects: puffiness, bloated face, joint pain, insulin issues.

4. Reality check​

Even if everyone you see seems “mogging,” consider:
  • You’re still in peak natural puberty, so your body is literally building the same gains without risk.
  • Waiting 1–2 years and combining natural hormones with training will often surpass anything you’d get from unsafe GH use now.

If you want, I can show a timeline of natural puberty + training + diet so you can literally mog safely, see jawline gains, lean out your face, and maximize your appearance — without touching hormones right now.
Do you want me to do that?

lwk was gonn start hgh at 16 cs bones start to close

Ah, now I get it — your plan was basically: wait until 16 to start HGH because bones start to close. That’s actually closer to how people think about it medically, but there’s still a lot to unpack.

1. Why 16 seems “safer”​

  • By 16, some growth plates in the long bones and face start narrowing, so HGH may have slightly more predictable effects on bone thickness.
  • The extreme unpredictability of taking it at 14–15 drops a bit, because some of the explosive growth phase is already happening naturally.

2. But 16 is still not risk-free

  • Facial bones, jaw, and nose aren’t fully fused until late teens or even early 20s.
  • HGH can still:
    • cause disproportionate growth (jaw vs cheeks vs forehead)
    • lead to puffiness, bloating, and coarse features
    • affect organs and insulin regulation
  • The “safe window” is much narrower than social media makes it look.

3. Timing vs natural puberty​

  • Your body is still in high GH + testosterone mode naturally.
  • Starting HGH at 16 won’t necessarily give you better results than letting your own hormones finish puberty, especially if your goal is face/body aesthetics.
  • Most of the “mogging” 16–17-year-olds you see have genetics, training, and diet already stacked in their favor.

4. Safer alternative​

  • Maximize natural puberty from 14–16: sleep, diet, training, posture
  • By 16–17, if you’re really considering optimization, you’ll have a much better baseline, and safe interventions are easier (like working with a doctor for hormone therapy if truly needed).
  • That approach gets you most of the “mogging” without risking permanent damage.

If you want, I can make a plan showing exactly what you can do from now until 17 to maximize jawline, body, and face masculinity without HGH, so that by 16 you’re already looking ascended naturally.
Do you want me to make that plan?

i would start 15-17

Ah — now I understand your timeline: you’re thinking starting HGH somewhere between 15–17 to “catch the window before bones fully fuse.” Let’s break this down carefully:

1. The biology of 15–17​

  • Facial and long bones are still growing, but growth plates gradually narrow as you hit late teens.
  • HGH use at this age is still unpredictable, because tissues are highly responsive and can grow disproportionately.
  • Unlike adults, your body doesn’t just add muscle and sculpt your face nicely — it will thicken bones, cartilage, and soft tissue in ways you can’t fully control.

2. Common misconception​

  • Many teens see social media examples of “mogging” 16–17-year-olds on HGH and think it’s predictable.
  • Most of those cases involve:
    • Completed or near-completed natural puberty
    • Years of training and diet
    • Possibly other hormones or genetics favoring fast facial growth
  • You won’t replicate that exactly just by “starting HGH at 16.”

3. Risks at 15–17​

Even if you wait until 15–17, you can still get:
  • Puffy face, jaw asymmetry, uneven growth
  • Organ growth (heart, liver, kidneys)
  • Insulin resistance / diabetes risk
  • Hormonal shutdown (your natural testosterone production could drop)
  • Irreversible changes to your facial proportions

4. Why waiting is usually better​

  • Let natural puberty finish → your jaw, brow, and face develop in balance
  • Combine training, diet, and sleep → maximizes natural GH + testosterone
  • By 17–18, if you still want intervention, your baseline is stronger, safer, and more predictable

Bottom line: 15–17 is “less catastrophic” than 14–15, but it is still very risky, and it will not necessarily give you a clean, aesthetic “mog” like social media makes it look.
I can map out a safe, optimized natural plan from 14–17 that maximizes:
  • Jaw and brow definition
  • Face leanness
  • Muscle and posture
All without exogenous hormones, and by 17 you could naturally look like the guys you see online.
Do you want me to make that plan?

which worse low dose of it long period high dose short period

I’ll answer this cleanly and non‑actionably, because I can’t help with dosing or using hormones — but I can explain the risk logic.

Short answer​

For a teen: both are bad, but in different ways.
High‑dose short period is usually worse acutely;
low‑dose long period is worse cumulatively.

Neither is “safe.”

High dose · short period​

What goes wrong:
  • Sudden insulin resistance
  • Severe water retention / face puffiness
  • Joint & nerve pain
  • Rapid, uncontrolled tissue growth
  • Higher chance of acute damage (organs, glucose control)
Why it’s bad:
Your body gets slammed with a growth signal it’s not meant to handle.
Think shock to the system.
👉 This is how people end up with obvious bloat, weird facial changes, or metabolic issues fast.

Low dose · long period​

What goes wrong:
  • Chronic organ enlargement (heart, kidneys, liver)
  • Gradual coarsening of facial features
  • Long‑term insulin sensitivity loss
  • Subtle but permanent changes
  • Hormonal feedback disruption over time
Why it’s bad:
You’re quietly pushing growth signals while your body is still developing.
Damage accumulates before you notice.
👉 This is how people say “it felt fine” and later realize things never went back.

The key thing people miss​

In adults, this debate is nuanced.
In teens, the answer is simpler:

You’re not choosing between “bad vs okay.”
You’re choosing between fast damage vs slow damage.

Very important reality check​

The “mogging” you see:
  • Isn’t just HGH
  • Often isn’t short‑term
  • Often isn’t shown after side effects
  • Often involves genetics + training + timing
HGH isn’t a precision tool — it’s a growth amplifier.

Bottom line​

  • High dose / short time → more obvious, acute harm
  • Low dose / long time → quieter, cumulative, permanent harm
  • During puberty → both are high‑risk, unpredictable
I know this isn’t the answer you want, but it is the honest one.
dnr robot nigger
 

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