Pubertymaxxing, The Hidden Softmaxxing Guide... Next guide is "Late Bloomers" guide.

1, 1. One of the most important factors: SLEEP — the natural source of free growth hormone (GH) provided by the human body.

Why it matters:​


  • Deep sleep triggers the release of growth hormone (GH), which is crucial for height and muscle development during puberty.

Backed by science:​


  • Study: Growth hormone is secreted in pulses during slow-wave sleep (Takahashi et al., 1968; Van Cauter et al., 2000).
  • Adolescents need 8–10 hours of sleep per night for optimal development (CDC, 2017).

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Aim for 9–10 hours per night. For a more restorative sleep.
  • Avoid screens 1 hour before bed (blue light disrupts melatonin). Why melatonin is important? It regulates circadian rythm, Induces deep sleep (Stage N3) maximizing GH and also acts as an antioxidant supporting healthy cellular and bone development.
  • Keep a consistent sleep schedule (even on weekends). For no disruptions in melatoning meaning consistent deep sleep.



2. Nutrition: Fuel for Growth


Key principles:​


  • Protein for muscle and bone development.
  • Calcium and vitamin D for bone growth.
  • Zinc and magnesium for testosterone and GH production.
  • Overall calorie surplus supports growth if not overweight.

Backed by science:​


  • Protein is essential for growth during adolescence (WHO, 2007).
  • Low vitamin D is linked to reduced growth and poor bone density (Weaver et al., 2016).
  • Zinc deficiency is associated with stunted growth and delayed puberty (Prasad, 2013).

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Eat 1.2–1.8g of protein/kg of body weight.
  • Include foods like eggs, milk, fish, yogurt, legumes, and nuts.
  • Supplement vitamin D if sun exposure is low where you live



3. Exercise: Stimulate Hormones and Structure


Importance:​


  • Exercise increases testosterone, GH, and strengthens bones.
  • Resistance training builds muscle, improves posture, and defines bone structure (safely, if done right).

Backed by science:​


  • Strength training in adolescents increases lean mass and is safe with proper supervision (Faigenbaum et al., 2009).
  • Exercise improves bone mineral density and growth plate development (Tenforde & Fredericson, 2011).

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Combine:
    • Strength training 2–4x/week (bodyweight or light weights).
    • Sprint training (boosts testosterone).
    • Posture-focused training (planks, rows, chin tucks).



4. Avoid Growth Inhibitors


Substances and habits that suppress development:​


  • Smoking and vaping (Nicotine suppresses GH and testosterone).
  • Alcohol (affects liver function and hormone levels).
  • Junk food and chronic under-eating.

Backed by science:​


  • Smoking during adolescence is linked to reduced height and delayed puberty (Al-Sahab et al., 2010).
  • Alcohol suppresses GH and reduces sleep quality (Van Cauter et al., 2000).

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Eliminate nicotine (Clavicular nicotine argument vs Santa Cruz is cope), alcohol, and ultra-processed foods.



5. Hormonal Optimization


Key points:​


  • Natural testosterone and growth hormone peaks during puberty — maximize, don’t suppress it.

What increases T and GH:​


  • High-intensity training (HIIT)
  • Zinc, magnesium, vitamin D
  • Deep sleep
  • Cold exposure (ice baths, cold showers)
  • Avoiding stress

Backed by science:​


  • Magnesium and zinc supplementation in deficient individuals increases testosterone (Cinar et al., 2009).
  • Short bursts of high-intensity exercise can temporarily spike GH and T levels (Kraemer et al., 1990).



6. Facial Development


Idea:​


Proper tongue posture may help support ideal facial structure if practiced during growth years.


Scientific support is limited but plausible:​


  • Skull and jaw bones are still developing in adolescence (Enlow, 1990).
  • Proper oral posture (tongue to palate, lips closed, nasal breathing) may support better structure and breathing patterns.

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Practice keeping your tongue on the roof of your mouth.
  • Breathe through your nose.



7. Genetics vs Environment


Reality check:​


  • Genetics play a big role (height, bone width, etc.)
  • But epigenetics and environment matter — hormones, nutrition, and training shape how your genes express.

Study support:​


  • Puberty timing and growth are affected by both genes and environmental factors (Parent et al., 2003; Silventoinen et al., 2003).

Hope you like it.​


**Off-Topic** I'm very lazy to type, used an Ai language to write the guide with my knowledge.
 
With your knowledge :ROFLMAO:
Laughable, you wrote the prompt, "How to pubertymax" and called it a day.
Laziness: pure and utter laziness.
 
5056385 4926580 4921568 4921129 4912654 1000002126
 
With your knowledge :ROFLMAO:
Laughable, you wrote the prompt, "How to pubertymax" and called it a day.
Laziness: pure and utter laziness.
Researched a lot for this softmaxx guide, took me like 1-2h and I don't get paid for this so, how can you use the term "Laziness"
 
Researched a lot for this softmaxx guide, took me like 1-2h and I don't get paid for this so, how can you use the term "Laziness"
Looks like you just wrote a simple prompt and regurgitated everything out here.
 
Looks like you just wrote a simple prompt and regurgitated everything out here.
I readed like 5 guides and searched for sources, also watched some youtube videos
1750992453297


And the hate in this platform is incredible
 
1, 1. One of the most important factors: SLEEP — the natural source of free growth hormone (GH) provided by the human body.

Why it matters:​


  • Deep sleep triggers the release of growth hormone (GH), which is crucial for height and muscle development during puberty.

Backed by science:​


  • Study: Growth hormone is secreted in pulses during slow-wave sleep (Takahashi et al., 1968; Van Cauter et al., 2000).
  • Adolescents need 8–10 hours of sleep per night for optimal development (CDC, 2017).

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Aim for 9–10 hours per night. For a more restorative sleep.
  • Avoid screens 1 hour before bed (blue light disrupts melatonin). Why melatonin is important? It regulates circadian rythm, Induces deep sleep (Stage N3) maximizing GH and also acts as an antioxidant supporting healthy cellular and bone development.
  • Keep a consistent sleep schedule (even on weekends). For no disruptions in melatoning meaning consistent deep sleep.



2. Nutrition: Fuel for Growth


Key principles:​


  • Protein for muscle and bone development.
  • Calcium and vitamin D for bone growth.
  • Zinc and magnesium for testosterone and GH production.
  • Overall calorie surplus supports growth if not overweight.

Backed by science:​


  • Protein is essential for growth during adolescence (WHO, 2007).
  • Low vitamin D is linked to reduced growth and poor bone density (Weaver et al., 2016).
  • Zinc deficiency is associated with stunted growth and delayed puberty (Prasad, 2013).

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Eat 1.2–1.8g of protein/kg of body weight.
  • Include foods like eggs, milk, fish, yogurt, legumes, and nuts.
  • Supplement vitamin D if sun exposure is low where you live



3. Exercise: Stimulate Hormones and Structure


Importance:​


  • Exercise increases testosterone, GH, and strengthens bones.
  • Resistance training builds muscle, improves posture, and defines bone structure (safely, if done right).

Backed by science:​


  • Strength training in adolescents increases lean mass and is safe with proper supervision (Faigenbaum et al., 2009).
  • Exercise improves bone mineral density and growth plate development (Tenforde & Fredericson, 2011).

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Combine:
    • Strength training 2–4x/week (bodyweight or light weights).
    • Sprint training (boosts testosterone).
    • Posture-focused training (planks, rows, chin tucks).



4. Avoid Growth Inhibitors


Substances and habits that suppress development:​


  • Smoking and vaping (Nicotine suppresses GH and testosterone).
  • Alcohol (affects liver function and hormone levels).
  • Junk food and chronic under-eating.

Backed by science:​


  • Smoking during adolescence is linked to reduced height and delayed puberty (Al-Sahab et al., 2010).
  • Alcohol suppresses GH and reduces sleep quality (Van Cauter et al., 2000).

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Eliminate nicotine (Clavicular nicotine argument vs Santa Cruz is cope), alcohol, and ultra-processed foods.



5. Hormonal Optimization


Key points:​


  • Natural testosterone and growth hormone peaks during puberty — maximize, don’t suppress it.

What increases T and GH:​


  • High-intensity training (HIIT)
  • Zinc, magnesium, vitamin D
  • Deep sleep
  • Cold exposure (ice baths, cold showers)
  • Avoiding stress

Backed by science:​


  • Magnesium and zinc supplementation in deficient individuals increases testosterone (Cinar et al., 2009).
  • Short bursts of high-intensity exercise can temporarily spike GH and T levels (Kraemer et al., 1990).



6. Facial Development


Idea:​


Proper tongue posture may help support ideal facial structure if practiced during growth years.


Scientific support is limited but plausible:​


  • Skull and jaw bones are still developing in adolescence (Enlow, 1990).
  • Proper oral posture (tongue to palate, lips closed, nasal breathing) may support better structure and breathing patterns.

Pubertymaxx tip:​


  • Practice keeping your tongue on the roof of your mouth.
  • Breathe through your nose.



7. Genetics vs Environment


Reality check:​


  • Genetics play a big role (height, bone width, etc.)
  • But epigenetics and environment matter — hormones, nutrition, and training shape how your genes express.

Study support:​


  • Puberty timing and growth are affected by both genes and environmental factors (Parent et al., 2003; Silventoinen et al., 2003).

Hope you like it.​


**Off-Topic** I'm very lazy to type, used an Ai language to write the guide with my knowledge.
 

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