What's actually happening at the cellular level
When nutrients become scarce, the body's first move isn't to burn fat — it's to slow the engine. The practitioner corpus is explicit on the mechanism: the body increases production of reverse T3 to block the effects of T3, which throttles cellular metabolism at the receptor level even when total T4 looks fine on labs. The three deiodinase enzymes that govern thyroid conversion shift their behavior in response to caloric scarcity — T4 stops converting cleanly to active T3 and gets shunted into the inactive reverse T3 pool instead. The "thyroid master regulator" can quietly drop the body's natural calorie burn — the substrate cites a drop to roughly 1,500 kcal/day in chronic dieters — without a single TSH change to warn you.
Selenium gets the most airtime in popular thyroid content, but the practitioner corpus is broader: iron deficiency, zinc depletion, low carbohydrate availability, and chronic caloric restriction all suppress T4→T3 conversion independently. A cut that strips carbs aggressively is essentially a thyroid suppression protocol with extra steps. The corpus is direct here — adequate calorie and carbohydrate intake is required to keep the deiodinase enzymes converting T4 to active T3. Strip that, and the engine downshifts regardless of how well-formulated the peptide stack is.
Simultaneously, the HPA axis is doing the opposite — and worse. Cortisol in modern life isn't acute, it's chronic. We're not being chased by lions; we're chipping away at cortisol release through training stress, sleep debt, work pressure, and the metabolic stressor of the deficit itself. The corpus is unambiguous: cortisol breaks down muscle for glucose, decreases fat breakdown, and increases fat storage — particularly visceral. During a cut, this is the exact wrong direction. Worse, cortisol and the anabolic hormones (testosterone, DHEA, growth hormone) all share precursors — pregnenolone moves toward cortisol whenever chronic stress dominates, and the system favors the survival response over building or preserving lean muscle. The deficit IS a chronic stressor. The training IS a chronic stressor. The collision is structural.
The downstream pattern the corpus describes: elevated cortisol-to-DHEA ratio, suppressed conversion of T4 to T3, blunted leptin signaling (because low calories means low insulin means low leptin, and the hypothalamus stops getting the "you're fed" signal), and a slow drift into the metabolic state where the body refuses to release fat regardless of deficit math. This is the wall most cutters hit at Week 4-6 and misinterpret as "needing to eat less."
The protocol — defend thyroid and modulate cortisol
The supporting axis stack runs alongside the Phase 1 and Phase 2 peptide stacks introduced in Modules 3 and 4. It's not optional during an aggressive cut.
| Compound | Dose | Route | Frequency | Evidence Tier | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Selank | 200–400 mcg | Intranasal | 2–3x/day | 🟢 Expert | Anxiolytic without sedation or cognitive impairment. Modulates HPA-driven cortisol output during deficit stress. 30 days on / 10 off cycling. |
| Selank | 200–400 mcg | Intranasal | 1–2x/day | 🟢 Expert | Lower-end maintenance dosing for cutters with moderate stress load. Run alongside Phase 2. |
| DHEA (micronized) | 10–25 mg | Oral | Daily, AM | 🟢 Expert | Restores cortisol/DHEA ratio when chronic stress has shunted pregnenolone toward cortisol. Substrate notes the greatest effect demographic is women; men in high-stress phases also benefit. |
| Pregnenolone | [practitioner corpus thin on cut-phase dosing — track and report] | — | — | — | Substrate confirms pregnenolone is the precursor upstream of cortisol and DHEA, but specific cutting-phase doses are not well-characterized in the available corpus. |
The carb refeed lever. This isn't a compound, but the corpus treats it as a protocol element. Strategic carbohydrate reintroduction — the substrate describes a periodic exit from low-carb states "once a week or once every two weeks" — restores leptin signaling, spikes insulin enough to tell the hypothalamus the body is fed, and re-engages T4→T3 conversion. The practitioner framing: morning carbohydrate intake "is one of the best ways to reinduce leptin sensitivity and reestablish normal metabolism after a period" of restriction. Without refeeds, the deficit defeats itself.
The cortisol-awakening protocol. The corpus describes cortisol as the wake-up hormone — it's supposed to peak in the early morning and fall through the day. During a chronic cut, this rhythm inverts: low morning cortisol (the "burned out" pattern after chronic over-production) or stuck-high evening cortisol that destroys sleep. Two substrate-cited interventions: (1) get sunlight exposure inside the cortisol-awakening window to lock circadian timing — the corpus notes melatonin takes 12 hours to reset, so later sun exposure pushes the entire rhythm; (2) front-load easily-digesting carbohydrate immediately on waking to dampen the catecholamine response and prevent the all-day adrenaline state.
What you should feel
- Week 1–2 (Selank loaded): Reduced "wired but tired" feeling, baseline anxiety drops without cognitive blunting, easier sleep onset despite the deficit.
- Week 2–3 (DHEA loaded): Improved morning energy, restored libido (the corpus is specific on this — DHEA restoration "put it in optimal ranges" and "they sleep" better), reduced sense of being chemically drained by training.
- Week 3–4 (refeed integrated): Body temperature stabilizes, cold extremities resolve, the scale resumes moving 12-24 hours after a refeed, training output recovers.
- Week 4 onward: Cortisol/DHEA ratio normalizes on labs, fT3 holds within the lower-normal band rather than crashing, reverse T3 stays compressed.
What's NOT happening yet
- Selank is not a benzodiazepine replacement. The corpus explicitly describes its anxiolytic action as occurring "without sedation, cognitive impairment, or addiction potential seen with benzodiazepines." Don't expect a knockout — expect a quieter nervous system.
- DHEA is not a testosterone replacement. It's an anabolic-axis intermediate. The corpus notes its greatest effect is on the cortisol/DHEA ratio, not on circulating testosterone directly.
- Carb refeeds do not break the cut. The substrate frames them as the mechanism that keeps the cut working — leptin won't be around to counteract hunger and metabolic downshift without periodic insulin spikes.
- You will not "fix" thyroid by adding T3. The corpus framing for the self-experimenter on a cut is upstream: restore calories episodically, restore the conversion enzymes' substrates, lower the cortisol load. Exogenous thyroid hormone during a cut is a separate, more advanced intervention not covered by this protocol layer.
- You will not feel "amazing" on Day 3. Cortisol/DHEA rebalancing in the corpus is described in weeks, not days. Selank loads faster (acute anxiolytic within hours), but the axis-level recovery is slower.
The corpus describes these mechanisms. Track your labs at Week 4 and adjust.