
Peptide Journey: Week 12 Update
Week 12 brought some changes to my peptide research protocol. After finishing my GLOW blend, I decided to explore GHK-Cu and NAD+ individually while adjusting my MOTS-C schedule and continuing my weight loss journey.

Disclaimer: This article is simply a personal thought experiment and opinion piece. I am not a scientist, doctor, or medical professional. Nothing in this article should be considered factual evidence or medical advice. These are questions and ideas I have explored while researching peptides and human biology.
One thing I want to mention is that I have always been a conspiracy theorist, and since this is my personal blog, I wanted to write about a topic that has been coming up in my mind a few times over the past month since taking GHK-Cu.
I ran into a few conspiracy videos talking about how the next war they will create will be a war inside of ourselves, and how they will achieve this by being able to control your thoughts, emotions, and behaviors much easier if you have a lot of heavy metals inside your body.
I can't stop thinking about this peptide, GHK-Cu, that I just started taking a month ago and how popular it has become on social media.
I understand that copper is an essential mineral that the body needs, but all I'm saying is this: if you introduce more copper than your body would normally produce or use, could that make you more susceptible to this conspiracy theory?
This isn't a post telling you what is factual or not. It's literally just a thought that's been stuck in my head and something I've been curious about while researching GHK-Cu.
I've also been thinking about this in a completely different direction. I started thinking about the people who wear copper jewelry. Spiritually, many believe that wearing copper enhances physical and spiritual energy, improves circulation, and cleanses negative energy from the body.
So there are two completely different ways that I'm thinking about this.
As I've continued researching GHK-Cu, one thing that keeps grabbing my attention is the copper component itself.
Most people interested in GHK-Cu are focused on its potential role in collagen production, skin health, and tissue repair. That's what originally caught my attention as well. But the deeper I went into researching copper, the more I started thinking about something entirely different.
Copper is one of the most conductive metals on Earth.
It's used in electrical wiring, telecommunications, electronics, and countless technologies that rely on transmitting energy or information. That got me wondering: if our bodies already operate through electrical signals, and if trace metals play important roles in biological processes, how much do we really understand about the relationship between conductivity and consciousness?
The human body is already an electrical system.
Our hearts generate electrical impulses. Our brains communicate through electrochemical signals. Our nervous system functions through electrical activity. None of that is controversial…it's basic biology.
Where my curiosity starts to drift into more speculative territory is wondering whether we truly understand all of the ways external electromagnetic environments interact with the human body.
Modern life surrounds us with signals. Cell towers, Wi-Fi networks, Bluetooth devices, satellites, radio transmissions, and countless other sources of electromagnetic activity exist all around us. Most people never think about them because they've become part of everyday life.
But sometimes I find myself asking a simple question:
What if we're only scratching the surface of understanding how biological systems interact with electrical environments?
History has repeatedly shown that scientific understanding evolves over time. Ideas that once sounded impossible have occasionally become accepted science decades later.
For me, this isn't really about proving a conspiracy theory.
It's about staying curious.
The more I learn about peptides like GHK-Cu, the more I realize how interconnected the body is. Metals, minerals, electrical signals, hormones, neurotransmitters, and cellular communication all seem to play roles in systems we're still trying to fully understand.
For now, it's simply one of those questions that sits in the back of my mind whenever I dive down another research rabbit hole.
And if there's one thing I've learned from researching peptides, it's that asking questions is often what leads to the most interesting discoveries.

Week 12 brought some changes to my peptide research protocol. After finishing my GLOW blend, I decided to explore GHK-Cu and NAD+ individually while adjusting my MOTS-C schedule and continuing my weight loss journey.

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