Glow Stack
An online-coined stack adding GHK-Cu to the Wolverine Stack (BPC-157 + TB-500) for combined skin/aesthetic and tissue repair effects.
Assembled by Cited from Abud Bakri's recorded recommendations across multiple sources. It is not an ordered program and was not created or endorsed by them — it's our grouping of what they've said on the record.
Components
2-
In a protocol
Bakri uses oral BPC-157 while traveling to avoid travelers' diarrhea and gut distress from exotic foods.
“When I travel, I have a bottle of BPC orally.
HL▶ 50:42Dosageoral, while travelingCaveatsAnecdotal personal use; not FDA approvedCertaintypersonal onlypersonal useBPC-157 as the tissue repair core (Wolverine Stack component) -
Organic (prompted) In a protocol
Topical GHK-Cu in a well-formulated skincare product can support collagen synthesis and may help with photo-aging, especially when combined with red light therapy.
“GHK CU as a post...the blue pigment and the red light seem to be synergistic
HL▶ 2:10:42DosageTopical application; combine with red light therapy; use alongside rest of skincare routineCaveatsPoor-quality products from research chem sites may not be real; don't inject into faceCertaintyhedgedrecommendationGHK-Cu added for skin/collagen effects to create the 'Glow Stack'
How this protocol has evolved
Evolved from the 'Wolverine Stack' (BPC-157 + TB-500) by adding GHK-Cu; Bakri notes debate about whether mixing denatures peptides.