Bedroom Stack 1) PT-141 — Desire & Central Arousal PT-141 fixes the problem most guys don’t even realize they have: their brain isn’t initiating sex properly. This isn’t a blood flow drug. It doesn’t shove blood into the penis and hope for the best. It acts centrally on melanocortin receptors in the brain, which regulate sexual motivation, arousal, and responsiveness. In other words, it turns the want back on. This is most useful when testosterone is normal but libido is still trash — which is extremely common with stress, burnout, SSRI exposure, overtraining, poor sleep, or just being mentally fried. Once the brain is actually engaged, erections often improve indirectly because arousal is finally there — but PT-141 itself is not a vasodilator. Translation: “I actually want sex again, not just going through the motions.” 2) Cialis/Tadalafil — Erection Reliability Cialis handles the mechanical side. It improves penile blood flow by inhibiting PDE-5, which makes erections easier to initiate and easier to maintain. That’s it. It doesn’t create desire. If your brain isn’t aroused, Cialis won’t magically make you horny — it just amplifies the signal once it exists. Where Cialis shines is reliability. The long half-life means you’re not timing sex down to the minute, which massively reduces performance anxiety. When your mind is engaged, your body actually follows through. Translation: “When I’m aroused, my dick does what it’s supposed to.” 3) Dapoxetine — Ejaculatory Control Dapoxetine is purely about not finishing too fast. It’s a short-acting SSRI that raises the ejaculation threshold by increasing serotonergic inhibition of the ejaculatory reflex. Unlike daily SSRIs, it’s designed to be used situationally, which is why it doesn’t nuke libido the way long-term antidepressants do. It does not improve erections. It does not increase desire. It does not fix arousal. All it does is give you control over timing. Translation: “Everything works — I just don’t blow my load in 90 seconds.”