What's Included




Your Stack
Wolverine (BPC-157 + TB-500)
A two-peptide blend that supports your body's healing of soft tissue and calms the inflammation that comes with injury. BPC-157 focuses on the tissue itself; TB-500 supports circulation and helps repair cells reach where they're needed.
Helps with:
- Tendon, ligament, and muscle strains and tears
- Nagging joint pain and stiffness
- Post-surgical and post-procedure recovery
- Gut lining repair and systemic inflammation
- Faster bounce-back between hard training blocks
GHK-Cu
A copper-binding peptide your body makes naturally, and one of its master "rebuild this properly" signals. It tells your cells to lay down fresh collagen and remodels the area toward better-quality tissue, not just a quick patch. Your natural levels drop by more than half with age, right when recovery gets harder.
Helps with:
- Collagen production and connective-tissue quality
- Stronger, more resilient repair (not just closed-up)
- Skin firmness, tone, and post-procedure skin recovery
- Reduced oxidative stress at the repair site
- The long-game "rebuild it right" side of healing.

How the two work together
Wolverine (BPC-157 + TB-500): the repair crew. This is the pairing athletes nicknamed "Wolverine" for a reason. BPC-157 is a body-protection peptide that supports healing in the exact tissues that nag you: tendons, ligaments, muscle, and the gut lining. TB-500 works alongside it on a different front, supporting circulation and helping repair cells move to where they're needed. Together they're the crew that shows up fast and gets the damaged area healing.
GHK-Cu: the rebuilder. Here's the piece most recovery protocols skip. GHK-Cu is a copper peptide your body makes naturally, and it's one of your master "rebuild this tissue properly" signals. It tells fibroblasts to lay down fresh collagen and remodels the area toward better-quality tissue, not just a patch. The catch: your natural levels of it drop by more than half between young adulthood and your sixties, right when recovery starts getting harder. This puts that signal back.
Wolverine gets the area healing. GHK-Cu makes sure what grows back is worth having. Repair, then rebuild.

What you can realistically expect
No peptide is an off switch for an injury. Here's the honest version of how this tends to go.
First 1 to 2 weeks: Many people notice the first changes here: less pain, better mobility, a joint or area that feels calmer. Gut-related improvements, if that's part of why you're here, often take a little longer.
Weeks 3 to 6: This is the meat of it. Tissue-level repair builds with consistency, and the rebuilding side (collagen, structure) starts to show as the area feeling genuinely more solid, not just less sore.
Beyond: Recovery peptides are usually run in cycles, not forever. Your provider sets the length and the breaks based on what you're healing.
The honest note: this works best as active recovery support, alongside the rehab, the movement, the loading that actually rebuilds tissue. It speeds and improves the process. It doesn't replace it.
Recovery Bundle FAQs
What's the difference between Wolverine and GHK-Cu? Why both?
Wolverine (BPC-157 + TB-500) is the repair side: it supports healing of muscle, tendon, ligament, and gut tissue and helps calm inflammation.
GHK-Cu is the rebuild side: it supports collagen production and tissue remodeling so the repaired area regrows with better quality.
One fixes the damage, one rebuilds the structure. Together they cover the full recovery process instead of half of it.
How fast will I notice results?
Timelines vary by person and by what you're healing. Many people report less pain and better mobility within the first one to two weeks of consistent use.
Deeper tissue repair and the collagen-rebuilding effects build over a typical four to eight week cycle. Gut-related improvements often take a bit longer to show. Consistency matters more than dose size.
What is the Recovery Bundle best for?
People use this stack most for soft-tissue injuries (tendon, ligament, muscle strains), nagging joint pain, post-surgical or post-procedure recovery, and gut or systemic inflammation.
The GHK-Cu side also supports skin and connective-tissue quality, which is why some people notice skin and recovery benefits together. Your provider helps match it to your specific goal.
How do I take it? Do I have to inject near the injury?
Both are typically given as small subcutaneous injections with a fine needle, set by your provider.
For a localized injury, some protocols inject closer to the area; for systemic recovery or gut support, site matters less.
Your care team walks you through technique and site rotation so it's quick and comfortable. You don't have to figure the protocol out yourself.
Do I need to cycle these, or can I run them continuously?
Recovery peptides are generally run in cycles, often four to eight weeks of use followed by a break, rather than indefinitely. This is partly about giving the tissue time to consolidate and partly good practice.
Your provider sets the cycle and any maintenance approach based on what you're recovering from.
What are the possible side effects?
These peptides are generally well tolerated, but that doesn't mean side-effect free. The most common is mild injection-site reaction (redness, swelling, tenderness).
Some people report mild nausea, headache, dizziness, or fatigue, especially early.
With GHK-Cu, irritation at the site is the usual one, and overdoing copper isn't beneficial, which is why dosing is set for you. If side effects are persistent or severe, contact your provider.
Who should not take the Recovery Bundle?
It's not for anyone pregnant or breastfeeding, not for competitive athletes in a testing window, and anyone with an active cancer diagnosis or history should not start these without specialist guidance, since they act on tissue growth and repair pathways.
If you have a chronic condition or take other medication, your provider reviews fit first.