I did what you said CaneDog. I put it into a slightly bigger pot and brushed off the soil from the root ball. I use Happy Frog soil and just got to run to Home Depot and get some stakes to hold it upright.
@hotmanPete I'm going to answer your questions on both this thread and on the other one that you made (asking what you should do next). I personally don't think your issue is nutrient burn from bone meal, because bone meal releases nutrients very slowly over a period of time, so in order for you to get nutrient burn from bone meal you'd have to add an awful lot of it. You could have had a nutrient lockout from it, but that's another conversation.
Moving forward, I think it was a good idea to use Happy Frog and stake it. I don't recall what size your pot is, but my advice to you is as follows:
1) Assuming that you have drainage holes in the pot, water it again very deeply, wait 5 minutes and then do it again. Make sure that the soil is completely wet. Let it drain completely. You don't want any standing water in the bottom.
2) Don't pinch, prune or remove anything. Don't feed it either. Put it in a spot where it gets some natural light (not complete shade) for a few days, then move it back under the grow lights. Otherwise, leave it alone. Don't water it, feed it, or touch it at all, and take another look at it again in a few weeks. I'm willing to bet that you'll see new growth and it'll look better than it does now.
When I first started growing, an acquaintance who had much more experience with growing than I did told me that peppers thrive on benign neglect. I found that to be true, you can love your plants to death. Now that it's been potted, get it watered in and give it time to settle in. It'll tell you what it needs down the road.