Image Credit: DEA / G. P. CAVALLERO / Contributor / Getty Images “Testosterone-maxxing,” the media says, is a worrying new trend. Young men are being told, by videos and posts they see on social media, that they should increase their testosterone levels by working out, fixing their sleep schedules, eating certain foods—especially animal foods (eggs, milk and meat)—and taking various supplements, like zinc and ashwagandha. I saw yet another article on the topic this morning as I browsed my usual beat of health sites, looking for newsworthy stories to report.
There are, indeed, worrying aspects to this trend, not least of all the suggestion that young men, in the prime of their physical lives, should risk destroying their natural hormonal function by taking steroids.
Part of the problem lies in persistent myths and outright charlatanry within the fitness industry and professional sport. For decades, since the invention of performance-enhancing drugs, athletes have lied about their use of them. In the 1980s and 1990s, there was intense scrutiny of bodybuilders and professional wrestlers. Were they doping? Of course they were! The kind of superhuman physiques that became standard on the bodybuilding stage and in the squared circle were precisely that—superhuman, beyond the natural boundaries set by Mother Nature on muscular development. Even today, despite everything we know or should know, it’s still considered a “revelation” to be told that this or that bodybuilder or wrestler was taking steroids in their prime. And even when they do admit steroid use, former athletes and bodybuilders almost always play down the amounts they were taking. “It was a just a little anavar a few weeks out from competition.” Doping has powerful stigma, and rightly so.
A realistic view would be that professional athletes have an extraordinary natural endowment that’s enhanced by steroids. What’s more, there’s no substitute for dedication and hard work. Simply taking steroids is not enough, on its own, to guarantee a Herculean physique or the ability to play football, fight, snatch 200 kilos overhead, or sprint the 100 meters in less than ten seconds.
But, still, these truths shouldn’t blind us to the dangers of taking steroids, up to and including death, and medical professionals who warn against their increasingly widespread use are right to do so. These are not substances to be taken lightly.
Young men today are vulnerable to the beguiling claims of fitness influencers on Instagram, Twitter and TikTok, especially influencers who claim to be “natty”—to have achieved their splendid physiques without the aid of steroids—when in fact they are anything but. There are plenty of tell-tale signs for those who really know, like round “capped” shoulders and trapezius muscles—the “yoke”—that wouldn’t be out of place on an ox or other beast of burden. The incentives for making such claims are obvious. If this dude can look like Mr Olympia without synthetic enhancement, surely he knows some fabulous secret others don’t know. Buy his latest ebook and you’ll find out for the low price of only $50!
No matter how much you perform this special exercise or drink that special protein shake, you still don’t look like your favorite influencer, and then comes the realization that the only way for a mere mortal like yourself to become a demi-god must be to take steroids. And so, many do. It’s a cruel trick indeed.
We need a serious adjustment to expectations of what can be achieved naturally, and of how long it takes. Honesty is what’s needed, but we’re unlikely to see that any time soon.
Justified warnings about the darker side of seeking physical perfection should not be used, though, to downplay or even hide the fact there really are problems with testosterone today. Grave problems.
The truth, as I discuss at length in my new book The Last Men: Liberalism and the Death of Masculinity, is that the Western world has seen a catastrophic decline in testosterone levels in recent decades, and it’s seriously affecting the health and happiness of young men. It’s also making it harder to reproduce. The broader reproductive-health decline of which the testosterone decline is just one part could make it impossible for mankind to reproduce by natural means within decades. According to world expert Professor Shanna Swan, sperm counts are declining so precipitously, by 2050 the media man will have a sperm count of zero: Half of all men will produce no sperm at all, and the other half will produce so few, they might as well produce none—they won’t get a woman pregnant, no matter how hard they try.
Alarm about testosterone levels was first raised by the Massachusetts Male Aging Study (“MMAS”), a random population-cohort study conducted in the Boston area between the late 1980s and early 2000s. The study showed a 1% year-on-year decrease in testosterone levels among men of all ages. Over a period of less than 20 years, testosterone decreased by just over 20%. Follow-up investigations in Finland, Israel and the US confirmed these results and deepened our alarm; although many still try to pretend none of this is happening.
Testosterone is the master male hormone, and as such it’s largely responsible for making men men and not women (although women also require testosterone for good health, just as men require the “female” hormone estrogen). Its effects go far beyond simply increasing muscle mass. Testosterone governs mood, motivation, libido, immune function and much, much more. Men who have less testosterone—and especially men with low testosterone—are likely to be weaker, less motivated, anxious, sluggish, disinterested in sex and unhappy.
Understanding the crisis of masculinity, and its root in plummeting testosterone levels, is easiest when we look at what happens to men who have low testosterone. The forum website Reddit contains whole sub-forums dedicated to the negative effects of having low testosterone. They’re full of personal testimonies, often very moving, of the ruinous effects of having low testosterone as a man, and the miraculous transformations that take place when normal levels are restored. Many end up taking testosterone therapy (exogeneous doses of the hormone), but as I repeatedly counsel in my work, most men do not have congenital low testosterone—don’t have a genetic or medical condition—and can improve their hormonal health simply by doing things like exercising, especially lifting weights, cleaning up their diets, getting sunlight and sleeping properly. Testosterone injections or gels aren’t usually needed.
We can also see the effects of testosterone decline on a population level. In Japan, millions of young men have become hikikomori—extreme social recluses—maybe as many as ten million, by some estimates. Hikikomori retreat to their bedrooms and consume a steady diet of junk food, pornography, anime cartoons and video games. At least one study from Japan has shown, as we’d expect, that having low testosterone predisposes a young man to becoming a social recluse. There are millions more social recluses in other Asian societies like South Korea.
America, too, has its hikikomori, though we don’t give them that name. It’s reckoned at least six million young American men have simply dropped out of society and the workforce, contenting themselves with an aimless existence. An entire generation of dropouts and do-nothings.
There is no single cause of testosterone decline. Poor diets, sedentary lifestyles, lack of sleep, constant exposure to blue light from screens and even radiation from electronic devices are all to blame. We’ve also created a toxic environment in which it’s impossible to avoid exposure to hormone-disrupting chemicals known as “endocrine-disruptors.” These chemicals are literally everywhere. In the deodorant we spray under our arms, in the soap we wash our hands with; in our sofas, bedding, clothing and furnishings; on the electronic devices we use every day; in the food, the water—even the air.
Microplastics have been identified as a growing threat to human health. These tiny, often invisible, pieces of plastic carry toxic chemicals, including endocrine-disruptors, deep into our bodies, where they can affect the function of every single organ, from the lungs and liver, to the eyes, brain and also the reproductive organs. Scientists have found microplastics in the testes, the seminal fluid, even the “meat” of the penis, as well as the placenta, ovaries and amniotic fluid in which babies gestate for nine months. Studies have also shown that microplastics can also absorb hormones in the blood, including testosterone, making them unavailable for use by the body.
The scale of the problem is unprecedented, and demands unprecedented action. In America, at least, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.—my fellow co-star in the 2022 Tucker Carlson documentary “The End of Men”—is raising awareness and taking action; although, realistically, it will take decades to “Make America Healthy Again,” since it’s taken the better part of a century to make Americans this sick. MAHA must be a generational agenda, spanning multiple administrations, or it will amount to nothing.
Warning young men about the dangers of “testosterone-maxxing,” if it involves taking steroids and performance-enhancing drugs, is a good thing, but such warnings should not be used to disguise the real biological problem facing men today, or to accuse men of exhibiting “toxic masculinity” for wanting to be men at all.
Testosterone levels are declining, and we should all be taking notice. Men’s health, happiness and their future—the future of civilization—depends on testosterone.
Raw Egg Nationalist’s new book, The Last Men: Liberalism and the Death of Masculinity, is out now in hardcover, Kindle and audiobook versions in bookstores and via Amazon.