Barbell Shrugged - Physiology Friday: [LIBIDO] The Biochemistry of Improving Your Sex Drive w/ Anders Varner, Doug Larson, Travis Mash and Dan Garner Barbell Shrugged
Episode Date: August 16, 2024In today’s episode of Barbell Shrugged you will learn: The internal mechanisms that create your sex drive. How psychological, hormonal, and functional dysfunction impacts sex drive. The biochemistr...y of boners The nervous system’s response to sexual arousal The psychology of porn addiction Supplementation that can improve your sex drive Impacts of chronic fatigue on sex drive How estrogen and testosterone influence sex drive Hormonal changes during pregnancy that heighten sex drive How aging affects your libido They affect of marijuana and alcohol on sex drive Hair loss medication and erectile dysfunction symptoms To learn more, please go to https://rapidhealthreport.com Connect with our guests: Anders Varner on Instagram Doug Larson on Instagram Coach Travis Mash on Instagram Dan Garner on Instagram
Transcript
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Shrug family, this week on Barbell Shrug Physiology Friday is back.
Is there anything better on your Friday than taking a deep dive into all things libido?
Everybody thinks about it.
Everybody probably wants a bigger and better, badder libido.
I don't know.
Who doesn't want to have more sex and better sex and more consistent sex?
Everybody.
And that all comes down to making sure that your physiology and your environment
allow you the health to be
a practicing breeder. That's what we're going to call it. Having a high libido. How do you
practice the breeding? You don't have to breed every time, but practice as much as you possibly
can, friends. And if you listen to Dan Garner, he will help. As always, friends, make sure you get
over to rapidhealthreport.com. That is where Dr. Andy Galvin is doing a free video on the three steps that we use here at Rapid Health Optimization to unlock your true physiological potential.
Essentially, how we make the best in the world better.
And you can access that free video over at rapidhealthreport.com.
Friends, let's get into some libido.
Welcome to Barbell Shrug.
I'm Andrew Varner, Doug Larson, Coach Travis
Mash, Dan Garner. In the house today, we are talking about
libido. That's like the coolest
subject for any podcast because everyone's
going to get a little something they like.
Hopefully, if you pay attention, you'll get a lot of something you like
at the end.
If you got a lot of libido, you get a little more.
If you don't have libido, maybe you get some.
Travis Mash level libido in the next 60 minutes of hanging out with us.
I hope my laws don't listen to this.
They can always stay at it.
We hit the record button too late for that one.
I think everybody probably understands what their libido is, but has no idea what the mechanisms in place are for you to have a sex drive.
Where does our sex drive come from?
Okay.
That was your broad open-ended question at the start of the show.
I have no idea.
We're throwing the largest umbrella over this as possible to start.
Actually, let's back it up just for a second.
You said nobody knows where their sex drive comes from. I feel like that's kind of accurate,
but not all the way accurate. I feel like most people think it's like pure testosterone. Like,
that's it. Like, if you have tight testosterone, you got sex drive. And if you don't, you don't.
And I feel like it's probably not that simple. And now we'll turn it over to Dan.
There he goes. Yeah, sure. We need a new host.
I'll tackle this one the best way I can here. So libido is actually super complicated.
And it's way more prevalent than people allow themselves to admit because it's something that's
super private. It's something that people are embarrassed about. But I work with a lot of
people with low libido. That's a that's a that's a not an uncommon complaint to come my way is low libido, low sex drive.
It's not the way it used to be.
And I'm talking males and females.
This is absolutely a unisex thing that applies across all categories.
And when it comes to libido, there's primary areas that you want to focus on.
There's psychological, there's hormonal, and then there's actual function.
But I think a more productive place to begin the conversation would be to understand function
first, that actual like the biochemistry of libido and how that's actually going to break
down and help us.
So why don't we just talk about achieving interaction?
That's probably one of the biggest, one of the bigger complaints that we get.
Hold on a second.
I can even give like some real,
this is probably like 20% of the people that come to see us.
It's a very high number.
Yeah.
It's something that affects
and affects way more than 20% of people.
It's just 20% of people reach out.
That I get to talk to.
Yeah.
You know?
Yeah, exactly.
So this is something that's hyper common,
but it's understood biochemically.
So basically what you're looking for
when it comes to achieving an erection,
you've got three different primary types
of muscle tissue in the body.
There is your skeletal muscle tissue,
your cardiac tissue, and your smooth tissue.
Skeletal muscle is the stuff we normally talk about
on this show.
Biceps, pecs, getting jacked. Cardiac tissue is a little self-explanatory. That is the muscle
tissue that is a part of the heart and allows the heart to do what the heart does. And lastly,
there's the smooth tissue. Smooth tissue is different from the cardiac and skeletal muscle,
and it's found in things like the lungs and in the intestines and also in the penis.
So there's a spongy type of muscle tissue in the penis called the corpus cavernsum.
And the corpus cavernsum, that's actually where we're trying to dilate vessels and get
blood flow into so it can expand and stiff it up for you to do what you need to do.
This is not unlike what we're trying to do in the gym,
believe it or not.
So what we're trying to do, you've got nitric oxide.
Nitric oxide is what's going to trip off activity
of an enzyme called cyclic guanosine monophosphate,
or CGMP.
CGMP is what allows the vessels in the corpus cavernosum to relax, dilate,
and completely fill up with blood. So the degree of activity of the CGMP, you can think about the
degree of activity of the CGMP, like the degree of integrity of your erection. And everybody on
here knows that that's a continuum. You can have,
that's like, you can have a 25% good one. You could have a 50% good one. You can have 70,
or you could have that 100%. This is, we're ready to rock. We're ready to rock being a pun,
rock hard. But that's a, that's totally a continuum. And that is dependent upon CGMP activity. So we want plenty of nitric oxide
to activate CGMP activity so that that activity is very high. So lots of dilation takes place
and therefore lots of blood flow can get in there. But there's something known as phosphodiesterase to race five or PDE5. PDE5 is what inhibits and breaks down CGMP because biologically or
evolutionarily speaking, it doesn't make sense to walk around with an erection all day. So PDE5
will slowly degrade that activity of CGMP. And this is actually how things like Cialis work. Cialis inhibits PDE5.
So PDE5 is what's breaking down CGMP.
So when you stop the enzyme that is breaking down CGMP, then you allow not just more CGMP
activity to take place, but it can take place for a longer period of time.
So then you get that 100% erection that you're after, and you also can sustain it for a longer period of time. So then you get that 100% erection that you're after,
and you also can sustain it for a longer period of time.
That function is important to understand
because this is how we can kind of utilize
certain over-the-counter things to get the job done.
Things such as arginine, things such as citrulline,
these have been demonstrated to increase blood flow.
Yes,
in the gym, we take them pre workout, but they also increase blood flow to other areas as well.
And blood flow is not just it's not only a thing for males either. Because when it comes to desire sexual function, blood flow, even to the clitoris and vaginal area is just as important as blood flow to
the penis.
So that's actually a unisex thing that we can apply to both categories.
Now, that function, that needs to be happening properly because there's such a thing as having
desire without function.
Those are like two different categories.
So when I'm looking at somebody's questionnaire or I'm looking at somebody's labs, I'm basically
trying to break it down into psychological, hormonal, and function.
When I can identify where that issue is coming from, then we've identified how we're going
to increase libido.
Wow.
I get a question.
With NO2 Explode, that a lot of the breathing techniques, you know,
like breathing through your nose is a part of like NO2 because it is potentially through the
nose. Can you explain that more? Because ever since I was told this, I've been curious.
Sure. So yeah, nasal breathing enhances parasympathetic activity. So our nervous
system's basically got two branches, right? We've got the sympathetic branch, and we've got the parasympathetic branch. Sympathetic is very
fight or flight. Parasympathetic is rest and digest. So parasympathetic activity actually
dilates blood vessels. So parasympathetic activity, and this is actually how ejaculation
is accomplished. So you actually want to be maximally parasympathetic to have a maximum
erection, but then your body actually flips from parasympathetic into sympathetic for and during
the ejaculation stage. So somebody who is able to nasally breathe and therefore activate more
parasympathetic activity is going to have greater blood flow
due to not being in a sympathetic state. And this is exactly why and then it kind of starts to make
sense when you start thinking about evolutionary biology, but also kind of just common sense,
because common sense would tell you, hey, if I've got stress, am I going to be in the mood?
Probably not. If I've got a lot of anxiety going into this, am I going to perform
very well? Probably not. And this is largely due to sympathetic activity, overriding parasympathetic
activity, and therefore overriding proper blood flow. So that's something where, and you can
actually read more about that. There's a book called Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers that I read
a long time ago. And that that part actually stuck with
me, he goes over an entire section on parasympathetic activity for during sex, and then
sympathetic activity for that's when the ejaculation takes place. So that nasal breathing is a huge
part of it. But it's also why I kind of begin that whole libido breakdown process with the psychological,
because we can talk function all we want.
It's very easy to talk about that.
But a psychological like when you go through the literature on libido, you just see an
undeniable connection with depression, with fatigue, with insomnia, with stress, and with porn addiction. But between
fatigue, insomnia, depression, stress, and porn addiction, those can absolutely railroad libido
because they do a lot of things to us that is simply going to make, let's just back it up to
an evolutionary perspective.
Shrug family, I want to take a quick break. If you are enjoying today's conversation, I want to invite you to come over to rapidhealthreport.com. When you get to
rapidhealthreport.com, you will see an area for you to opt in, in which you can see Dan Garner
read through my lab work. Now, you know that we've been working at Rapid Health Optimization on programs for optimizing health. Now, what does that actually mean? It means in three parts,
we're going to be doing a ton of deep dive into your labs. That means the inside out approach.
So we're not going to be guessing your macros. We're not going to be guessing the total calories
that you need. We're actually going to be doing all the work to uncover everything that you have going on inside you.
Nutrition, supplementation, sleep.
Then we're going to go through and analyze your lifestyle.
Dr. Andy Galpin is going to build out a lifestyle protocol
based on the severity of your concerns.
And then we're going to also build out all the programs
that go into that based on the most severe things first.
This truly is a world-class program and we invite you to see step one of this process by going over to rapidhealthreport.com.
You can see Dan reading my labs, the nutrition and supplementation that he has recommended that
has radically shifted the way that I sleep, the energy that I have during the day, my total
testosterone level, and it's my ability to trust and have confidence in my health going
forward. I really, really hope that you're able to go over to rapidhealthreport.com,
watch the video of my labs, and see what is possible. And if it is something that you are
interested in, please schedule a call with me on that page. Once again, it's rapidhealthreport.com,
and let's get back to the show. Stress, because we are hardwired to survive. We're hardwired to survive. Our DNA hasn't changed a
whole lot since back in the day. So when we have any form of stressor coming into our body, our
body sees that as very sympathetic, very fight or flight. And this is a connection to reduce
reproduction at the expense of survival. Because for example, if you've got a tiger in front of you,
it's gonna be a really bad idea
to have sex with your girl, okay?
So that stress is in us to survive
so that we can reproduce another day.
So any kind of psychological disorders,
that is going to play a huge role
in reducing many, many, many different areas of libido
that say Cialis or Viagra or any kind of supplement could never do.
So that's kind of like number one is if you haven't seen a sex therapist, for example,
and you've tried a bunch of stuff, that's a huge thing that I would recommend.
And if anybody's listening right now, if you think you're the first person that that sex
therapist has seen that has your exact issues, you're fucking wrong.
Like that person has seen many, many people like you.
And if you need help, go freaking talk to them because your root cause isn't going to
be found in biochemistry.
It's going to be found in psychology.
So how would that be different
than just seeing a regular psychotherapist? Like, a sex therapist may be dealing with like a sex
specific issue, but it also could be something totally unrelated to sex. Like you had you had
trauma from when you're a little kid, you feel like nobody loves you, what that type of thing,
it has nothing to do with sex. And that's just, it's just a downstream consequence of some
totally unrelated issue that a regular psychotherapist that presumably could handle. Is it radically
different? Do you know much about the distinctions there? No, I don't know much about the distinctions
there. But it would be my, it would be my intuition that psychology is very much like physiology,
and that you're going to have one person that specializes
in the endocrine system, one person that specializes in the immune system, one person
specializes in the muscular system. I think that in the world of psychology and how much goes into
that, there are likely specialists in sex by itself. And then that person would be able to
better identify if their client needs to go see someone else. This is not a sex
thing. This is depression. This is not a sex thing. This is this. So I think that that would just
be a better curator if their need to work with them or exactly who they would need to see next.
If you had, if you had adequate desire, we'll say, but it was purely a function issue,
you think a sex therapist would still help in that case? Or is that if you have a good function, but just like you just don't ever feel
like doing it? Is that more a sex therapist role? In my opinion, yes. So if somebody if somebody has
adequate desire, I don't think they need to go talk to somebody because the diet desire is already
there. It's going to be a function thing. So that's actually when I'd start going down the list,
I'd be looking at hormones, and then I'd be looking at hormones and then I'd be looking at function and I'd be looking to
incorporate things from there because, you know, all that nitric oxide stuff that I just
talked about.
Well, in the genital area, that's mediated by testosterone and estrogen.
So testosterone and estrogen both play a huge role.
And that's something that a lot of people kind of miss, too.
And something that I believe you talked about, Doug, at the beginning of the podcast, everybody thinks it's only testosterone. It's absolutely not.
Testosterone plays a role in this, no doubt. But estrogen plays just as big of a role. And in a lot
of data, it plays an even bigger role in sex drive, not just in females, but in males. Estrogen is
absolutely required for libido. Ask any bodybuilder
who's five weeks out from a show and taking a lot of anti-estrogens to create a real dry look
in his physique. What happened to his libido in those last five weeks?
Even while he's taking tons of testosterone.
Yes. Even while they're on testosterone, trans, gastro, the suppression of estrogen is enormous to and of course,
the hypocaloric state in that context, but the suppression of estrogen is absolutely enormous
when it comes to libido. So testosterone and estrogen are key for both sexes. And estrogen,
that the way in which the menstrual cycle works. Estrogen actually peaks right before ovulation. And it's
very clear in the literature that sexual desire in females is highest during ovulation. And that's
triggered by that peak in estrogen. Yeah. So both of them, if you've got hormone issues on either
side, and that begs another question too. So like this, this topic is so big. So we go over that psychology stuff, right?
But then even when you get into hormones, you we can dive into the nitty gritty on testosterone
and estrogen. But those could be completely thrown off due to obesity, due to insulin resistance,
due to sleep apnea. Like these are things that like even testosterone and estrogen therapy, which
people freaking jump to, they will jump to hormone replacement therapy in so many different scenarios,
but never actually address why that took place. That's such a huge mistake, because you're kind
of missing the point. Maybe you got your desire back, but you're not any healthier. You just got
a thing that got your desire back. And it's actually artificial desire. Like it's not even the real deal because insulin resistance was offsetting your hormones.
Obesity was offsetting your hormones, sleep apnea, insomnia.
What was the freaking reason why you had stress or anxiety that's offsetting your hormones?
Because that's still in your life.
It's just now you've got some desire.
Like I'm very big.
I'm just like, I like to take a more holistic approach.
And it's kind of like my answer to everything is when you improve health, you're never worse off.
We just improve systemic health and everything gets better along the way.
Yeah, go ahead. I was just gonna say like, if you have a low libido, isn't there a big chance
that you have a much bigger problem that could be like early death? I mean, like, you know, I've read everything I've read about low libido.
It's a very good sign that you have a much bigger problem you need to deal with.
So like if you just take the hormones, I mean, you might just be like placing yourself into an early grave.
So, yeah, absolutely.
Because one of the key predictors of erectile dysfunction is high cholesterol. And then that starts to make sense. Like, yes, that would absolutely increase mortality risk. But hey, that also reduces blood flow. So it makes perfect sense that that's impacting the erections, but also impacting mortality. So while you're trying to chase an erection, you're going to die sooner. So let's figure that out first.
There's something more important, brother.
Believe it or not, there's something more important.
If I die at 50, my volume doesn't get to where I want.
I'm looking for volume sex.
Not intensity, volume.
When you were going through kind of talking about the psychological side of this thing,
we've also done a show.
I can't remember the exact number what show it was on the number of ways that poor health
actually leads into the behavioral health side of things.
Is that also a factor of it?
Like, obviously, I think the running theme of all is let's get you as healthy as possible and then see how does someone know if they need to go to a psychologist or
they need to get look into dopamine and serotonin and understand hormone levels before they've
gone into see a behavioral health or sexual health specialist i think that um there's going to be
some degree of uh escapism so with people who are honest with themselves they humans we do an
amazing job at justifying our terrible decisions we are so good at that uh justifying uh cheat
meals justifying alcoholism justifying substance, just we justify all this stuff.
And it is just that a justification. But somebody who's truly ready for change will reach a level
of self awareness to identify, hey, is this psychological? What type of am I doing some
form of escapism here? I truly think that a coach will bring that out of you. And sometimes that
needs to take place where a coach just needs to reach into your heart and pull it out and show you
that this is actually the route you need to go. And I've done that for a lot of people in the past
too. And you just tell someone, Hey, have you ever talked to someone about this? And then the answer
is almost always no. And then that you almost give them permission because now it's not them,
you know, seeing that they've lost in their mind in some way and going themselves. No,
it's like a prescription from coach. Hey, go talk to them. Just give it a shot. Try it out.
And then there's, there is an admission there. So I think a lot of people,
whether they're ready to admit it to themselves or not, they know if they have some degree of depression
or some degree of anxiety
or some degree of porn addiction.
Yeah.
These are all things that play a huge role in it.
So I think that that would just simply be a conversation
you have with your clients.
I totally-
And then if that conversation goes well,
then do your labs
and we'll see what's going on under the hood
so I can fix your testosterone, estrogen and function.
I've asked two people that we've interviewed on this podcast over the last couple years about the porn addiction thing and nobody really has a great answer cool i feel like
those uh like the depression side of things if i were to look at behavioral health is like going a, and maybe I don't understand all of the pieces of depression.
Um, but that, that seems to be a, like a psychological issue where I view like the
porn addiction side is like alcoholism. Is that, is that correct? And aligning those two in a way
of like, this is a personal choice that you're making and it's negatively affecting your life
where depression seems like it's, uh, in a way it's like some event triggers and stacks on top negative
emotions and negative uh like like seeing where you're going to be in the future you don't like
where that's headed the anxiety that side of things um obviously this is a massively prevalent
thing in our society uh and that somebody is going to porn
hub billions of times a day to make it like the fifth most visited website in the world um what
what does porn actually do to your body that is so detrimental or your mind that is so detrimental
that um one it's labeled as an addiction now
to look at naked people rubbing each other. And then two, like, how does this create like
long-term issues where people can become impotent or have no sex drive whatsoever?
Sure. So that was a beautiful question, my man. I think this is something that's so important to
talk about. Um. And I really like
actually how you separated depression and addiction, because that's like, that's important,
like depression. And depression is kind of a big category where you're you're apathetic about most
things. Like being motivated to have sex is hard for someone who's depressed, being motivated to
work out is very hard being motivated to make a meal or even get out of bed. Like these
are all things that's very hard for someone who's truly depressed, but they don't represent the
characteristic traits of addiction. Whereas addiction is a totally different thing. And
this is already in the research that alcoholism and opioid use reduce libido dramatically.
And one of the reasons why they reduce libido dramatically,
chronic alcohol use, not acute, acute can drive it up because of estrogen factors,
but chronic abuse completely suppresses it. And one of the reasons why opioid use and alcoholism
suppress libido over time is because dopamine is involved in libido. So dopamine is the reward neurotransmitter.
So when you have that orgasm,
you have a dopamine rush and it's rewarding
and you remember what that was like
and that's what's gonna have you come back next time.
That's very dopamine mediated.
However, if you're getting your dopamine elsewhere,
your desire for other things to get dopamine
isn't even nearly the case because when
you feel- Base lines up, right.
Exactly. When you know how good painkillers feel, when you know how good heroin feels,
when you know how great of an escape alcoholism gives you from the reality of your life,
these are all rewards that actually make sex secondary as opposed to primary.
They're not having the right sex thing, but go ahead.
Yeah, man.
Damn that, man.
So it's a dopamine thing.
If I can get a better kick, if I'm getting more juice from something else, then why would I go for another treat?
Like, I'm not going to visit the tree over here. If I've got a tree here that
can give me everything that I need. So that's a huge part of the chemistry behind how addiction
can over time, reduce libido. But hey, that's also pornography. When you when you log on to
Pornhub, that porn addiction is a thing. That's a real thing. And there is so much porn out there now that if you wanted to watch a porn video every day for the rest of your life, I'm sure you'd be able to do it.
You can't keep up.
There's no way.
It's produced way faster.
Yeah, yeah.
You think it's tough to keep up with shows on Netflix?
Try keeping up to Pornhub.
Jesus.
Nobody quote me on that, actually actually by the way like i heard humor you've been talking about this to
where like it's uh the most important part is is the difference in the amount of dopamine to the
baseline so like it's not really necessarily how much it's the difference in baseline because every
if you watch i guess if you watch porn day, that baseline creeps up and soon,
like you have to go to crazier porn or something more, you know,
out there to get that difference in baseline because you're increasing that
baseline, which then therefore makes normal sex really hard for you to get
excited about, you know, for that dopamine dump. What are your thoughts?
What's the truth to that?
Well, I think that a comparable example would be caffeine.
So like the first time you have 100 milligrams of caffeine, it makes you feel freaking great.
And then, you know, over time, you might go to 125 and then 150, 175, 200.
And you kind of keep climbing up that ladder, even though you're still never achieving that
initial 100 that you got.
You keep chasing that hit.
You keep chasing that same feeling that you originally got.
In the world of pornography, you can look at something that I guess societal norms would
call somewhat normal, right?
I think it's a normal thing to explore
pornography but when you start doing it every day dude you're gonna start looking for that extra hit
that extra hit that and then it is it ends up getting uh more weird more hardcore more all
kinds of things and you've reached a scenario where like you're actually watching something that you don't necessarily enjoy.
And I think a good a good way to almost calculate this is if the moment you're done, the moment you finished and you look at the screen and you go, oh, what the fuck's that?
Like, that's like one of the. Yeah.
If like you can actually get into these states where you're like in a type of trance seeking that reward. And then it's something you would never do in real life. It's something you're not fucking interested in at all. But in that moment, in that heat, the dopamine rush is worth it, and you're going to go after it. So then that over time can raise that dopamine baseline. So then when you go have missionary sex with your girl later on, it's quite below baseline.
And then you're not going to be able to perform because the desire is not as high because
the dopamine rush isn't as big as it otherwise would have been.
And you might be going to the tree of reward of dopamine on Pornhub.com rather than having
a healthy, loving, great relationship with your girl.
So that's something where if people can kind of understand that and stop, let me tell you
something, your life will never get worse if you quit porn.
Your life will never get worse if you quit it.
It will only get better in so many different ways because of dopamine and a host of other
factors revolving around being in
a healthy, amazing relationship with your partner. I have a question about how that same cycle
repeats itself in real life, in that I have talked to multiple people that are unable to climax, even though all of the hardware works.
And in the back of my mind, while they were explaining to me the issues that they're having,
realizing that these people have probably gone out almost nightly, had plenty of success due to the level of power that they have in their life,
whether it's financial or access or whatever that whatever allows them to meet the opposite sex and influence that situation to to get those people, uh, home with them, whatever it is, um, that are now unable to actually enjoy,
uh, even real life sex, uh, to the point of, of climaxing and having an orgasm. Is that,
is it possible? I mean, it almost has to be, I guess, but, uh, those mechanisms can play
themselves out in real life as well. Is that correct?
Yeah.
Yeah,
absolutely.
Like that,
that you're just simply finding another way to raise that dopamine baseline that we were just talking about is that if you've had these extreme
experiences,
it's kind of like,
this happens a lot in the fight game actually.
It's like when you've been the main event of a pay-per-view and you've won
a world title via knockout,
you actually, you hear about a world title via knockout um you actually
you hear about a lot of these fighters actually getting a lot of trouble after their career
because they're that nothing gets their juices going anymore that there's no that that same
thrill of victory of fighting in a cage of prepping for it that that that is just an
unbelievable high that they're constantly trying to chase again.
And I think that an example of somebody who's killing it at the bars and now has a troubled time being loyal to their girl or to their man,
that's just another representation of someone who kind of needs to reset their priorities
and do like a type of, I don't know what to call it, a dopamine fast.
You could like just truly, you know, cut out pornography, revisit your priorities, and
then also use some, you know, there are things over the counter that can actually help in
this situation.
Like Macca.
Have you guys heard of Macca?
No.
M-A-C-A.
That's like one of the most well-demonstrated things for libido.
And it's males and females. By the way,
everything I'm saying right now, I'm using males because I want to speak from experience about a
topic as important as this. But everything I'm saying also applies to females, everything.
Three grams, there's just to provide people with some some value here, three grams of maca powder
with breakfast. And there's no difference in yellow, red, green, there's different colors of
maca. They all seem to work very similarly.
Three grams with breakfast for males or females reliably improves libido without altering
hormone status.
So you can really increase desire over time without impacting hormone statuses.
That's why it's really good from a unisex perspective.
But the problem with maca is a people take underdose stuff like the 500 milligrams or something like that. Three grams
is really where you want to be at. And Macca actually progressively increases desire for
eight weeks. So I when when I give someone Macca, like first off, I want to do the psychological
hormonal and function thing. But if someone really just wants a little boost, a reliable and safe for long term use
boost, three grams of maca with breakfast over the course of eight weeks will increase
sexual desire for males and females.
And then after that, that's when I start looking at other function things.
Citrulline is great for blood flow.
Arginine is another one demonstrated in the world of research that's good
for blood flow. Citrulline is a little bit better. I've seen a study actually in, this was actually
on heart disease patients, but it was found that three grams of citrulline increases
levels of arginine inside the body as much as six grams of arginine. So three grams of citrulline
via the arginine citrulline cycle that happens in physiology, three grams of citrulline is as
effective as six grams of arginine. So it's actually better at increasing blood arginine
than arginine itself, because arginine gets really eaten up by the liver. So citrulline is great for
blood flow. Cocoa powder, believe it or not,
is well demonstrated in the world of libido and function because of its impacts on nitric oxide
as well. And then there's also yohimbine. I don't really recommend it as often, but yohimbine at
about 0.09 milligrams per pound of body weight. It's a stimulant. So it's 100%. It's very bad
for people who are prone to nervousness or anxiety. It's a stimulant. So it's 100%. It's very bad for people who have who are
prone to nervousness or anxiety. Like that's it's totally contraindicated in those situations. It
seems to exacerbate nervousness and anxiety. But yohimbine is one of those, you know, kind of
unique ones that improves desire and function. So it'll actually increase desire while improving
blood flow. Whereas arginine and citrrulline they're more just blood flow based
and maca is more pure desire based yeah um one thing i'd love to get into is how sleep uh affects
libido um there has never been a time in my life that i have wanted to have sex less than having children and the lack of sleep.
Like I,
if somebody was like,
you could have sex with whoever and whatever,
how about I just take the eight hours of sleep?
Is that possible?
Can you just,
can I trade,
uh,
that sex life with just an extra three hours of real sleep?
Um,
I,
I had never experienced like a low sex drive into my life.
And now it's like, I shouldn't say all the time.
It's thanks to Dan Garner.
Now I sleep great.
But especially during the like first year, two,
you have another one on top of that.
And then all of a sudden you start back at zero.
Like it's like a three, four year long process of feeling alive. And I honestly had
never felt like I had a low sex drive by any means. And then kids showed up, the sleep went
away. And all of a sudden it was like just pure survival. And the last thing I cared about was
like rolling over and performing for three and a half minutes so that I could go to sleep.
I'm fine. I can go to sleep. I need sleep.
Well, how does that all play together?
Well, first of all, three and a half minutes. You stud you.
I know, right?
I love it.
That's three minutes longer than me, dude.
My wife might argue with me too.
She'd be like, why are you making yourself sound cool on the podcast?
When it comes to sleep, fatigue is just an enormous overwhelming factor.
To where if I sleep three hours last night, I don't, sure, my libido is lower, but I also also don't really feel like training i also don't feel like recording a podcast i also don't really feel like walking the dog also i
definitely don't want to go shovel the driveway or get groceries or any of that shit so i think
just fatigue is systemically down regulating everything which again i i just always think
in terms of like evolutionary biology, is it a good
time to be a dad if you're never sleeping? Like, I think that that in many cases is just a biology
answering questions that we don't even know our questions yet, and having protective mechanisms
in place. So and that protective mechanism will play itself out from an endocrine perspective,
because sleep reduces testosterone and increases
cortisol. So we're having less drive for reproduction and more drive for stress response,
which is not an evolutionary great situation for reproduction and having kids. So it just,
it's playing itself out from an endocrinology perspective. It's playing itself out from a,
from an evolutionary perspective.
But then I also just think fatigue
is a real big factor there.
Yeah.
I actually saw a study a while back.
Don't quote me on the numbers here,
but it was something along the lines
of like 30 minutes extra sleep per night
increases sex drive in new mothers
by 14% or something like that.
And I showed it to my wife
and she was like, see, see, it's not just me.
I just need some more sleep.
I know.
Okay, go take a nap.
Let's do this.
I'll see you in 30.
This is worth it.
Yeah, I think too that that would just,
that would improve female hormone balance.
It would reduce her fatigue.
And I also think it would reduce her fatigue and i also think it would reduce her
stress and i think that's a great combination to have a higher percentage chance of being in the
mood um yeah you do get the double whammy with kids you get the sleep thing but then you also
you also have the stress thing on top of it yeah that's right yeah so that that time alone even if
it was 30 minutes of peace let alone 30 minutes of sleep i think they both have a pretty similar effect um i have two so i don't know about you guys uh but in my life when my wife got pregnant
um fireworks like what goes on hormonally when you're pregnant when for the first time in my
life i was like hey can we just like take a night off? This is like rock. I'm trying to read it off. Yeah. Like I'm, I literally can't keep up. I have,
I can run like a 5k 20 minutes, but I cannot keep up with you right now. Why? Um, what,
what hormonally is going on when women are pregnant that potentially sends sex drive just through the roof?
Well, I am not sure of the exact answer,
but my greatest guess,
there is a form of estrogen known as estriol
that has estrogen-like properties
that increases over 100X on the onset of pregnancy.
So estriol increasing 100x.
I've actually seen it on a lab before.
And it was actually,
I think I told this story in the seminar.
I've seen it at a lab before
and actually had to tell someone that they're pregnant.
But estriol can increase 100x
and it has estrogen-like properties.
So it would be my prediction
that that is what's creating the hormonal response that's allowing
for libido to take place.
I also think too, you know, depending on a certain situation, that there's a lot of people
who struggle with pregnancy out there.
And when you get pregnant, finally, it's like a huge sigh of relief.
It's like a weight off your chest.
There's a weight off your shoulders.
When you can't get pregnant, it's the worst. And I'm speaking from experience. It's the absolute
worst. It's a real tough time for everybody involved. And then when you actually do get
pregnant, there is an enormous sigh of relief. And I think that you do sleep better. You do
have less stress. You're happier. It's not, you know, that I think that less stress you're happier it's not you know that i think that also when
you're trying to get pregnant it's like prescriptive it's like this is the day we got to do it this is
how we're going to do it this is it's like as opposed to just freaking doing it and enjoying
yourself and remembering why you did it in the first place like i think that the combination
of a lot of those things would uh would contribute towards, but estriol being a big one.
The other piece, as we get older, I don't know if it has to, but most people trend towards having a lower sex drive.
Is that merely just because you've had decades of sex, or is it the lowering of sex? Or is it the the lowering of testosterone? What what happens when we get older that makes
sex drive and libido lower? I think that the progressive reduction of testosterone and
estrogen is very well documented. So that would play a large role. I think also like when you're
when you when you say things like this, there's always reading between the lines because you say that libido decreases over the course of time.
You know what people over the course of time also get fatter, lazier.
I think that those are actual contributors to libido and not necessarily libido because
people can actually they can show you a beautiful graph and be like, you know, libido has decreased
this over the course of time. And this is what happened to their age. So the correlation is great.
The correlation is not causation. As people get older, they do have a higher body fat percentage,
they are more insulin resistant, their testosterone and estrogen is down, not necessarily because of
age, but because of their bad decisions. There's a lot of things happening that can contribute to that. So I think that that would play a role there.
And I think that's probably all I would say in that category.
That'd be my answer.
Dr. Justin Marchegiani Yeah.
Can we dig into, you mentioned alcohol earlier.
Can we dig into alcohol, marijuana, like recreational drug use, steroids, and just other things
people might be
consuming for a variety of reasons and how that affects sex drive both in the short and long term?
Yeah, so estrogen is increased by marijuana and alcohol. They both have estrogen like properties.
The difference is marijuana for large amount of people is kind of like cut in half. It either gives you anxiety
or it allows you to calm down. And there are different strands. You can go Indica, you can
go Sativa, you can have a CBD to THC ratio. I'm telling you just from a coach's perspective,
there are people out there that get anxiety kind of no matter what combination of stuff they throw
at them in that department. So I think it's kind
of just right tool for the right job. Alcohol is likely the the worst of the two, because of
the amount of calories it has because of the the larger negative effect on hormones, because it
reduces testosterone over time, because it dehydrates the body and the genital musculature is still musculature. And that requires hydration.
Alcohol also reduces serotonin over time, which can have a which, which is actually what creates
the alcohol dependency. Alcohol, it does this like very strange thing where you take it. So
if you're someone who has anxiety, and drink alcohol and it reduces your anxiety, that's alcohol is actually providing you an artificial form of serotonin synthesis.
But then that actually reduces your baseline serotonin in the absence of alcohol.
So then although alcohol reduces anxiety by improving serotonin, you end up having more
anxiety without alcohol because it reduces your brain serotonin in you end up having more anxiety without alcohol because it reduces
your brain serotonin in the absence of alcohol. So then next time you need more alcohol and then
more and then more, and then it becomes more frequent. And then you run into a situation where
yes, alcoholism is going to impact libido in its own way because of dopamine pathways.
But then I also think it's going to impact libido in its own way via serotonin pathways,
because it's going to impact anxiety and nervousness. So in at the end of the day, when it comes to poisons, less is
better. Poisons. I want to ask one more question about the nitrous oxide. Like I look, I've been
trying to find what they're talking about. The lady that I spoke with said that there's in the sinuses,
that there's actually, when you breathe in your nose,
you take nitrous oxide in from the sinuses. Is that, is that right?
I'm actually, I'm sure I'd be the wrong guy to ask. I've never seen that,
but that'd be fascinating. Yeah, I know. Like, yeah, I've, I've never,
you know, I've never heard that. So I was going to ask the expert ask the expert i found an article but like i don't know proof of that yeah yeah unfortunately
i don't i don't have the answer for that one no problem yeah um when we start to get into
um the the testosterone thing uh i know we've done multiple shows on testosterone and, uh, kind of
as, as it was discussed earlier, it's like, uh, adding, adding it, just throwing testosterone
in your body without the health side of it really is not the best solution. Um, is there a time or
like when, how many layers of things can people do before it's like, now there's an actual
testosterone issue and we need to kind
of go down that that route? Is that is that a real thing for increasing sex drive?
100% Oh, there is undeniable that hormones play a huge role. And that's why it's the first thing
I look at after psychology. And a lot of times those acts kind of a chicken and the egg at times
too. So you got to be you got to be pretty intricate with your data collection process. But there are many things to rule out before you know
you need a hormone like ruling out environmental pollutants, ruling out heavy metals, ruling out
dietary consistency, ruling out body fat percentage, ruling out micronutrient availability,
ruling out psychology, because stress by itself reduces testosterone, ruling out micronutrient availability, ruling out psychology because stress by itself reduces
testosterone ruling out sleep quality because sleep reduces testosterone. I mean, I mean,
that was seven or eight things that also have their own subcategories of things that all
negatively impact testosterone. So like, I'm just a guy where if somebody comes to me and they want sexual desire, then I want to achieve that through
also making them a way healthier person at the same time, as I think that's the way that they're
actually going to maintain that desire in the absence of supplements, because I could give
them three grams of Maca and it's probably going to work. But did I actually help that person?
Or am I kind of a guy now who's a symptom
manager rather than a root cause solver? I could give that person desire, sure. And I might even
do it or recommend it in the short term while we work on the root cause in the long term so that
they can eventually come off of that and sustain their own sexual desire moving on in the future.
But yeah, I like to do a comprehensive process to
improve the system as a whole. Like we got to remember, we're hardwired to have sex. Like
humans are hardwired to reproduce. That's another I keep saying evolutionary biology, we are hardwired
to keep this species rolling and reproduce and increase the population and do what we need to do on this evolutionary journey.
When you aren't executing something that's hardwired, we should look under the hood and
see where that dysfunction is. Under the hood sometimes might be in your mind, but under the
hood other times might be enzyme related, it might be blood flow related, it might be hormone related. So I just
I think that that comprehensive process would is extremely likely to not just eliminate a lot of
things that will make you a way healthier version of yourself, but in the process of doing so
increase your libido at the same time. Gotcha. So we talked a lot about hormones impacting
sex drive and the desire to have sex. Does we talk a lot about hormones impacting sex drive
and the desire to have sex.
Does it work the other way as well?
Like if you don't have a very strong sex drive
and then all of a sudden you find yourself in a situation
like you have a new partner
and like the opportunity to have
like a lot of novel, exciting sex becomes available
and your partner is bringing it to you,
like having more sex, does that improve
your hormones? Does it work like that at all? Not to my knowledge. No, I think that I don't
know if having sex improves hormones, but that might be something that would be more
fit to ask somebody because there's a whole area of research in like the world of pheromones
and scents and things like that. And I think that that would likely probably have an impact on hormones, but I don't know the research offhand on that. But I do
think that that desire is a big component of sex drive. And then hormones are a big component of
sex drive. But I don't know if having sex would increase hormones. I just, I haven't seen that in the literature just yet. But I feel
like if you do consider it on a case by case basis, or really just talk yourself through it,
it's not unreasonable that there would be an increase in hormone synthesis due to having more
sex, probably just because you're a happier person, you are in a new relationship, the sex
is being brought to you, it is fun, you are getting a dopamine hit from it, which means you're going
to want to come back for more. And that's also great for confidence. Confidence is good for
libido and testosterone. So I think probably you could talk yourself through a scenario where that
makes a lot of sense. But I just haven't seen any studies on it. Yeah. Um, my final question, uh, hair loss medicine seems to be,
uh, have a, a very big impact downrange on erectile dysfunction. Um, one, why do they
keep giving it to people who cares if you have hair? Yeah. We're crushing it without it.
I don't need that. Um, who cares if you have the hair if you can't uh
get the the downrange result of getting the girl and then uh getting it up who would knowingly
want hair over libido well i don't think it affects everybody the same which is really what
um is is interesting to me of like why are some people go on propitia and then have erectile
dysfunction or there's there's many hair loss methods or no risk like that no risk um but what
what happens from hair to penis and all of a sudden now now things aren't working yeah so
when it comes to propitcia or a finasteride,
what they do is they inhibit an enzyme called five alpha reductase, which is allows for the
synthesis of our conversion rather of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone. Dihydrotestosterone
plays a role in libido, and it even plays a role in flaccid size. So it plays a role in the grower or shower.
But for real, it does.
Dihydrotestosterone plays a role in that.
Finasteride actually reduces the activity of 5-alpha reductase, which is what increases DHT.
So the degree at which that happens and the degree at which you're naturally predisposed to making DHT
is likely what's resulting in the inter-individual variability.
Because if we had a very low conversion rate to begin with, and then we cut the enzyme
off, it's likely that that is going to have a major impact on libido and erectile dysfunction.
But if you had a decent conversion rate already, and you do reduce enzyme activity, it's not going to
completely cut it off, it will reduce it. And then you will have basically not as large a reduction.
So you can think about it like going from 100% to 50%, rather than from 50% to 0%. And that's
likely resulting in the variability. But that's a major, major prevalent thing. And if people are on
antidepressants can actually reduce sex drive.
So like, it's just a good conversation, even even larger than that. finasteride or propitia,
antidepressants have a big impact on libido, alcohol, opioids, pain medications,
there's a lot of things like I would just also invite people to go to drugs.com
and type in their uh blood pressure medication reduces libido like a lot of people don't know
that the blood pressure is one of the top things that reduces libido how many people are on blood
pressure medication i mean a ton of them yeah yeah and i so like i think that it's important
for people to just go to drugs.com type type in your medication, and then look at the side effects because you might find something that matches a lot
of your current symptoms.
Yeah.
Yo, one last thing here.
I believe I heard Huberman say on a podcast a while back that a lot of people kind of
incorrectly, and we already addressed this, think that high estrogen is a problem for
sex drive, even though that actually can be beneficial in many ways.
But high prolactin is very often an issue for decreased libido.
Do you know anything about prolactin specifically in relation to the other
hormones?
Not in the way in which it,
not in the way in which it impacts libido.
No,
not nothing.
I'd be able to rhyme off offhand here.
Yep.
Cool.
Got it.
Dan Garner,
where can people find you?
At Dan Garner nutrition on Instagram. There it is. And coach G it. Dan Garner, where can people find you? At Dan Garner Nutrition on Instagram.
There it is.
And Coach Garner,
Team Garner?
CoachGarner.com.
There it is.
Yeah.
Make sure you get over,
check out those courses.
We,
I tell many people to go check out those nutrition courses so they can start
to dig into their own labs and understand how all this stuff works
together um when we hire new coaches one of the first things they do is watch the ultimate
nutrition mentorship so we recommend that one first for sure yeah travis mash masterly.com
or uh what do you have going on what are you putting out into the world these days how's
your olympic lifting coach course going uh. You know, we sold a ton of those.
We're about to release a live seminar we're going to do in California
with stronger experts.
We're going to do the, like, you know, basically version two, but live.
It's going to be really good.
I'm the one that developed the, you know, the, I guess the,
all the different categories that we're going to touch in.
It's going to be cool.
We're going to go deep into correcting dysfunction.
We're going to look into the advancing techniques in programming.
It's going to be good.
A deep, deep dive for coaches.
Love it.
When is that?
October.
I think it's October 7th and 8th or early –
first weekend in October, I believe.
Are tickets on sale?
Any minute.
Today they launch.
We're just waiting on Phil to
give you the website.
We'll have it up on the next show.
It'll be me, Spencer Arnold, Chris Amenta,
and then, of course, my man Phil
from Stronger Experts.
That'll be good.
Doug Larson.
Right on. I'm on Instagram. Awesome. Doug Larson. Right on.
I'm on Instagram.
Douglas E. Larson.
I'm Anders Varner
at Anders Varner
and we are
Barbell Shrugged
at Barbell underscore Shrugged.
Make sure you get over
to rapidhealthreport.com.
That is where you can
sign up for a call with me.
Learn about Dan Garner
reading your labs,
Andy Galpin
designing training programs,
Doug Larson and I
building out
all of these systems
and habits so that you can execute that plan perfectly and optimize your health. It's at
rapidhealthreport.com. Friends, we'll see you guys next week.