The Jordan Harbinger Show - 1031: Sarah Hill | How Birth Control Rewires Women's Brains Part One
Episode Date: August 13, 2024Beyond pregnancy prevention, birth control pills affect the way women think and behave. Dr. Sarah Hill explains their invisible impacts here! [Part 1/2] What We Discuss: Birth control pills... affect more than just fertility — they can influence a woman's partner preferences, career choices, and overall behavior due to hormonal changes. Women on birth control may choose different types of partners compared to when they're off the pill, potentially leading to relationship changes if they stop taking it. The pill can alter women's stress responses and immune function, potentially increasing the risk of anxiety, depression, and autoimmune issues. Birth control pills may reduce sexual desire and change how women perceive attraction cues in potential partners. Women can make more informed decisions about their health and relationships by understanding these effects. Consider discussing with a healthcare provider about trying periods off birth control when making major life decisions or choosing long-term partners. And much more... Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/1031 This Episode Is Brought To You By Our Fine Sponsors: jordanharbinger.com/deals Sign up for Six-Minute Networking — our free networking and relationship development mini course — at jordanharbinger.com/course! Like this show? Please leave us a review here — even one sentence helps! Consider including your Twitter handle so we can thank you personally! Subscribe to our once-a-week Wee Bit Wiser newsletter today and start filling your Wednesdays with wisdom! Do you even Reddit, bro? Join us at r/JordanHarbinger!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Coming up next on the Jordan Harbinger Show.
They worked with women who were working as dancers at a strip club.
And in particular, what they find is that that five or so days prior to ovulation
and then the day of ovulation itself, that period of time was marked by having really high
tip earning.
So they earned the most money across the cycle.
And what this is showing us is that men are just, you know, instinctively responding to these
cues that are related to the probability of pregnancy.
from sex.
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Today, an episode all about birth control
and the hormones involved.
I really had no idea
that hormones from the pill
and a lot of the birth control stuff
that goes all over your body, right?
so if it affects everything, the immune system, hair, mood, anxiety, etc.
There can be extreme side effects.
We're going to dive into some of those here today.
It's like dropping a bomb on your house to blow out a candle.
It'll do the job, but it won't only do that job.
Today we'll explore why you shouldn't choose a life partner
or make any really big decisions while you're on birth control
and what to do instead.
We'll discuss how to defend yourself against depression
or other mood stuff that might actually be caused by birth control.
Why and how to take breaks from birth control.
and when it's time to give your body and your mind a break,
and a whole lot more.
This episode is a must if you're a woman who is interested in how her body works,
and if you're a guy and you're interested in how women's bodies work, giggity.
All right, no, but for real, I wanted to do a show on birth control
because a lot of young women, well, a lot of women, period, are not using it
because of influencers on social media who are hawking, frankly, alternative health nonsense
that doesn't really work.
And one of the reasons they're citing is there are extreme side effects,
which are super rare, like two out of three and 10,000 people,
and they want to make it seem like it happens to everybody on social media.
So cognitive bias, availability, heuristic, and all that stuff kick in here.
And it seems like if you take birth control, you're just a coin flip away from becoming infertile
or getting cysts on your uterus or whatever.
But guys, this is for you too.
If there are any women in your life who might be affected by this, it affects you too.
And besides, you can't tell me this stuff is not absolutely fascinating.
All right, here we go with Dr. Sarah Hill.
As a guy, I really didn't think that I would do a show on slash love a book about birth control,
but here we are.
And I guess because as a guy, and I'm sure you've heard this a million times, I kind of grew up just being like, well, I don't ever, I mean, this isn't something I really need to know about.
If you get a girlfriend and you're sexually active, she takes a pill or something and you just kind of like, that's it.
It's not really my, I hate to say not my problem, but it's like not really my concern, even though for obvious reasons, all men who.
date or are active with or partnered up with women should be concerned about this or are related
to women or have raising women or have women in their lives. It's just, once you think about it,
once you read this book and think about it, it just permeates sort of the whole society in a way
that I hadn't thought of before. Yeah, you know, I didn't really think about it either,
honestly. I mean, it's so normalized. It's so common that women get on it and their doctors
recommend it for everything ranging from acne to period cramps to just about anything else. And so even when
I was on it, I didn't think much of it. It was just like, oh, okay, I take this. Then I don't get
pregnant. That's great. Yes. And then I just kind of was going on with my life. And it wasn't until I
went off of it. And I realized how different I felt when I was off it compared to when I was on it,
that I really started to ask the questions of like, well, wait, what am I actually doing?
What have I been doing?
And even though I'd always appreciated just because of my research background in psychology
and I study women and I study hormones, I'd always been aware of the fact that hormones are
really instrumental in terms of shaping behavior and I'm sort of nudging our behavior this way and
that way.
But I never even connected the dots to think twice about the fact that my hormonal birth control
because it was affecting my hormones.
That means it was going to affect me.
Right.
My whole body.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I don't, you know, I don't think.
that being a guy, you're not really thinking too much about it. There's also a lot of women
who just really don't think too much about it because it's so normalized. I think that's probably
true. There's also this thing that people like me do where we think, this is a pill that does
one thing to one organ at one time when I want it to. Not like, this goes into my whole body
and into my bloodstream, and it happens to do the right thing over here. And we don't really
have any idea what it does all the way over here and in your brain. And then in this other area,
It's like, ah, we, if somebody doesn't die or like their ears don't fall off, the FDA's like,
hey, cool, this looks fine, you know, you don't end up with cancer right away, something.
But side effects are real, and some of those side effects are kind of invisible.
And I want to talk about some of those, I mean, maybe they're not traditional side effects,
like your ears falling off, but side effects like you choose a different partner or you find
that you like or feel a certain different way, that that's certainly something that we should
pay attention to, it seems like the pill almost changes the version of our personality that we
express, which is a hell of a side effect and also something really hard to measure. Because if they're
asking you on the questionnaire, do you feel different? You might just be like, sure, I guess,
unless you have depression, but you're not like, oh, I suddenly don't like my boyfriend as much.
That's not something you're going to even put together necessarily. Right. Well, no, because your brain
tells yourself a story about things, right? It's like you think, wow, my life is worse
than it used to be, or my boyfriend has sure gotten annoying.
Like, we don't really, like, tend to equate things to whatever it is that we're putting into
our bodies.
That might also be true, just FYI.
I mean, these are not unusual exclusive things.
He might also have gotten more annoying.
Yeah, but it's like the way that it affects our brain isn't something that our brain
is able to think about.
It's like our brain just thinks that it's doing its thing and it doesn't realize that
some of the inputs that are creating the version of yourself that your brain is creating
is something that's different.
And so in these ways, we have these invisible side effects.
They can also be really profound where it can do things like affect your mental health
and just sort of like your general take on the world, like whether you feel positively or negatively.
And as you noted, even like whether you're attracted to your partner or not, because attraction is something that is profoundly affected by our hormonal states.
And research has been showing that for several decades now.
And then when you add, you know, a different hormonal milieu into the picture, then of course,
course, that can have the effect of nudging you in and out of attraction with different types of
partners. That is a great use of the word, milieu, by the way. Thanks. I've been working on it
for months. It's funny because I'm like, wow, you unironically used that word. And my transcription
is going to be like, I have no idea what you said here. Can you tell me how to spell that?
And I'll say, I'll be right back because I know, actually I cannot. I'll be right back.
So you mentioned your own experience of stopping the pill. Tell me about that. Because
And I'm sure this is maybe a few years ago.
It's not a new book.
And by the way, if people buy the books,
please use the links in our show notes.
It helps support the show.
But I read this book quite a while ago
and reread it a little more recently.
You describe it quite dramatically.
This isn't like, oh, one day I'm off this
and it's like, oh, yeah, things are slightly different.
I mean, you kind of, this is a bold,
underline kind of change in your life.
Yeah, it was.
So I've gone off it for little periods of time.
Like when I had my children, I was off it.
I got pregnant right away.
with both my kids. And then when I was breastfeeding, I wasn't on it. But other than those little
blips of time when I was having children and feeding them, I was on it almost nonstop for about
12 years. Wow. And so, yeah, like a really long time. That was a long time. Yeah, it is. Then I went off
of it and I didn't really think anything of it, honestly, until it was about three months after I
discontinued. And I was thinking, I was just feeling really energetic. And I was thinking to myself,
I feel alive.
Like, I feel really alive.
And I was thinking, like, I started downloading new music recently.
I'd listening to new things for the first time in a really long time.
I'd started going to the gym again, which is something that I used to love when I was, like, in high school.
And I kind of fell off of it.
I would still exercise, but it wasn't like, like, I wasn't loving it.
It wasn't something I really enjoyed.
And I was enjoying that again.
I was cooking and just, like, doing things that gave me pleasure.
I was noticing men.
I was noticing my husband.
I was like wanting to have sex more frequently.
And I just felt like I had this level of dimensionality that I didn't have before.
Like I just felt like all of a sudden I could like feel the full amplitude of being alive.
Yeah.
And in some ways it was like really good things like, you know, sexual desire and music and pleasure.
But it was also like I noticed that I felt more emotional.
It could also get more upset like things would make me more upset.
It was really interesting for me because it felt.
felt like, and I describe it this way in the book, but it very much felt like I went from my life
as a gray scale, one-dimensional drawing. And then all of a sudden I, like, crawled off the page
into like a three-dimensional color-filled reality. It was just like, oh. Yikes. Yes. And it was once
I sort of recognized how I had felt, I mean, it really struck me how different that was. And, you know,
Since the last time that you and I met, I mean, I had only been off the pill for, I don't know,
like maybe three years or so.
And you and I had met.
But, you know, more time has passed now because that book came out at the end of 2019.
Another thing that I've really realized in recent years, just because it takes a while
to build a narrative about yourself.
Sure.
You know, like trying to understand who you are and how you respond to things.
But I remember all through my college years and graduate school years and early assistant
and professor years, I'd always had this belief about myself that I was somebody who was anxious
and became really easily overwhelmed by things. And that turns out to just not be true. Wow.
It's just not true of me. And it's been over the last, you know, several years that I've realized
that that's not a personality trait that I have. Wow. It was something that was the results of my
birth control. It had to have been because I don't feel that way anymore. That's a little scary
because you spent 12 years on it, right? If you'd spent like six months on it, you're like,
well, oh, no, I forgot how I feel.
12 years is a long time to not have Spotify.
I mean, or whatever.
Yeah, I know.
I know.
So here's just an example of this.
And it used to be that when I was cooking dinner,
because even though I wasn't really loving cooking,
I was always cooking because I'm into food.
And I couldn't like cook dinner and have music on in the background.
It was too much.
It was overwhelming.
It felt overstimulating.
And now, you know, I always have to have music.
I have music on all the time, like always in the house.
and when I'm cooking and I can have it on and have a conversation.
And I remember I used to just get overwhelmed or if we were having a party at the house,
I'd have to go back in my bedroom and sit alone for a little while for like 20 minutes just
to like decompress because it felt too peopley.
Yeah.
And I still don't love, you know, when it's way too people.
But it's like I don't feel that feeling of like overwhelmed and anxiety that I felt
when I used to be on it.
And I thought that that was who I was.
And it's not.
What it's such an identity level shift, which is the scary part.
guess. Yeah. And again, like, birth control pills are what, hormones and receptors for these
hormones are all over our body and our brain. So it doesn't just affect your brain. Sure,
it switches something off in the ovaries or whatever, but like it also changes your, the personality
thing is just wild because I, I'm guessing virtually nobody who goes to get a prescription for
this is even thinking about how their personality might change. They're like, oh, I might get
acne or like it says depression. So if I feel really awful, maybe I'll switch out of this.
But I don't think people are thinking about these little nuanced things. Like, you know,
they're going to start to hate Taylor Swift. I mean, that's horrifying. That is horrifying. Yeah.
No, I mean, but just that it makes so many little nudges in our body. Right. It is profound.
And when you think about the number of different systems in the body that have receptors for hormones,
I mean, it's really astounding.
And it's because as women, everything in our body and everything that our body does has to
change a course a little bit when we're pregnant.
It's like our circulatory system has to do a different thing.
Our respiratory system has to do a different thing.
So we have to take more oxygen in.
Our immune system has to do something different because it can't attack a developing baby.
I mean, there's like all of these things that have to change what they're doing in response to
pregnancy.
And the result of that is that our body from head to toe is wired for sex hormone reception.
It's like all the cells on all major systems of the body have receptors for hormones.
And so when you have all of these systems that are like listening for a hormonal message and all of a
sudden you give it a new one, I mean, that's changing everything that your body does.
And so, you know, one of the things that we recently published is we did a paper looking at
differences between naturally cycling women, so women who are not on hormonal birth control
and are experiencing regular ovulatory cycles.
And we looked at them and then we looked at pill take care.
and we were interested in the inflammatory response to stress because when we're feeling stressed
out in addition to releasing stress hormones, our body also releases inflammation.
And it does this because stress is something that can indicate that you're going to be
hurt, that you're going to be physically harmed.
And so your body prepares for that.
We were really interested, given that you get differences in stress response between
pill takers and non, which we can talk about in a moment.
we were interested in whether that also leads to differences in inflammatory activity or the activities of the immune system.
And it does. You have these very different immunological profiles in response to stress between women who are using hormonal birth control and women who don't.
And one of the things that we know about birth control is that it can increase women's risk of developing autoimmunity.
And we think that this might be one of the ways that it does this is by changing their inflammatory response and then putting them at a greater risk.
the autoimmunity, by the way, is that like when your immune system starts attacking your own body?
Is that what that is? Because you hear about inflammation. It's almost buzzwordy these days, right? It's like,
oh, you've got to eat this, reduce inflammation. Don't eat that. It inflames things. At the core level,
is this kind of cortisol response, or is it wider than that?
I think that it probably is wider than that. Initially, we were really interested in that process just because of the cortisol
response because what research finds and what research has been finding for several years is that
women who are using hormonal birth control tend to have a blunted or dysregulated cortisol
response to stress. And so like the rest of us, like you and I, if we get stressed out by something,
like we have to give a public speech or whatever it is, generally our body will start releasing
cortisol. Cortisol kind of gets a, has a bad reputation just because if you have constant cortisol
release is not good for you.
Like what cortisol actually does is it is a rearranger of metabolic priorities.
And so when your body releases cortisol, it's telling your body, we are under stress right
now.
Stop doing everything that you're doing.
So don't invest in the immune system.
Don't invest in cell repair.
Don't invest in growth.
Instead, we need to take all of those resources and devote them to potentially having to get
away quickly and birthing new neurons in our hippocampy.
campus to remember what's going on because when stressful things are happening, it usually means
it's important and we need to remember it. And so our body essentially stops doing everything
that it normally is doing to maintain itself. And then it diverts all of those resources to
managing the stressor. And in the short term, that's really good. Right. Because in the short term,
it's helping you deal with the stressor. And so your body is like ready to go. You've got fat and
sugar in your bloodstream. So that way if you need to run away, you can. All of that's also fueling your
brain to be able to think and remember and know what you're doing and be really quick on your toes
and focus your attention. But in the long term, if you're releasing cortisol at high levels for a long
period of time, then your body is constantly dumping all of its resources in stress management.
And it's not able to do things like protect itself from germs or grow or, you know, just do
regular cell repair. And because of this, if we have cortisol constantly being released,
our body just shuts down the stress response. And it says, no more stress response for you.
and it actually blunts the cortisol response.
And this is why for people who have post-traumatic stress disorder
or who've experienced any sort of trauma,
what you tend to see is that they have this really blunted cortisol response to stress.
So you and I, if we give a public speech,
we have this big rise in cortisol because our body is preparing ourselves
to deal with something stressful.
But for people who've experienced trauma,
you have no stress response because their body told them no stress for you.
What we see with women on birth control pill
is that they look like people who've experienced chronic stress or trauma,
and they have that blunted cortisol response to stress.
And this has led researchers to think that when we take hormonal birth control,
when we're first on it, that the progestins or that synthetic progesterone that's in them
might be activating our glucocorticoid receptors or the receptors in our body that
usually pick up cortisol and making our body think that we're under chronic stress.
and as a result, the body starts to shut down the stress response.
And this is something that is obviously not good.
No.
And it's something that's related to having problems with regulating your stress response.
So you're less able to cope with stress because that's one of the things that cortisol does is it helps us adaptively deal with stress.
Hence your anxiety issues, maybe.
Well, exactly.
I mean, you know, I think about the fact that I used to get so easily overwhelmed where it was just like system overload where I was like, oh my gosh, like there's just too much.
going on. There's too much stimulation, too much whatever, and have to go into another room.
And I'm thinking to myself, when I'm reading this research that finds this blunted cortisol
response to stress, that this was undoubtedly playing a role. The other thing that's probably
playing a role when I think about my own experiences and the experiences that so many women have,
because there's like a ton of research that shows that women who are using hormonal birth control,
that they're at a greater risk of developing anxiety disorders, anxiety problems, and depression.
especially teenagers, so women who go on it when they're teenagers have the highest risk of these things.
One of the things that's undoubtedly a contributor is that blunted cortisol response to stress that we just talked about.
But another thing that researchers have been paying a lot of attention to and is likely a really big contributor to this increased risk of anxiety and depression is that you don't get the release of there's this neuro steroid called alopregnanalone.
and when, which is a really long word, but when a naturally cycling woman is going through her
regular cycle, which just for people who aren't familiar with what this looks like, an average cycle,
so let's imagine that there's a 28-day menstrual cycle. The first day of your cycle is the day that
you get your period. And at that point, levels of hormones are very low. So you have low levels of
estrogen and low levels of progesterone. And then as the egg follicles begin to get stimulated and
your body's preparing for the possibility of ovulation, that leads to the release of estrogen.
And so estrogen levels increase and increase and increase and increase. As egg follicles are
maturing and one is getting ready to get released, right when that egg is mature, you're at
these peak levels of estrogen, and then the egg gets released and is out in the world
in pregnancy is possible. And then the empty egg follicle starts releasing this other hormone
progesterone. And progesterone is the hormone of the second half of our cycle. So,
it generally gets released after ovulation, which happens around day 14 until you get your period.
And that hormone, when it gets broken down in the body, when it gets metabolized, it releases
a neurosteroid called alopragnolone, which is a really potent stimulator of our brain's
gaber receptors.
And this is a lot of big words.
It's like gaber receptor.
Alaparineanelone, neurosteroid.
But essentially what this does is this wonderful little neurosteroid that gets.
it's released from progesterone being broken down in the body is it causes a neurotransmission
in our brain that calms the brain down. So GABA activity in the brain is chill out activity.
So things that tend to stimulate GAVA release in the brain are things like yoga, meditation,
cozying up by the fire in your jammies. Other things that stimulate GABA receptors are alcohol.
I was going to say wine. Benzodiazepine. Yeah, Xanax. Yeah, exactly. Xanax does the same thing. And so
all of those things work on that same pathway. And so progesterone actually allows us to create our own
internal Xanax and that calms the brain and releases it or relaxes it. Women who are using
hormonal birth control because they're not getting actual progesterone, they're getting the
synthetic progestin that doesn't get metabolized the same way because it's actually made out of
testosterone instead of being made out of progesterone. Oh, I see. Yeah. And so when it gets broken down in
the body, there's no alipregnolone release. And so your brain never gets.
It's that big chill-out effect that we get from real deal progesterone.
And so there's a lot of research looking into the role that lack of that activity,
lack of that a neuro steroid contributes to the increased anxiety and depression risk that we get in
women who are on the pill.
Man, that stuff is fascinating.
Don't worry, I have a smart audience.
I'm usually the weak link when it comes to understanding these things.
So I appreciate you explaining like I'm five.
The audience usually gets all this stuff.
We do have foreign listeners, though, who are going to be like neurosteroid.
And they can Google it.
this is the, it's 2024. You mentioned in the book that parental investment is higher for women than men,
and that kind of goes without saying, but tell us, of course, why this is just for people who are,
you know, jogging and not necessarily critically thinking about everything we're saying.
And also tell us why it's important for what we're discussing with respect to birth control.
Yeah, so a parental investment, I mean, when we're talking about the minimum, bare minimum levels
of investment that a male versus a female have to make in an offspring,
Females are actually defined as females in part because they make a larger investment.
And that investment difference begins even before a man and a woman meet, a female has already
invested more in reproduction than the man has because eggs are so much more metabolically expensive
than sperm.
And so females are born with, you know, a finite number of eggs.
Each one is, I forget what it is, is something like a thousand or a million times larger
than a sperm cell.
So it's like metabolically a lot more expensive.
And so females before they've already, their initial investment, which is just their gamete or their sex cell, is larger and more costly than what gets invested by a male.
And so you get that initial difference in investment.
But then for a human, you know, we're mammals and females internally gestate.
And so a woman, you know, if there's going to be a pregnancy, the minimum amount of investment that a woman has to make in order to reproduce.
is nine months. And the minimum investment that a man has to make to reproduce is like what,
like the time. I mean, you know, we all know it's about 35 seconds, right? Right. Yeah.
Yeah. Say right. Say right. Yeah. Say right. Yeah. And so there's just a really big different. There's a
big asymmetry and the minimum amounts that have to be invested. And this is important for the current
conversation because one of the things that makes biological males and biological females different from
one another is these differences in investment. And historically throughout our long history as a species,
females have been the ones who have to invest more in reproduction. And so for women, sex historically
has been something that's very costly for us, because anytime that we have sex, it could potentially
lead to having to invest in, you know, not only a nine-month pregnancy, but then subsequent time spent
lactating. And there's a possibility that this guy that just knocked you up isn't going to stick
around and care for this child. And so women have had to, over the course of history, be a lot more
choosy and discriminating and also, you know, sort of delay sex and be a little bit more sexually
coy just to try to figure out whether or not this person that they're with is somebody who's going
to be able to help them care for an offspring
because human offspring are notoriously
like a black hole of need.
Right. Yes, I'm going through that right now.
Yeah, no kidding. Twice.
Yeah, no, trust me with teenagers, because he was even worse.
Oh, don't tell me this.
I was like, I can't wait until they're older and then they don't need me to, yeah,
no, maybe not.
Yeah, no, it's a little bit of it.
It's a different set of problems, but it's so hard to rate,
especially young children, like as you noted,
I mean, they require so much investment.
And so sex for women,
historically has been something that is very costly and is going to necessitate a lot of investment.
And the same has not been true for men. That's true. Yeah, I mean, guys are giving this stuff away, right?
Like anywhere that they'll take it, we're giving it away. It's like take it off the lot right now.
And yeah, women not so much. That's why, yeah, I'll leave that there. Right. I mean, because it sets up all
of these asymmetries between the sexes because it's like, you know, all of a sudden the cost of sex,
you have this big asymmetry between the, and the cost of sex, right? For women, because pregnancy
is a possibility. Sex is very costly. For men, it's not. It's just not costly. There's also
differences in the like sort of reproductive opportunities that you're going to be passing up if you
would agree to sex with this person compared to that person. And if you're a woman, if you have
sex with this person and that ends up not to be your person, you're stuck with nine months with this,
you know, in this other person. You know, if you're a man, you can have sex with 10 different women
and have 10 different children, you know, in the course of an afternoon. You need 10 minutes in a
washcloth. And the washcloth is optional. Yeah, I know. It's like the course of an afternoon.
You get all of these big differences between men and women that ultimately stem from the fact that we have
these differences in the minimum level of investment. And why this is interesting in the context of the
current conversation is that the birth control pill creates a context where the cost of sex all of a sudden
are much lower because we can feel very certain that we're not going to end up getting pregnant.
right? And all of a sudden, that big cost that women have had to shoulder over history as a consequence
of their sexual behavior that has made their sexual behavior in the way that they behave so
different than that of men, all of a sudden is removed. It's like taken off the table. And so that's
like a really interesting question. And it's something that we've been looking at in my research lab
recently is really trying to understand how does taking the pill, which is something that makes the
cost of sex so much lower for women than what it was historically. How does that change their mating
related behavior? So how does that change women's sexual psychology and how does that change their
sexual behavior? Does it make them behave just like men? Because all of a sudden, you know,
sex is something that's not as consequential as it used to be? Or did they still, because they're
operating with that sort of stone age brain that we've inherited from our ancestors who didn't have
birth control. Like, do women still prioritize things like investment? And are they still sort of
really cautious about having casual sex to a greater extent than men, just simply because we're
operating with this really old brain that we've inherited from ancestors who didn't have
access to birth control? I don't know much about hormones, but I do know about dopamine. And I get a
rush of it whenever you support the fine products and services that support this show. We'll be right back.
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Now, back to Dr. Sarah Hill.
I got a feedback Friday letter to this, our advice,
that we do every Friday, this woman had been like cheating with a bunch of people and she used
this excuse that she had hormones implanted in her hip. Somehow they put this little grain of rice
hormone releasing thing and she was just like sex craze. And other people wrote in and they were
like, I've had that. Yes to the sex craze thing, no to the cheating with like anybody who
looks at you twice thing. But all these other women wrote in and they were like, oh yeah, you get that
thing in there in your hip. And I don't know what this is. This is apparently some hormone therapy
for women who might be a little bit older?
I'm not totally sure.
And it just turns you into a demon if they get the dosage wrong, I think.
Or maybe that's the point.
I don't know.
Right.
Yeah, no, I think that it's got to be the testosterone implant.
Maybe.
That's my guess.
Because they do these.
Welcome to my world, lady.
Yeah.
Yeah, well, I was going to say, so it essentially turns them into men.
And so men are like, yeah, no, like, girl, like, we don't get to do that.
Yeah.
You don't get to do that either.
I'm pretty sure it's, because there's this pellet.
Pestrone Pellet. Yeah.
Yeah, that's what it's got to be.
That's really funny.
So it's essentially like turning women into men and they're having to realize how hard it is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Women were writing in and they're like, I've never been unfaithful to my husband,
but I will tell you, my personal trainer was stretching me out and, you know,
and I'm like, okay, let's leave it there, lady.
Right.
Yeah.
But it's quite funny because any guy who you're friends with, you'd have that exact same
type of conversation.
Like, oh, man, my trainer was stretching me out, you know, and she pushed on my back.
and I gotta go. I gotta go. I just like, what? But it's so interesting what hormones do. Your book mentioned
something also I found really interesting. Children, because when I first talked to you, I didn't have kids,
right? So there's a line in the book that I noticed this time, which was children that look more like
their fathers tend to get more investment from dad, which makes total sense, right? Paternity tests are new,
but you didn't need one if your son, my son looks just like me. And so my buddy even,
and said something like, wow, it's a little you.
And my producer was like, guess you don't need a paternity test, you know, like elbowing me.
And just people are saying, wow, it's like looking at you from 1984.
And he's just like my little clone.
And it totally makes sense, right?
Because if it's a thousand years ago, you might not have been totally, totally sure.
Or if it's a hunt, I don't know, 10,000 years ago, you might not have been totally sure.
But if you are in your little tribe and there's a little you running around, you're like,
I'm pretty sure that one's mine.
He looks exactly like me.
Yeah, no, for sure. It's really interesting because what the research finds is that for women, there's absolutely no relationship with physical resemblance or personality resemblance or any type of resemblance and degree of like closeness. I mean, just, you know, sort of like psychological closeness, like how close you feel, but then also even caregiving and like preferential treatment. Like there's none of it because women's psychology does not need to be sensitive to that because we've always known that any child that we have is ours. And so women can have children that look or act nothing like them. And
they still invest in them all kind of more or less the same and probably based on other things,
other qualities.
But for men, what you tend to see is that there's this like a little bit of favoritism.
It's all unconscious for sure.
I mean, and maybe there's some conscious level stuff that goes on too where you're like,
I like you look like we were, you know, we're cool.
You're so handsome.
But yeah, you're so handsome.
Look at you.
And showing that men are really sensitive to those cues and that the more phenotypic similarity
you get, so the more similarity you get an appearance and even personality.
trades, they tend to get greater psychological closeness and sometimes even greater investment.
It seems like men's testosterone is all over, almost like a dice roll. Well, maybe not quite that,
but it seems fickle, right? You see some women, I think you wrote something in the book about,
you see women, your team wins in sports or you win an election, and I mean you, like the person
you voted for, wins an election, or which I thought was funny, you're around weapons, which is
actually explains a lot, I think. And if you're a guy, if you want to elevate your hormone levels,
you go watch hockey, vote, and then go to a strip club and then polish your rifle or whatever.
And you're good, right? You just watch that spike. Yeah, no, testosterone is definitely,
it's a reactive hormone. And so what we tend to see is that men's testosterone levels will decrease
if they, like, lose, if their team loses, if they're just feeling submissate, like in a situation
where they have to submit.
It makes their testosterone lower, testosterone increases if their team wins.
If their favorite political candidate wins, yes, if they're around weapons.
Yeah, it's so weird.
I know it's so funny, a beautiful woman or anything, sort of, even with the slightest hinting
of sex, men's testosterone will increase.
And all this is for good reason.
Having children, so, like, you get to be in the position right now where your testosterone
is probably lower than it would be.
So there's, like, parallel universe, Jordan.
who's got higher testosterone than you because he has no children.
When we have children as men's testosterone level decreases,
and it does this for a good reason.
It's like when you have kids and or if you've got a long-term partner that you're investing in,
it's not always a good thing to have your foot on the gas pedal of testosterone
for the reasons that we talked about with the women with the implant.
I mean, it can be a kind of counterproductive hormone sometimes.
And it doesn't lower your testosterone to the degree that you're going to get pushed around
and, you know, just all of a sudden become a meek underling.
But rather it just like sort of prevents maximization of testosterone
because it's really adaptive to channel your energy towards your children
and towards your partner and not toward looking at the next door neighbor
and thinking about, you know, vivid sexual fantasies with strangers.
That's what parallel universe Jordan is doing is going to the gun range after looking at
some pornography or whatever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so women, you know, we get a hard time about our hormones because they cycle and they
fluctuate. But men, you know, their primary sex hormone testosterone is something that also
changes and fluctuates. And it's got a circadian rhythm and is highest in the morning and then
decreases during the day and response to all of those things that we talked about. And so
our sex hormones are part of what creates the experience of being who we are. And all of it
is helping to guide our behavior in ways that are actually really adaptive and functional.
And so when we mess with that, like we do with the pill or with that implant that we were just
talking about. I mean, it can really change behavior in ways that can not always be necessarily
what we want. Yeah, some people have reported, like, manic. You're really turning something up to
11 when it was supposed to be turned up to like five or six, and it's hard to control. It's really
uncomfortable. Some of that, though, I have to guess, is just women being like, oh, I've never
experienced this. I think other stuff is clinical where it's like they just can't control themselves.
That's like maybe a combination of things. But it's very, it was really, really. It was really,
interesting reading the email after this particular letter. There's a lot of tradeoffs when choosing
long-term versus short-term partners for women especially, of course. Can you speak to that a little bit?
Because, of course, for men, you know, choosing a lot of partners is not good for your marriage,
but it's good for spreading your genes and we're kind of evolved to probably spread genes,
I mean, to some degree. But it seems like you don't want to mess with that. If you're a woman especially,
right, you don't want to have your short-term switch flipped if you're trying to do the long-term thing,
which I think a lot of women are, right?
Husband and kids.
Right.
Yeah.
I mean, I think that when we're talking about mating,
you know, we can think about the types of benefits that we get
from our different types of partners as kind of falling in the immediate genetic benefits
that you get.
Like, if I'm just having a one-night stand with somebody,
but the only thing I'm going to get from them,
like if we're talking about things in terms of reproduction,
it's going to be their genes, right?
So I'm just like having a one-night stand with you.
All I'm getting from you is,
your genes, that's going to lead to the prioritization of cues that are related to genetic quality.
And some of the things that we know are related to genetic quality are things like physical
attractiveness because generally the types of things that our brain perceives as attractive
are things that are related to health, immune function. And when we're looking at attractiveness
in men, it's also related to testosterone levels. And our brains, women's brains, see these things,
these types of qualities as attractive. Because of course, over the course of history,
women who zeroed in on those qualities and said, I want that as my mate, they would have had a greater
number of successful offspring than women who preferred different traits. And so what we tend to see is that
when women are short-term mating or just having like a casual sexual relationship with somebody,
that's usually what they tend to zero in on is like sexiness, right? Like how sexy is this person?
And sexy is just really what our brain is perceiving as things that are related to good genes.
Now when women are choosing a long-term partner, there's a balance between wanting good genes for your offspring, so wanting somebody who's going to be sexy.
But then also wanting somebody who's going to be somebody who cares and is going to contribute to provisioning and caregiving of yourself during a time of pregnancy and they're soon after.
But then also the care of your offspring.
And so women have to balance their preference for sexiness and good genes types of qualities with also quality.
related to provisioning, willingness to invest, willingness to be faithful and invest resources
only in you and your children and not also the next-door neighbor's children and so on.
And so, you know, when women are in like long-term meeting, I mean, most women would ideally
in an ideal world would have somebody as a partner who has so much sexiness and then also
all the resources and caring and provisioning. But unfortunately, there's not a lot of people
out there that have all of those qualities.
Yes, we are very few and far between.
Yes.
Well, it's really funny about that is there's a lot of research that
men who are like super sexy, they tend to not always be great at fidelity.
And they tend to engage in more short-term mating.
So men with higher testosterone levels, we know that they tend to have more casual sex.
They tend to have more extra pair fantasies.
They tend to have more extra pair relationships when they're in relationships.
there's a balance that you have to make if you're a woman and you're looking for somebody who's
going to be giving you good genes and then also giving you investment. It's all about trying to
figure out where you're going to be putting your chips essentially. It's like, you know, you've got so
many chips you can cash in in terms of choosing a partner and where are you going to put those?
They're going to skew them towards sexiness. You're going to shift them over this way and have
it more balanced between sexiness and investment or, you know, somewhere between.
You see that problem with, well, Hollywood or popular, I should say powerful,
men, right? I think the research shows, and I could be wrong, that there's just a disproportionate
number of affairs with powerful guys because they have more options, typically. Yeah, no, totally.
And what's really funny about this is, you know, we see it with humans, but they've done really cute
experimental work with birds, where they'll take like a species of songbird, where, for example,
if the females really like males who have bright plumage, where they'll take kind of an average male
and they'll follow his mating behavior over the course of a season.
And then they'll dye his feathers and make him have like these qualities that all of the
females like. And all of a sudden all the females are like, and these males just become
absolute philanderers. I mean, they're just, they just are having sex with everybody.
And then they take out the die the next season. And then, you know, he's back to being the really good
dad. Oh my gosh. But yeah. So with songbirds, you see that they're as faithful as their options. And I mean,
I think that in some degree, you know, that there's an element of this with humans. Obviously,
there are some men, right, who have all the options in the world and are faithful. There are some men
who have very few options, yet nonetheless managed to have a lot of extra pair of sex and, you know,
and everything in between. But definitely the number of options available to you is a contributing
factor into the decision of fidelity. In the book, you discuss that when women see other
ovulating women at high fertility, they often won't like that the men they're with.
interacting with her. But that means that women can detect other women who are ovulating. Did I read that
correctly? Yeah. So this is actually really fascinating. And it's obviously not something that we
think about consciously because I don't think that like if you showed me a hundred women, I don't
think I would be able to say, oh, she's ovulating and she's not. And she's not. And she is.
Right. But instead, our brain, again, our brain sees things in a way that are very much
geared toward getting us to do things that historically would have helped to promote genetic
replication, right? It's a reproduction. And so if I see 100 women, I can tell you who the most
attractive is or who the sexiest are and who the most beautiful are. And our brain is likely
picking up on all those cues that are related to fertility. And then those are informing those
decisions. And so my brain, if I see a really sexy woman, I'm not going to want my partner
to be near that person, right, because that could be a threat. And so my brain is probably just
perceiving sexiness cues. I'm not like necessarily seeing it as like, oh, that person is fertile. It's just
like, oh, that person is a threat because that person is sexy. You know, there's a lot of research that
shows that for both men and women, it's like the cues that we tend to find as sexy and beautiful
in women are cues that are related to estrogen presence and fertility. Yeah, this is fascinating.
I mean, this is the obvious question is why would women evolve this? And the answer is because they don't
want the guy that they're with who they've invested in, potentially partnered with, to invest in
somebody else, right?
Yeah, well, exactly.
I mean, it's like, you have to know your competition.
You know, it's like we have to understand who it is that we're out there working
against the same with men.
It's like, even though men are like, I can't tell if other guys are attractive.
That's such nonsense.
I know.
That's like such bullshit.
You got to have your head firmly up your rear if you can't tell that the six foot five guy,
like Chris Holmesworth, oh, he's good looking.
I mean, I guess so.
You know, like, come on.
Come on, man.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Exactly.
It doesn't have to be that extreme either for guys to feel threatened.
I'm not super tall or anything like that.
I'm, you know, 5'10.
But even you can feel like, why is this guy being mean to me just because I looked at,
or like shook hands with his girlfriend or whatever?
Like, this is ridiculous.
And it's, oh, he's insecure about this.
And you can even hear, sometimes you get concrete evidence, right?
Like, oh, well, you rolled up in a Tesla or something and the guy's like really jealous.
It's just like, geez, man, calm down.
It's got car seats in the back for.
God's safe. Chill. That's so funny. It is interesting, though, and a lot of this hinges on,
the fact that guys have insecurity around other guys is case positive that guys can tell if another
guy's attractive because they're not threatened by the portly waiter at the Italian restaurant.
Right, right, exactly. And what was also really interesting about that to me is that both men and
women have an understanding of what the other sex is looking for, because there are somewhat,
you know, there are differences in the degree to which men and women prioritize different
types of traits when they're choosing partners. And so, for example, you know, if I see a woman who has
this, like, really amazing job and she's like a super, like a ton of power and status and that sort of
thing, and she's kind of average looking, I'm not going to be threatened by her at all because I know
that that's just not something that most men are like, wow, like, she's so powerful. That's so
amazing. She's got two PhDs. Yeah, it's like, wow. That is impressive. But like, like, for a man who
who sees that, I mean, that's a threat. Yeah. And so it's like we both have this, have this implicit
awareness of like what plays out in the mating market within our own sex. And it's also that way
we can maximize our own probability of getting what we want by being maximally competitive
for what we're looking for. But also so we can keep an eye on our rivals. Yeah, it is a little bit
of a sad state of affairs and totally unfair. Like, oh, she's got two PhDs. That's really impressive.
Meanwhile, guys are like, yeah, but that booty dough. Like, come on, man.
Yeah, I know, right. Like, come on. Is that it? Give me a break.
I said it. Tell me about strippers and tipping during their cycle and while on the pill. This was just
fascinating. I was just thinking like, wow, you can put a dollar amount on this. That was not,
I did not expect that. Yeah, no, that was a really brilliantly done study. And it was a study that
was done at a strip club. Of course. The researchers. They must have had a great time running this.
I was going to say, they had a line of research assistants out the door, like men saying, I would love
to participate in the study. Yeah. I'm super interested in hormones, guys.
Yeah, it's like this is hormones, right? It's like hormones. Yeah, okay, okay. Yeah, yeah, I'm totally into that. They worked with women who were working as dancers at a strip club and they had them all keeping a diary over the course of, I think it was two cycles. And all that they had to do is every day they logged in whether or not they're working, how many hours they worked and how much tip money they earned. And then did you get your period today, yes or no. And so they logged this over the course of two cycles. And then the researchers took the diaries. And the first thing that they did is they divided the
diaries into two piles. One was a pile that was kept by women who are using hormonal birth control.
So women are on the pill or on the hormonal IUD or what have you. And the other stack of diaries
was the diaries of the naturally cycling women. And then what they did is they mapped the tip
earnings onto the women's cycles because they asked the women every day, did you get your period?
And so they were able to know when the first day of their cycle was, right? And that is the day
you get your period is the first day of your cycle. So they track that there. And then they look and see
where the end of their period is, and then they sort of bisect that in half. It's usually around
day 14, where ovulation is, and you're able to see when estrogen is rising in the cycle
and when fertility is high for women who are naturally cycling. And then you're able to
look at women who are using hormonal birth control and see whether or not they also have,
you know, are there any differences in tip earnings that they get as a function of their cycle
because they don't have changing sex hormones the way that naturally cycling women do. And what they've
found was that for women who are naturally cycling, you see that tip earnings, the average amount
that women were pulling in each shift, was increasing as a function of estrogen in the cycle.
And in particular, what they find is that during that period of time, that five or so days prior
to ovulation and then the day of ovulation itself, that period of time was marked by having
really high tip earnings. So they earned the most money across the cycle right during what we call
the peri-ovulatory window. It's that five days prior to
ovulation and then on the day of ovulation itself, when sex can lead to conception.
And during that time, women are earning the most tip earnings.
That's so funny.
And then it falls when estrogen levels fall in the cycle.
And then when estrogen levels climb a little bit in the second half of the cycle,
you also see a little bit of an uptick in earnings again.
And what this is showing us is that men are just, you know, instinctively responding to
these cues that are related to the probability of pregnancy from sex.
and that men are finding that these fertility cues as being really intoxicating.
And we know from research that men prefer the scent of women when they're ovulating,
so they like the way that their skin smells more.
They tend to find them more attractive.
In this study, like, showed it perfectly.
I mean, this very non-reactive measure that quantifies how much interest men have in women,
showing that as estrogen rises, that you get this increase in tip earnings.
And then when they compared this to the natural, or pardon me,
when they compared this to the women who were on the pill,
what they found is that there was no such increase for the pill takers.
And of course, when you take birth control, it prevents you from ovulating.
So you never get that big increase in estrogen.
It keeps your estrogen levels really low.
And the entirety of your cycle when you're on the pill is you have this pill that has
relatively low levels of estrogen and then relatively high levels of this synthetic
progesterone or progestin.
And you're getting that same hormonal message every day.
and what we see is that there's no real differences in tip earnings across the cycle.
They earn pretty consistently across, and they never get to that high that is reached by women
who are on the pill, or not on the pill, but who are naturally cycling.
That's so interesting.
And so if you're a part-time exotic dancer, then choose your shifts based on the peri,
it was a peri-ovulatory window?
Yeah, so the five days prior to ovulation and then the day of ovulation itself.
So, like, usually if you have a 28-day cycle, day nine to day-four,
14 or 15. Yeah, work that 10-hour shift.
Yeah. Work that pull. It's going to be worth it.
Yeah. I'll say you just take the rest of the month off.
Yeah. If y'all could only smell the hormones oozing out of me.
Every time you support the fine products and services that support the show, well, that just
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Now for the rest of Part 1 with Dr. Sarah Hill. This is going to make me sound gross by association,
but I don't care because it's for science. When I was in law school, I used to go out all the time,
of course, because I was in college, and I had a friend, and he would say something like,
that girl over there is on her period right now.
And I would be like, how do you know this?
And he would go, they're a little bit shinier than the other women look around.
And like, we would have drinks and I'd be like, all right, it was one time where I was like,
this is BS, we got to figure this out.
And he just went around asking everyone.
And a lot of them were like, excuse me, but we're like, no, no, no, it's a thing.
You know, but he would try to come up with an explanation.
Some people were offended.
But a lot of them were like, yes, no.
So we actually did this a few times.
And he was very often correct.
That's fascinating.
Yeah.
I had a student. I teach this really fun class called Evolution, Sex, and the Brain. And we're
like talking about all of these kinds of things. That sounds so interesting. My goodness.
Yeah, it's so fun. And I was, I had this student in my class. And after class one day, he came up and he said,
I have this skill. Superpower. Yeah, he's like, I have the superpower. I know you're going to think that
is crazy, but I've had 100% accuracy on this. He's like, but I can smell from a woman's breath, whether or not
she's on her period. That's interesting. Yeah. And he's like, there's something in their breath that I'm
picking up on and I'm always right. I've never been wrong. Wow. And I'm like,
wow. What is that? That's also something you don't necessarily want all the time.
Like you're ordering at McDonald's and you're like, I don't need to know that.
Yeah. Come on. I know. Well, it's so funny because he's saying that to me and I'm like,
okay, well, you know that's interesting. Just dumping tic-tacks in your mouth. Like, really,
tell me more. Tomorrow though, not today. Maybe next week, actually. We'll have this conversation.
I mean, it's so fascinating. And what's also really interesting about that is that if there is something that you can
pick up on, I mean, that's something that you could use as some sort of a metric. I mean, I don't know,
because I'm like, there's got to be something that you can be measuring that'll give you insight into
hormones that, you know, that we aren't able to do yet. Because one of the big things in women's
health right now is a lot of people are trying to come up with ways that women are able to better
keep track of what's actually going on hormonally with themselves. Because especially, you know,
as women go through the paramedopausal transition and like with pregnancy and or somebody's trying
to get pregnant and their fertility. It's like women want so much information about what's going on
in their bodies and it's so hard to get it in a way that's like cheap and easy to get and is available
to everyone. And so everybody's trying to figure out like how can we measure hormones cheaply?
Like how can we do this without taking blood? How can we do this where women can measure this every
day so that way they can see how their cycle is performing? And so whenever I hear something like
that. I'm like, what is it and can we measure it cheaply? Because as soon as something like that is
available to women, I think it's going to be like it's going to change the way that we do things like
tracking, for example, the menopausal transition or fertility for women or trying to get pregnant.
It seems like that's a breathala, we're a breathalyzer away from being able to detect that
because if that guy can smell it, and the human nose is not, is that sensitive, right?
I mean, those dogs that can smell cancer. No human is like, I think you have cancer, right? It's more like
Maybe if you had a pastrami sandwich, I could detect that, but that's about as far as we go.
That's quite a superpower.
Yeah.
By the way, has that stripper study?
Sorry, exotic dancer study.
Has that been replicated?
No, I don't know that anybody has even tried to.
Guys, somebody get after it, scientists.
I know.
You know, I'm something of a scientist myself.
Yeah, that seems like an opportunity to just, you know, make sure that this study is just
hammered down properly for the sake of science.
I would think that there would be a bunch of scientists trying to replicate that.
I think that the fact that it hasn't is a reflection of the fact that we are seeing a lot more
women going into science.
Maybe. Why wouldn't women also be interested in this? I mean, it's not maybe as interesting
as it would be to men, but they would have no problem getting research assistance for sure.
They would have, like you said, a line out the door. What is the method by which the pill works?
I mean, without getting super, super in the weeds, because, look, we know it prevents ovulation,
but what is the mechanism using as few of those $10 words as possible?
Big terrible words.
Yeah.
So essentially, it's fooling your brain into thinking that you just ovulated.
Okay.
And so after you ovulate, like one of the things that I talked about is the first half of your cycle is just all about releasing estrogen.
And that's what happens when an egg is getting ready to be released.
After that egg gets released, that empty egg follicle is what starts releasing that other hormone progesterone.
And when progesterone is being released, that actually tells the brain, don't stimulate the egg follicles.
Because you just ovulated and we want to see.
whether or not that egg gets fertilized and implants. And so when you have progesterone getting released,
your brain doesn't stimulate your ovaries. And so what the pill does is it gives you this daily
dose of the synthetic progesterone or progestin. And this is what tells your brain not to stimulate
your ovaries. And so that's how it works. I would love to get some stories of women who met men
on or off the pill because the change in preferences is very interesting. And you see a lot now in the
news about, well, it's sort of like clickbaity stuff like the birth control pill makes women choose
effeminate men. And it's turning it into this like whole societal crisis instead of something
that's kind of a temporary effect that some people may be experienced. Right. Yeah. So there is some
research that finds that women who have chosen their partner when they were on the pill and then they
discontinue the pill, that on average it can create some differences in how women feel about their
partner. And what's really interesting about it is that what it finds is that it can either increase or
decrease your attraction to your partner. And so for some women, when they go off of the pill,
because the pill is oftentimes, I mean, it kills your free levels of testosterone. So it causes
the release of what's known as sex hormone binding globulin, which binds up all your testosterone
and makes it unusable. And when you're not ovulating, that combination of things tends to kill
libido. And so a lot of times when women are on the pill, their sex drive goes in the toilet.
And when they go off of it, all of a sudden, they're like, oh, my God, sex. And then they're
really into their partner and they're super attracted to them. But for some women, they go off
of it. And even though they're having this increase in sexual desire, they're realizing that
their partner isn't really what they want. And like, oh, no. And that does happen. And it's not,
it doesn't happen most of the time, but it does happen. And it's possible. I mean, it's like,
we know that hormones nudge our partner preferences.
There's been research for decades showing that, like, for example, when estrogen is rising
and high across the cycle, that this tends to make women almost more shallow.
It's like all of a sudden we're really into all of those genetic quality kinds of cues,
things like sexiness and facial symmetry and testosterone markers.
And women aren't having any estrogen surges in the cycle.
You're never getting that, you know, sort of queuing into these things that women find
sexy. And it's possible that for some women, because they're not really prioritizing those
kinds of cues when they're choosing their partners, that all of a sudden when they're off the pill
and they start to care about those things again, that they realize that their partner isn't
really hitting all the right buttons. And that can be really upsetting. I've talked to women who've
gotten divorced and I've talked to women who've had really tumultuous breakups that happened as a result
of going off of hormonal birth control because they realize like, oh my gosh, this isn't,
like, I don't like the way you smell anymore. And then I've also had women who,
who go off the pill and are like, oh my gosh, like my partner is exhausted.
Poor guy.
Yeah, because I'm like so sexually excited to be around them.
And I hadn't been, you know, for so long.
And so whenever you have hormonal changes and given how big of a role our hormones play in
terms of partner choice and attraction, you're going to get these changes in sexual
behavior or potentially get these changes in satisfaction with your existing partner.
Wow.
And we just actually did a new study, and it hasn't come out yet, but hopefully it will be ready. We're getting it ready to submit for publication. But we worked with natural cycles, which is a cycle tracking app for women who are not on hormonal birth control. But we captured new users who had just discontinued birth control. And then we asked them, what type of birth control were you on when you met your partner? And for some of them, it's hormonal birth control. And for others, it's something else or nothing. And we looked at,
women's sexual frequency, you know, over the course of multiple cycles and then looked at whether
or not we had differences in the frequency of sex between people who chose their partners when
they were on the pill or women who chose their partners when they were off. What we find is that you
get more sex within these couples that were chosen when the woman was naturally cycling. So they're
having more sex across the cycle relative to women who chose their partners when they were on the
pill. And again, this is just consistent with the idea that if you choose your partner when you're off
the pill, you're going to be going through this regular fluctuation where you have this period of
time when estrogen is kind of driving the bus in terms of the brain. And estrogen really likes
those sexy qualities like testosterone and good genes markers and somebody who's got signs of
good immune functioning and all these other things. And women who are on the pill don't have that.
They don't go through that period. And it seems like what's likely happening is when you go off the
pill and everybody's naturally cycling is that for women who chose their partners when they were going
through that, they're experiencing that. They're like, oh, yeah, yes, yes, yes. And that for women who chose
their partners and they're off the pill, for some of them, they're going to be having that exact
response. And then for some of them, they're not. And it's because their brain wasn't prioritizing
those cues when they chose their partner. It seems like that could lead, what the obvious
conclusion is that it would lead to less relationship satisfaction potentially. It could. Maybe
do you pick based on mate investment in financial stability instead? I mean, maybe not financial
stability, but stability instead? Right. So that's a really great question. And there was a study that was done,
gosh, probably 10 years ago now, where they looked at different types of relationship satisfaction,
and depending on whether women chose their partners when they were on or off of the pill. And what they found
is that women who chose their partners when they were naturally cycling, that they were more satisfied
with the sexual and attraction related aspects of the relationship. So like how much sexual desire do you
have? Like how satisfied are you with sexual frequency? How satisfied are you with your attraction
to your partner and so on.
But then they found that women who chose their partners when they were on the pill
that they had more satisfaction with things like their partner's earning capacity
and their partners like just like how good of a partner they are, like how much of a team
player they are.
And so it suggests that women are just kind of queuing into different things and like prioritizing
different qualities.
And what was really interesting with that particular paper is that they found that
women who chose their partners when they were on the pill, that they actually had a lower
divorce rate. Really? Yeah. So, which is really interesting because it's like, so this sounds like a
question that you would ask like with your roommates when you're in college after like smoking dope or
like drinking too many beers. Yeah. We're like, what is a successful relationship? Right. And it's like,
what is that, you know? And it could be choosing somebody who's just a really good partner and,
you know, in financial provisioning and that you feel really satisfied at that. It could be the sexual
piece, right? Maybe that's what we're, I mean, nobody really knows, right? It's just like,
you hope to have all of it. Yeah. Right. Like I think all of us, when we choose our long-term
partners are like hoping that we're going to be satisfied in all of these different domains
equally. But it's like what is satisfaction? And at least, you know, if we're going to define
relationship success as togetherness, which I wouldn't, but some, many people do say like a successful
relationship is whether you're still together. If you're defining relationship success that way,
maybe the pill leads you to choose smarter partners, you know, like to choose more wisely.
I don't want guys to be like spiking their wife's pumpkin spice lattes with the birth control
pill.
But it is, it is interesting.
Super interesting.
Yeah, this is quite fascinating.
Do you know what women tend to prefer when on or off the pill?
I know there's a photograph experiment where you kind of get preferences.
Tell me about that.
What you tend to find is that women who choose their partner, like women generally when they're on
the pill, they don't have this preference for masculinized male faces that you get among
naturally cycling women. So naturally cycling women, particularly if you happen to capture them in
your study at times in the cycle when estrogen is high, women are really into things like
facial, vocal, and behavioral masculinity. So somebody who looks like a manly man and estrogen
loves testosterone. And that's, you know, just kind of the way that it is.
And when you blunt estrogen levels, which you do when you're on the pill because you're not ovulating,
and it's a creation of an egg that actually produces all that estrogen.
For women who are on the pill, when you're not having those estrogen surges where you're like really
queuing into these things, you tend to get a preference for a slightly less masculinized male face,
male voice, male behavior.
So women just don't seem to be zeroing in on those qualities the way that naturally cycling women do.
And now when we talk about these differences, you know, it can sound alarming and, you know, like, oh my gosh, like women who are on the pill are choosing these like namby, pamby girly men.
But when you look at the differences, like for example, in the photograph study where they had women like essentially using a little slider scale to create their ideal male face.
What they found is that women who were naturally cycling made a slightly more masculinized male face compared to the pill takers.
But when you look at the faces side by side, I mean, it's not like you're like, oh, my gosh.
God, like, how could the same woman have, you know, chosen this or that, depending on whether
she was on the pill or not? Instead, they're just slight differences. And essentially, what estrogen does
is it just makes us more sensitive to minute differences in faces based on the presence or absence of
high levels of testosterone. You do get differences, but they're not so great that it's probably going
to matter in most women's lives. For some women, it does, right? And we do know, and I've seen it,
more times than I can count, where you'll have women who have an experience where all of a sudden
they're off the pill and they're like, this isn't going to work out anymore. Or women who are like,
oh my God, my partner is like, this is awesome. But for a lot of women, because these are small nudges,
it's not going to nudge you out of attraction or nudge you into attraction. For some women,
it will, but for most women, it won't. I realize this is probably one of the creepiest non-sequiters
I could ever have on this show. But talking about hormones and faces, pre-teen girls love these
BTS-looking guys, like the boy band look, and they really look, like, sometimes I look at the photos,
and I go, is that a girl with short hair? And they're like, no, it's a guy with like seven earrings
and makeup on. And it's like, these guys are really popular. There's obviously some hormonal
differences between young people and adults. And I'm wondering if that's why they choose these
really girly-looking guys to be in these boy. Those guys are already young themselves, but
there's guys that are that age that have facial hair. And they're nowhere to be found. And they're,
Right. That's so interesting. I bet you're right because a lot of those preteen girls aren't ovulating regularly. And so they're not having this big surge in estrogen, which is, again, you know, that's like the thing that really tends to make our brain really cute into those masculinized male faces. So no, totally. That's really interesting.
Yeah, I'm going to leave it there because that's just about as creepy. People are going to be like, dude.
I don't know. Yeah, I don't know this Jordan guy. But it just, whenever I see these guys, I'm just thinking, what woman is going, oh, he's so.
cute. And the answer is a child, a literal child is the one who's thinking that these people are
attractive. Otherwise, they look like... It's like a non-threatening version of a male. It's almost like
a cartoon male. Yes, a cartoon anime guy with nothing, yeah, like two-dimensional caricature.
Like totally non-threatening. Yeah, no, that's so super interesting. It'd be interesting to see
whether or not like the age at which girls switch out of that coincides with menarchy and the
timing that they get their periods.
It makes sense.
I know that like older women go to backstreet, or what is it, new kids on the block
reunion concerts.
That's a totally different thing.
That's not what we're talking about here.
That's nostalgia.
But when I look at, again, like, BTS, that Korean K-pop band, and some of that might be cultural,
but I'm trying to think of any boy band that's not that one because it's not really my scene.
There's a lot, I'm sure, and they all kind of generically look like similar.
They're not leaning into the facial.
Even like the original OG Backstreet Boys, there was like one guy with a five o'clock shadow to appeal to like a certain demographic.
And then he wasn't even kind of nobody even remembers that guy's name, right?
Because it wasn't the popular one.
He wasn't the front man, so to speak.
So it seems like, and I'm worried I'm overstating this, so please jump in here.
It seems like women should try to choose long term partners when they're off the pill if they plan to not take the pill throughout their whole life, which is probably, you know, not something you should do anyway with medication.
Right.
I mean, honestly, I think, yes.
If a woman does not need to be on hormonal birth control and she's looking for a long-term partner,
my recommendation would be that you're not on it when you pick it.
Hormones affect the way that our brain does its daily business.
And that includes things like attraction and the idea of being under the spell of a different
hormonal profile when you're doing something as important as choosing your partner or even
choosing your career.
Because, you know, I've met women who were on the pill.
They were like a worker aunt is how they described them.
They're like a drone where they're like a drone where they're.
They're just like work, work, work, work, work.
They go off the pill and all of a sudden they realize that they want more work-life balance
because all of a sudden they're like kids and relationships.
And they start thinking more holistically about these other things that are important to them.
And then their life explodes because they made all of these other choices when they were on the pill
and now they're off of it and they're realizing that this isn't exactly what they wanted.
And so I think that for women who don't need to be on it for reasons of pregnancy prevention,
don't, don't, you know, it's like you're going to be living with these other hormones most of your life.
And so I think that choosing a life that fits you with the set of hormones that you're going to be spending most of your life with is probably a good idea.
Although I would say, man, short term, use that pill because getting pregnant by the wrong guy, Trump's pretty much anything else that we've discussed here.
Yeah?
I mean, absolutely.
I mean, it's like with everything, it's about tradeoffs.
So it's not necessarily that birth control is bad because, as you were saying, I mean, there is not.
nothing that will derail a person's life more than an unplanned pregnancy. And this is particularly
true in our current environment where women aren't able to get safe legal abortions in many states.
And so, like, not having that as a worry, I think is such a huge benefit to women and not having
your life go off the rails. So for women who don't have a different means of avoiding pregnancy,
then, I mean, absolutely, it's a great way to do it. You know, one of the things I write about in my book,
and I'll say it here too, is that knowing everything that I know, I was still been on it when I was on it.
Because for me, like, the need to prevent pregnancy and be able to plan and make plans for, you know, graduate school and then building my research lab, all of those things were so important to me.
And it's benefited me in so many ways. And even though it comes with tradeoffs, those are tradeoffs that I was willing to make then, even though I didn't know I was making them.
But now, knowing everything that I know, I would still make those trade-offs.
I would just be more informed about what it is that I was doing.
I love this.
I love the career idea that you mentioned.
Like, maybe don't become a partner to law firm until you've spent three or six months off of the pill.
How long does it take actually getting off the pill before your brain goes, hey, I'm thinking differently.
Like, three months seems too short.
Yeah.
You know, I think here's, and it differs for everybody.
I mean, for me, I started to notice differences within about three months.
Oh, okay.
But it can take a lot longer than that, right?
So, for example, if somebody was making a, like, I don't know about my partner, I don't know about my career.
I mean, I'm thinking six months or a year.
I mean, it took me several years to realize that I don't get overwhelmed super easily or that I don't have, you know, anxiety.
Or it takes you a while to figure out yourself narrative.
And so I think that for a lot of women, it probably would take six months or so before they're feeling like, gosh, you know, I'm really unhappy at my job.
burned out, yeah. Like, yeah, like, this isn't what I want in my life. I think I don't think that you'd
probably figure that out within three months. I think that would take a little bit longer.
It seems like also a type A personality who's a partner at a law firm or a surgeon or something like
that taking on extra shifts. You're going to try and plow through that for as long as possible.
You almost have to burn out and go, what is my deal? I used to be fine doing this. Am I getting old?
And the answer is, oh, I stopped. You also have to be aware that the birth control pill does this
in the first place because you might not even put it together if you stop taking the pill
and suddenly you burn out, you might not even notice the correlation between those two things.
Right, no, I mean, absolutely. It's not on the pillbox.
Right, no, it's not on the label, exactly. I definitely want to do more with you here and do part two.
I want to talk about the other drawbacks of birth control. There's a lot of stuff that can go, quote, unquote, wrong with it.
I also want to talk about the recent media storm with respect to birth control from the right and the left, turning it into a political discussion.
I definitely want to go through that because I think that's whenever we put health through a political,
filter. It's just never good, really, in my opinion, because your body doesn't care about your
politics. It cares about science. And so I definitely am looking forward to that. So stay tuned for
part two, y'all. We'll be back with Dr. Sarah Hill. Here's a trailer for another episode of the
Jordan Harbinger show with the legendary Astaire Perel, as she sheds light on cheating, not just
being about the thrill, but about finding a part of ourselves that we've lost. Affairs also happen
often in good relationships. They're not just symptoms of relationships that have gone completely.
arrive. Sometimes
a person goes looking
elsewhere, not because they want to find
someone else, but because
they want to find another self.
Nuclear family
life is a bitch.
It's really a stressful
situation on people, especially
if they have on top of it young kids, pets
and in-laws and older parents
and all the other responsibilities of life.
We were not conceived to live like this.
What's going on is this.
There is what people fight
about and then there is what people fight for. Power and control. That's the hidden agendas of
most fights. Whose decision matters most? Who has priority? Is it about care and closeness? Can I trust you?
Do you have my back? Can I rely on you? And respect and recognition. Do you value me? Do I matter?
Much of couples' life, when things begin to go a little bit awry, is putting the responsibility on the other person.
without paying attention enough to what can I do to make this better,
or in what way am I contributing to my partner feeling the way they do?
So it's very important.
What is relational and what is individual,
and where do you start to make sense of this complicated
and often very painful experience?
To hear how our fights can actually make our relationships stronger
and what the future holds for love in the age of AI,
check out episode 9-1-1 on The Jordan Harbinger Show.
That's the end of part one, part two out in just a little bit here.
All things Dr. Sarah Hill will be in the show notes at Jordan Harbinger.com.
Advertisers, deals, discounts, ways to support the show, all at Jordan Harbinger.com slash deals.
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Now, if you know somebody who might take birth control, is taking birth control, did take birth control,
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the body, share this episode with them. Frankly, I find this stuff fascinating. I don't know who
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