Looksmaxxing content creator Clavicular recently addressed the long-term consequences of his hormone use during a recent interview, where he spoke candidly about the likelihood that he is no longer fertile.
“I haven’t officially been tested, but I’ve just been kind of going based on my anecdotal experiences. But yes, that is extre mely likely due to the fact that I’ve been suppressed for a very long time because of my exogenous hormone usage,” he said.
Despite the gravity of that admission, he downplayed the concern. Rather than framing it as a serious drawback, Clavicular described it as manageable and in his view, somewhat advantageous.
“Well, first of all, that’s honestly like a pretty mog side effect, if you think about it, due to the fact that it’s extr emely easy to restart your fertility with fertility dr**s like HMG and HCG,” he explained.
He previously talked about his infertility in a broadcast with influencer SNEAKO, where he expanded on both his hormone use and its effects on his body.
He openly spoke about beginning his self-improvement journey after years of being severely overweight and dealing with what he described as “horrendous acne.”
His solution, unconventional by any measure, was to source testosterone online as a young teenager. “I just ordered it on the internet. You could just buy it on the clear, but I don’t like to talk about sourcing too much,” he told SNEAKO.
He also elaborated on the mechanism behind his condition. “So it’s just like a negative feedback loop when you’re not needing to produce testosterone anymore because your body realizes, okay, we’re getting it from an outside source,” he said.
When SNEAKO followed up by asking whether Clavicular was producing any natural testosterone at all, the answer was blunt: “No. None.”
Despite that admission, Clavicular remained confident about his ability to have children if he ever chose to pursue it. “You just take something that, you know, signals your brain to restart the production. You stop taking the testosterone. Your levels start to diminish. You agonize the receptors and then your body just starts producing it again,” he said, placing the odds of permanent infertility at “one in like a 100,000.”
Today, Clavicular frames his testosterone use as a quality-of-life decision rather than a performance one. “Right now I’m just on TRT. It’s more of like a lifestyle and energy thing than trying to get like a roided up bodybuilder. I just want like a little bit of exercise on,” he said.
Looking back at how it all began, he acknowledged there was no real plan guiding his early decisions. “I didn’t really know about pharmacology and what I was doing at all when I first started. So, it was kind of just like a slow development of me figuring things out,” he said.