|
by
Anthony Roberts
Author of
Anabolic Steroids: Ultimate Research Guide and
Beyond Steroids;
Co-Author with Christian Thibaudeau of
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
- Body Transformation From Both Sides of
the Force
Anthony Roberts has been researching anabolic steroids for over a
decade. He recently began formulating dietary supplements for
bodybuilder. The first is
MyoGenX - a natural testosterone booster developed by world
famous steroid guru Anthony Roberts. MyoGenX contains a three
pronged attack scientifically proven to increase your testosterone
levels - which will in turn increase your lean muscle mass, boost
your strength, and burn your fat!
Discussion of pharmaceutical agents below
is presented for information only. Nothing here
is meant to take the place of advice from a licensed
health care practitioner. Consult a physician before
taking any medication.
[Note from the Author: This is an article
I actually wrote some time ago, and eventually couldn’t
find anywhere to put it. A revised version appears
as a chapter in my latest e-book, and this represents
what can be considered a first draft of that chapter.
I think that the article itself is very important,
and represents a very candid look at anabolic steroid
use among women, so I decided to release it as an
article, in this form, even though a version of
it appears in my e-book. ~Anthony Roberts]
Over the last year or so, I’ve had the privilege
of knowing several people who are intimately connected
with female figure, fitness, and bodybuilding. I
have also consulted with one or two national level
fitness competitors, as well as a couple of national
level female bodybuilders, as well as some figure
competitors. I wanted this article to be very objective,
but the more I became involved in conversations
with these women, and began to develop friendships
with them, that became impossible. Even disregarding
my blatant unprofessionalism, it was virtually impossible
to avoid admiring them and developing friendships.
So roughly a year ago, I began researching women
and steroid use. I had figured that my name was
recognizable enough to give me a modicum of credibility,
and not come off like an internet-stalker- or at
least less of one. I contacted all of the women
I was on good terms with (not surprisingly, a relatively
small number), and had them introduce me to some
likely candidates to anonymously talk about their
drug use.
Several figure, fitness, and bodybuilder women
were all gracious enough to speak with me, very
frankly and candidly (on the condition of anonymity).
I have also retained a few connections with first
division athletes in various colleges around the
country, so I have decent insight into the world
of female athletics as well. So I ended up doing
dozens of interviews, and collecting reams of data
on female anabolic use from various female competitors
(and even a couple of recreational users).
Regarding female physique competitors, the first
thing which struck me is that, in the off season,
they are all remarkably similar in stats. While
a 5’3" (ish) female bodybuilder may bulk up to 155-165
lbs in the off season, I have seen more than one
figure girl get up to about ten lbs shy of that,
and fitness girls are typically around the same.
One very popular figure model gets about 50lbs overweight
between photo shoots. To look at her in the times
between shoots, she basically looks like a fat girl
with a pretty face. To look at her portfolio and
magazine shoots, she looks like the type of girl
high-school boys tape pictures of in their lockers.
Or whatever boys that age do with pictures of hot
girls wearing next to nothing…
Anyway, a typical off season weight for a female
bodybuilder is only about 10 lbs higher than a figure
or fitness competitor, if they are all still in
reasonable shape (not super-fat). This immediately
made me think that their drug intakes, diet, and
training routines would be shockingly similar, and
in some regards I was correct, and in others I was
not.
Let’s go over what I’m talking about here, so
we’re all on the same page. Fitness girls do the
same physique comparison rounds as the figure girls,
but also have a routine which contains compulsory
moves. Figure girls are compared doing quarter turns
in both a one and two piece "swimsuit". It’s called
a "swimsuit" but you can’t swim in it (naturally).
In fact, it doesn’t resemble a swimsuit in any way
except for the shape. The more sequins, jewels,
and stones you have on the suit, the higher the
price. And they’re not cheap…prices range from $500-1500.
Yeah, a thousand dollar swim suit that you can’t
swim in, that’s covered in jeweled studs. At those
prices, I shudder to think what Liberace’s swimming
wardrobe must have cost him…
I know we all want to get into the drug information
here, but first, I need to touch on training and
diet. With regards to weight training: figure, bodybuilding,
and fitness competitors train in a very similar
fashion. There’s really no "figure" workout, or
"bodybuilding" workout which isn’t very similar.
The fitness girls do a gymnastics routine (which
obviously requires separate training), and the bodybuilders
do a posing routine- while figure is limited to
quarter turns. If you think there’s a difference
in their training, besides the routine, you’re mistaken.
If you think there’s a difference in the diet, you’re
mistaken. The difference between figure and bodybuilding
is that there’s no posing round, and figure girls
don’t come in as dry. There’s about a 10 lb difference
in them, which is probably about 5 lbs of water
and 5 lbs of muscle, and that’s all. Of course,
female figure and fitness is separated into height
classes, while female bodybuilding is separated
into weight classes.
Now that we’re vaguely on the same page, we can
go over some basics regarding female anabolic use.
It’s pretty common to hear people say things like
"even fitness competitors use a low dose of ‘Var
or Winny here and there…maybe some Clenbuterol".
This is absolute bullshit. Competition level doses
I’ve seen are actually much higher than people think…
basically around 10 mgs of Anavar (never less),
stacked with an equal amount of Winstrol, and a
bunch of Clenbuterol. I can’t remember the last
time I’ve read a female bodybuilder or fitness girl’s
drug program and not seen Growth Hormone in it-
usually about 2IU’s a day (interestingly, IGF-1
hasn’t really busted onto the female anabolic scene
yet, nor has MGF or the other peptides). Thyroid
hormone is used in nearly every woman’s precontest
phase, and doses can get pretty outrageous here.
Proviron is pretty big when they can get it, and
most of them take the same dose I do (25-50mgs/day).
Some take more. Primobolan, both tabs and injectable,
are popular with women, when there’s enough cash
around to afford it. Most of the upper level competitors
usually don’t have that kind of cash when they first
break onto the national scene, though. Why? Because
breast implants are expensive- and the last show
I went to, there were only four that weren’t fake.
And I don’t mean four women, I mean four breasts.
In terms of their off season drug intake, female
bodybuilders differ from their figure and fitness
sisters. Typically their doses are only slightly
higher, but they are much more experimental with
compounds they will use. Testosterone propionate,
Trenbolone Acetate, Oral Turinabol, Deca-Durabolin,
and occasionally Equipoise are used by female bodybuilders.
I need to be totally honest, and say that if the
woman didn’t start off as exceptionally pretty,
these drugs, in the dosages commonly used by top
level female bodybuilders, will not win them any
beauty contests. Still, even at the top levels of
competition or in photo shoots, when their make-up
and hair is done, there are a lot of beautiful female
bodybuilders, who haven’t lost their looks. However,
what’s typically seen in the lower levels is a different
story. Girls who are trying to break into the professional
ranks, who haven’t done it after several tries,
typically turn to much higher drug intakes, and
sometimes ruin their femininity.
Most of the side effects I’ve seen in women are
manageable, and only temporary. Yeah, horror stories
exist, but they’re few and far between. Permanent
deepening of the vocal chords is very uncommon,
and I’ve only seen it with much larger female bodybuilders-
who typically don’t go off steroids long enough
to have their voices recover before it becomes semi-permanent.
I know of one woman who lost the highs in her voice,
but it didn’t deepen…she was, however, under the
mistaken impression that her voice had started out
much higher than it really did. I think a little
precaution here goes a long way. In particular,
women need to be more receptive to what their bodies
are telling them when they’re on a cycle, and they
need to come off the drugs, regularly and periodically.
When undesirable side effects start showing themselves,
doses need to be cut in half, or discontinued immediately.
Do I even need to remind everyone that blood work
is a must throughout the year, when you’re going
to be tampering with hormones?
The side effect most commonly ignored (believe
it or not) is the growth of body hair, and hair
loss (from the head). Most women I know brush off
the growth of body hair by rationalizing that they
have to shave anyway, and the loss of any hair from
their head is quickly re-grown after the cycle is
over. Body hair growth doesn’t go away usually,
but girls who are blonde (natural ones, anyway)
usually only grow a very fine layer of mostly unnoticeable
hair, and brunettes who compete often have to do
regular full body shaves anyway. Ever see any hair
on the arms of a bodybuilder (male or female)? Yeah,
that’s how that one goes down. The men and the women
usually shave every day or every other day anyway,
so it’s going to be growing back a bit heavier and
coarser. If you wanna compete, you have to shave…so
this side effect is usually ignored. And the thinning
hair just doesn’t phase the women too much because
they have so much of it.
How about acne? Yeah, it happens. I’m taking
300mgs of injectable steroids every other day right
now, along with 50 mgs/day of orals, and I don’t
have a single zit or pimple. Genetics obviously
play a role here, and that’s what I’ve seen with
the women who use anabolics too. Women who had severe
break outs during their teenage years often find
them to recur if they use anabolics. Conversely,
if a woman has had exceptionally clear skin her
whole life, the addition of steroids doesn’t usually
produce much if any acne. Look at some pics of the
top figure or fitness competitors next time you
see them. Do they look like they spent their teenage
years as awkward, skin blemished girls? Right, and
this is probably why we don’t see too much acne
from them now either- genetics.
Some slight clitoral enlargement is common, but
usually (mostly) goes away for the most part when
the woman stops using the drugs. Some slight enlargement
is going to be permanent, but the "Denise Masino"
level of enlargement is really not common at all.
And here’s a hot tip: Denise did it on purpose.
To be perfectly frank, most women appreciate the
temporary effect of clitoral enlargement and swelling,
because it makes it much easier for them to orgasm-
and combined with the libido increase experienced
through the use of anabolics- well, I’ll leave it
to you to figure out the advantages here.
But is it permanent? Lets think about this objectively
for a moment, ok? Men use tons of DHT based anabolics,
in much higher doses, and we never hear of grossly
enlarged and permanent external genetalia enlargement
in men, from those compounds. Topical DHT has been
used successfully to treat inordinately small penis
size in males (technically called Microphalia),
but this is really only marginally successful and
involves rubbing DHT on the area every day, for
months on end. And no, this isn’t something I’ve
needed to try- thank you very much.
One of the alarming trends I see with female
competitors is that they usually are listening to
men, with regards to their drug intake. Contest
Prep "Gurus" (read: drug dealers) usually recommend
the "mild" drugs which are used in the world of
male bodybuilding as cutting agents. This includes
Anavar, Primobolan, Proviron, and Winstrol, most
commonly. These are obvious choices for men, because
none of them aromatize (convert to estrogen). When
you take a look at their androgenic rating, they’re
all quite low, and have very decent anabolic effects.
None of them really provide any huge weight gains,
but they do provide very high quality gains, of
mostly muscle, and very little water retention.
In low doses, any of them are reasonably safe. Sounds
great, right? Surely, this is why men recommend
these drugs to women- when they use these drugs,
men typically experience very hard, quality gains
in muscle, with only small increases in muscle,
on the level of a few pounds, with no water gain.
This is just what women usually want out of their
cycles, so the reasoning behind these recommendations
is sound- almost.
Did I mention that all of the drugs I just listed
are also the most expensive anabolics on the market?
Not a bad deal for the "gurus" who recommend them…
In reality, when I look at the commonly recommended
steroids for women, the striking thing that occurs
to me is that they are all derived not from Testosterone,
but rather from it’s much more potent cousin, Dihydrotestosterone
(DHT). Most people think that testosterone is the
most potent natural androgen, but in fact, it’s
not. DHT is the most potent naturally occurring
androgen, and it’s responsible for several androgenic
effects in both men as well as women. In men, it
deepens the voice at puberty, is responsible for
male pattern baldness, aids in the growth of body
and facial hair, and in the fetus is responsible
for the development of external genetalia. Testosterone
gets converted to Dihydrotestosterone by the 5alpha-Reductase
enzyme, and the presence of 5a-R in the womb is
a major determinant in of the sex of the baby. Have
I mentioned that DHT is both anti-estrogenic and
anti-progesteronic? See where I’m going with this?
The reason men experience very nice gains with
the DHT family of steroids is that they not only
reduce estrogen, but they also are very potent androgens,
despite their misleadingly low androgenic ratings.
Androgens in men produce far less of an effect on
a Mg for Mg basis, than they do in women, and this
is due to the differing endocrinology of the two
sexes.
In female endocrinology, we see what’s called
a two-cell/two-gonadotropin concept LH is delivered
to the theca interstitial cell which leads to the
secretion of androstenedione. This is then aromatized
into estrone, which is then converted to the more
potent estradiol. In addition, some testosterone
is produced, and this is also subject to aromatization
just as it is in men, as well as being subject to
5a-Reductase and conversion to DHT. The overall
amount of androgens produced in the woman is, however,
far less than what is produced in men. This is why
women only need to use lower doses to produce really
nice changes in their physiques.
Their threshold for experiencing undesirable
side effects is also very low, so doses need to
be increased incrementally, and this isn’t usually
done. Let’s discuss why. The popular brands of Anavar
used by most women, for example, typically come
in 5mg tabs. So when a woman decides to up her dose,
she goes from one tab to two. That’s a huge increase,
and I’ve never heard of a woman going from five
to six mgs, or anything like that. Winstrol comes
in amps of 50mgs, and it’s very difficult to measure
out 1/th of a ml in a syringe. Consequently, most
women use a quarter ml every other day, and then
they jump to double that dose when they move up.
The pattern here is that doses are doubled every
time they’re increased, and this is something unique
to women. A man doing 500mgs of testosterone per
week will usually jump to 750mgs if they aren’t
receiving the effects they want. At lower doses,
and lower side effect thresholds, the trend in female
anabolic use is (unfortunately) to double the dose.
I would recommend moving up in mg amounts, rather
than arbitrarily doubling doses.
I also see women using rather high amounts of
anti-estrogens, in order to get that competition
level look, virtually eliminating all of the estrogen
in their body for months on end. Take away all of
the estrogen from a high-dose steroid using female
and what do you end up with? Yeah, you get someone
who doesn’t have to worry much about what the sign
on the public restroom says anymore…
I noticed another trend, in speaking with some
of the top level female competitors I interviewed.
Unfortunately, I saw what would be technically classified
as compulsive behavior in some women, who either
experience anxiety when they come off the drugs,
or feel a degree of anxiety when they aren’t using
the kind of doses they perceive their competition
to be using. As with any compulsive act, as anxiety
levels rise, the desire to relieve that anxiety
(in this case by using steroids) also rises. As
the compulsive behavior begins to manifest itself,
and as more compulsive acts are committed- i.e.
drug intake is continued or increased- anxiety levels
decline. This creates a pattern of unnecessary psychological
reliance on the drugs, not necessarily to build
a better physique, but rather to decrease anxiety.
It’s my hope that this article has shed some
light on a somewhat taboo subject, and maybe even
helped to provide a warning and some safety for
women considering the plunge into the world of anabolics.
They can be safely used, and I’ve seen them produce
incredible results in many women…but I’ve also seen
psychological compulsion drive their use to the
upper limits and coaches who serve to convince their
clients to use them far too haphazardly, without
thought to the consequences. And that’s something
I hope to see change, maybe just a bit, by writing
an article like this. Women run a far greater risk
from the use of anabolic use than men do, and seeing
the way it’s escalated in the past few years (on
the women’s side of things) makes me cringe. A sensible
approach needs to be undertaken; with caution replacing
the current mindset of random experimentation and
listening to "gurus" or even worse, internet personas
and message-board-experts…I truly hope that I’ve
contributed to a future shift in thinking about
women and anabolics, in at least some small way.
|