YOUR COLOGNE IS LOWERING YOUR TESTOSTERONE
How synthetic fragrance chemically working against your biology — and the simple switch that fixes it
I was the Axe kid.
I’d spray it everywhere — wrists, neck, chest, sometimes the air in front of me and walk through it like some YouTube tutorial told me to.
I thought I smelled incredible.
But in reality:
I was also getting headaches I couldn’t explain.
Sniffles that came from nowhere.
A brain fog I blamed on everything except what I was putting on my body every single morning.
It wasn’t until I started digging into the research that I understood what was actually happening.
I wasn’t just choosing a bad cologne.
I was dosing myself with endocrine-disrupting chemicals, suppressing my own testosterone, and covering up the one biological signal that makes humans genuinely attractive to each other.
What the fragrance industry isn’t required to tell you is costing you more than you think.
Your Body Is Already Sending Pheromones. Cologne Is Jamming Them.
You’ve heard of pheromones.
Most people think they’re a myth, or at best, something that works on animals but not humans. The science says otherwise.
Pheromones 101
Pheromones are chemical signals your body produces and releases through your skin.
They’re odorless to your conscious mind, but your nose picks them up through a structure called the olfactory epithelium and sends them directly to the limbic system — the part of your brain that governs emotion, trust, attraction, and memory.
This happens before any conscious thought. Before you’ve registered someone’s face, their voice, or anything they’ve said, your brain has already run a full biological assessment of who they are.
This is why you sometimes feel instantly at ease with a stranger, or inexplicably uneasy with someone who seems perfectly fine on paper. Your pheromone system made that call before you did.
The mechanism behind it is a gene cluster called your MHC, or Major Histocompatibility Complex.
Think of it as the biological code your body broadcasts through scent — completely unique to you, shaped by your genetics and immune profile.
In 1995, Swiss researcher Claus Wedekind proved how powerfully this system operates:
“Women consistently preferred the scent of men whose biological makeup was most different from their own. Their subconscious was doing the genetic screening.” — Claus Wedekind, University of Bern, 1995
Different MHC profile signals immune diversity. Immune diversity signals genetic strength.
Your pheromones are broadcasting your biological resume to everyone in the room, and they’re doing it whether you’re aware of it or not.
Here’s where cologne enters the picture.
When you apply synthetic fragrance, you’re not just adding a smell on top of your own.
The chemical compounds in conventional cologne — particularly the petroleum derivatives and synthetic musks — actively interfere with how your pheromone signals are transmitted and received.
You’re not just covering the signal. You’re distorting it. The people around you get a scrambled read, or no read at all.
You’ve chemically hidden your most attractive quality before you’ve said a single word.
Side note worth knowing: women on oral contraceptives showed the opposite preference in Wedekind’s study, gravitating toward similar MHC profiles rather than different ones. Some researchers believe hormonal contraception interferes with pheromone reception entirely.
The Hidden Chemicals in Your Cologne
Under a regulatory loophole called Trade Secret protection, fragrance companies are not required to disclose their full ingredient list.
On the label, everything collapses into one word: Fragrance.
Under that single word, manufacturers can legally conceal a mixture of up to 3,000 different chemical compounds, many derived from petroleum.
The most documented offenders are phthalates. Here’s what you need to know:
What they are: Industrial plasticizers added to fragrance to make scent last longer on skin
What they do: Classified as endocrine disruptors, meaning they interfere directly with your hormone signaling
The data: A study in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, analyzing over 2,200 participants from the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, found significantly reduced testosterone levels linked to higher phthalate exposure across multiple age groups
How widespread: More than 97% of Americans already test positive for phthalate metabolites in their urine, before adding cologne to the equation
You’re trying to smell masculine. You’re chemically undermining it every morning.
“Synthetic fragrance is the new secondhand smoke.” — Dr. Anne Steinemann, environmental health researcher
Dr. Steinemann’s research backs this up.
In a 2019 study spanning the US, UK, Australia, and Sweden, she found that 32.2% of the general population reports adverse health effects from fragranced products, including respiratory issues, migraines, and neurological symptoms.
This is also why your presence in a room sometimes has the opposite effect you’re going for.
A significant portion of the people around you are experiencing a low-grade stress response to the synthetic compounds you’re wearing. Their nervous system is detecting a chemical threat. They are not thinking about the Maldives.
The Clean Fragrance Switch
The answer is not to stop smelling good. The answer is to stop blocking your biology while doing it.
Natural, plant-based fragrance works differently in two important ways:
It calms rather than agitates. Compounds like Sandalwood, Cedarwood, and Vetiver have documented calming effects on the nervous system. Instead of triggering a subtle threat response, you make people feel more at ease in your presence.
It blends with your skin, not over it. Plant-based oils work with your skin’s natural chemistry. Your pheromone signal stays detectable underneath. You smell great. You’re still you.
Two brands I use personally and trust:
Alitura Presence — Sandalwood, Cardamom, Cedarwood. Sophisticated, hormone-safe, and the one that gets the most compliments
Henry Rose — One of the first luxury fragrance brands to achieve full EWG Verified ingredient transparency
No affiliation with either. Just what’s in my bathroom.
The Sauna Protocol
If you’ve been wearing synthetic cologne for years, phthalates have likely accumulated in your fat cells.
Your skin is a two-way membrane. What goes on gets absorbed.
The protocol:
Infrared or dry sauna, 3 to 4 sessions per week
20 minutes per session
Sweating at elevated temperatures mobilizes fat-soluble compounds and pushes them out through the skin
Think of it as clearing the deck so your natural pheromone signal can actually reach the surface.
What Changed When I Made the Switch
The brain fog cleared within a few weeks. The sniffles stopped. My girlfriend noticed before I said anything — she just said I smelled different, more like me.
And I’ve received more unsolicited compliments on how I smell in the two years since switching than in the entire decade before it.
There’s something harder to quantify but worth naming.
There’s an ease that comes with knowing you’re not suppressing one of your most fundamental biological signals every morning. You’re not performing. You’re just more present.
Your natural scent is not the problem. It’s your most underrated asset.
🏁 The Biohacker’s Checklist
Three moves, this week:
The Purge: Sauna, 20 minutes. Start clearing the synthetic buildup from your fat cells.
The Swap: Replace your current cologne with a clean essential oil alternative. Start with Alitura Presence or Henry Rose.
The Test: Go 72 hours without any synthetic fragrance. Track your morning clarity, headache frequency, and how people respond to your presence.
If this landed, share it with one guy in your life who still thinks his Bleu de Chanel is doing him favors.
For more weekly protocols on optimizing your biology without overhauling your life, subscribe to Biohack with Jack below.






workoutfitnessgears.com 💉🔌
Thank you for highlighting that this is also a problem with men’s persona care!! The female wellness industry has been spotlighting fragrance as a no-no for quite some time now, but it’s just as important for you guys too.
And definitely chuckled out loud at “I was an axe guy”