How to use serotonin to attract beautiful young women

This is quite fascinating…

 

Story-At-a-Glance

 

Matt Cook here, and serotonin has been called “the happy hormone” for decades.

 

But is it really all that good for us, especially for men?

 

The answer will surprise you… and very well may have a huge effect on how women perceive you…

 

—-Important Message From Amber—-

 

Why she wants a friend with benefits…

 

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A FWB is a girl you bang regularly…

 

But without any long term relationship BS…

 

It’s just pure, no strings attached sex… every week or so… with NO effort on your part.

 

Sounds like a dream come true, right?

 

Well what many guys don’t understand is that many women are actually a lot more open to this kind of arrangement than men are…

 

See for yourself right here.

 

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How to use serotonin to attract beautiful young women

 

Serotonin is known as “the happy hormone” — but nothing could be further from the truth.

 

Animal studies have shown that serotonin actually causes depression and anxiety.

 

High-tech brain scans have shown that the low serotonin theory of depression is actually completely backwards.

 

There are other problems with serotonin too.

 

For example, serotonin can turn confident, dominant animals into submissive shells of their former selves.

 

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These animal experiments were carried out at the University of South Dakota. The findings were published in Behavioral Brain Research.

 

All animals face various types of stress everywhere they go.

 

One of these ubiquitous life stresses is “social stress.”

 

This is simply the stress of interacting with other animals of the same species.

 

The pecking order, your social status, largely depends on how you deal with this “social stress.”

 

And this is determined by what happens in your brain when you are stressed.

“Social stress from aggressive interaction is expressed differently in specific brain regions of dominant and subordinate male lizards.”

 

The authors of this study believed that serotonin plays a role in dominant or submissive traits.

 

If this is true, increasing or decreasing serotonin levels could have major implications for human interactions.

 

The researchers tested their theory on lizards.

 

These particular lizards have an added advantage for this type of experiment because their eye color changes rapidly depending on their social status amongst other males.

 

These lizards, like most males animals, go through displays of aggression to find out which male is more dominant and which is submissive.

“Prior to aggressive behavior, the outcome is predictable via the celerity of postorbital coloration: Dominant males exhibit more rapid eyespot darkening.”

 

So the researchers tested a number of different pairs of male lizards to see which one was the top lizard in each pair.

 

Then the researchers gave lizards chemicals which could increase their serotonin levels.

 

They used a commonly recommended, serotonin-boosting, antidepressant treatment called sertraline to boost brain serotonin

 

The lizards were retested to see if changing serotonin levels could alter dominant/submissive status.

The researchers found that increasing brain serotonin could turn dominant males into submissive lizards.

 

After taking a serotonin-boosting treatment, the lizard which was top of the pile was now much more likely to find himself on the lower rung of the social ladder.

“When dominant males were treated with the antidepressant, their social status was reversed 43% of the time or negated 57% of the time.”

 

The researchers also found that the outward signifiers of high social status were also reduced by serotonin.

“Eyespot darkening was significantly retarded in dominant males treated with the antidepressant.”

The results show that serotonin is not “the happy hormone” – but in fact leads to lower social status and submissive behavior.

“Chronic serotonin elevation is consistent with subordinate status.”

 

It seems that animals are not born to be top of the pile – but rather social status can be manipulated.

“Social status is not immutable but may be changed by mechanisms that mediate adaptation to environmental conditions like stress.”

 

Your standing is determined by your ability to handle the stress that life throws at you.

 

Keeping your serotonin under control is a major factor in your ability to handle stress.

 

What you eat, and what supplements you take can have massive effects on your serotonin levels.

 

Some slight modifications to what you put in your mouth can have massive effects on serotonin, mood, and behavior.

 

—-Important Message From Matt Cook—-

 

Ever heard of oxytocin? It’s the hormone for happiness in the bedroom

 

There’s a hormone more powerful than serotonin or even testosterone…

 

It’s called oxytocin and it’s responsible for that addicting, pleasurable feeling you get when you’re intimate with a woman.

 

And studies show oxytocin is the true hormone that increases erections in men:

 

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So how do you boost oxytocin levels for better erections and even more pleasure?

 

Well here’s the thing — it has to be made naturally in the body…

 

So what I’ve done is come up with a simple protocol that gets your body to produce more oxytocin on its own.

 

Here’s how to try my free oxytocin protocol tonight (with a partner or by yourself)

 

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Matt Cook is editor-in-chief of Daily Medical Discoveries. Matt has been a full time health researcher for 26 years. ABC News interviewed Matt on sexual health issues not long ago. Matt is widely quoted on over 1,000,000 websites. He has over 300,000 daily newsletter readers. Daily Medical Discoveries finds hidden, buried or ignored medical studies through the lens of 100 years of proven science. Matt heads up the editorial team of scientists and health researchers. Each discovery is based upon primary studies from peer reviewed science sources following the Daily Medical Discoveries 7 Step Process to ensure accuracy.
Serotonin reverses dominant social statushttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/11275287/