Influencer who sterilized himself at 14 with TRT tries jiu-jitsu and gets bodied by a hater

19-year-old influencer known as Clavicular has built an online following promoting unconventional body modification methods. However, he recently found himself on the receiving end of criticism in an unexpected venue: a jiu-jitsu mat.

Video footage circulating online shows Clavicular attempting to spar with someone he later learned was a vocal critic of his content. The encounter didn’t go as the young influencer might have hoped. His opponent, clearly motivated by frustration with Clavicular’s online presence, repeatedly dominated the exchanges.

“I told you some people are gonna be on your as* Clav,” someone can be heard saying in the background as the match unfolds. The critic, while controlling position, made his motivations clear: “This is for all the bulls**t that I gotta watch on my f**king feed all the f**king time.”

At one point, the opponent even mockingly references one of Clavicular’s signature phrases, asking “What’s my rate, Clavicular?” while maintaining a dominant grappling position.

The incident highlights the growing backlash against Clavicular, whose controversial approach to self-improvement has generated both followers and detractors. The teenager has been remarkably transparent about starting testosterone replacement therapy at just 14 years old, admitting during a livestream with SNEAKO that he simply “ordered it on the internet.”

When questioned about fertility concerns during that same conversation, Clavicular confirmed he is currently infertile. “Right now, I am infertile, but I’m not able to have a kid right now. But if I wanted to, there’s a protocol I could put in place to be immediately good again,” he stated.

When pressed further, he acknowledged his body no longer produces testosterone naturally. “No. None.”

His confidence about reversing this condition has been met with skepticism, particularly given his admission that “I didn’t really know about pharmacology and what I was doing at all when I first started.”

Beyond early testosterone use, Clavicular has openly discussed using human growth hormone, melanotan for tanning purposes, and perhaps most controversially, crystal methamphetamine. “I use crystal methamphetamine as a stimulant and to lean max,” he explained in previous interviews, noting he switched from Adderall to achieve hollow cheeks.

His approach also includes makeup techniques, repeatedly punching his own cheekbones to create facial trauma, and plans for $35,000 worth of facial reconstruction surgery in Turkey.

The jiu-jitsu encounter gained particular attention after Clavicular recently went viral for criticizing a 20-year-old woman’s appearance in another video. The footage shows him questioning her tattoos and piercings with obvious disapproval.

“You’re all tatted up and s**t already?” he asks. “How’d things already go so wrong for you? You’re so young.”

The contradiction between his judgment of reversible aesthetic choices and his own permanent body modifications wasn’t lost on observers. “This is the same guy selling courses to teenagers about how to change their bodies, and he’s judging someone for tattoos?” one social media comment noted. “At least her choices won’t sterilize her.”

Clavicular has built his platform around the “looksmaxxing” movement, selling courses that specifically target vulnerable young men. His marketing directly addresses insecurities: “If you’re tired of being invisible to women, tired of getting rejected, and tired of watching other guys who won the genetic lottery take what’s yours, then pay attention.”

Standing at 6’2″ and conventionally attractive, his determination to pursue increasingly aggressive modifications has raised concerns among healthcare professionals and parents alike.

He has been candid about his motivations: “I wanted to get to my goals as quickly as possible. I do not care about side effects. I don’t care about any implications… none of that s**t really phased me.”

The jiu-jitsu match serves as a physical manifestation of the online criticism that has intensified around Clavicular’s platform.