Men: SUPERCHARGE Energy After 60 With This “Mountain Tar”
It’s the male energy crisis that’s been completely ignored for decades…
Until now.
If you’re feeling tired or weak… if just mowing the lawn or shoveling your sidewalk is leaving you exhausted…
Or if you’re losing your drive and stamina in the bedroom…
You’ve probably been told that your testosterone is low, your metabolism is slowing, or you’re just “getting old.”
But here’s something that you’ve probably never been told…
You may be suffering from an “energy crisis” deep in your cells.
And once that happens? Energy drops. Motivation plummets. Muscle recovery slows. And testosterone levels begin to follow.
But here’s the good news…
There’s a natural way to restore that lost energy—and it isn’t a vitamin, a stimulant, or a hormone replacement.
It’s a mysterious “mountain tar” men have unknowingly relied on for centuries… one modern science is only now beginning to understand.
High in the mountains of Central Asia, cracks in the rock reveal a dark, tar-like resin that seeps out only during the hottest months of the year.
For generations, local herders called it “the destroyer of weakness.”
Today, scientists call it shilajit—a rare mineral resin formed over centuries as plant material is compressed between layers of rock.
And what makes it so remarkable for aging men is what happens inside your mitochondria, the energy centers of your cells.
Shilajit contains fulvic acid complexes that act like tiny molecular shuttles. Their job?
To move electrons efficiently along the mitochondrial chain—the very step that tends to slow down with age.
The result? Your mitochondria generate more ATP, more clean cellular energy, and more metabolic resilience.
And in men? That increase in ATP supports healthier testosterone production and physical stamina.
Recent studies show:
- Men taking purified shilajit experienced increases in total and free testosterone
- Shilajit reduced fatigue markers and preserved muscle strength during exertion
- Animal and cellular studies confirm it improves mitochondrial function
- Its antioxidant and anti-inflammatory actions reduce mitochondrial “wear and tear”—a major factor in age-related decline
This isn’t a stimulant. It isn’t a hormone.
It’s a mitochondrial conductor, restoring the spark aging cells forget how to generate.
If you want to try it yourself, look for purified shilajit resin—the form used in modern studies. You’ll most often see it as a resin, paste, or capsules, and for the resin or paste, a typical dose is a small “rice-grain” or “pea-sized” amount once or twice daily
Most men notice the effects first in energy, stamina, and post-exercise recovery—the same systems that falter when your mitochondria slow down.
Your body has carried you through decades of work, pressure, responsibility, and stress.
Now you can give your cells the power they’ve been missing.
To renewed strength and lasting vitality,
Rachel Mace
Managing Editorial Director, e-Alert
with contributions from the research team
Sources:
- Carrasco-Gallardo, C., Guzmán, L., & Maccioni, R. B. (2012). Shilajit: A natural phytocomplex with potential procognitive activity. International Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, 2012, 1–10. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3296184/
- De Araujo Barros, D. et al. (2019). The effects of Shilajit supplementation on fatigue-induced decreases in muscular strength and serum hydroxyproline levels. Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, 16, 40. https://jissn.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12970-019-0270-2
- Gutierrez, J. et al. (2012). Shilajit attenuates behavioral symptoms of chronic fatigue syndrome; mitochondrial bioenergetics is involved. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 139(1), 1–10. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22771318/
- Ahmad, M., et al. (2022). Shilajit extract reduces oxidative stress, inflammation, and bone loss in postmenopausal women with osteopenia. Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry, 104, 108967. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0944711322004135
- Bhagwat, P., et al. (2023). A herbo-mineral compound (Shilajit) with multifaceted health benefits: A clinical and safety review. International Journal of Basic & Clinical Pharmacology, 12(4), 311–318. https://www.ijbcp.com/index.php/ijbcp/article/download/5961/3870/25768
- Gupta, R. et al. (2023). Phyto-therapeutic potential and pharmaceutical impact of Shilajit: Anti-aging, mitochondrial function, oxidative stress, gene activation. Qeios. https://qeios.com/read/RIXY86


