Thanks for your reply

Okay, my point wasnโt that anyone would pay you more because of a big bicep.
Iโm more wondering if people sometimes get a kind of drive or ambition after starting steroids.โso much that they might start a business, wake up earlier than others to work on it, or put in extra hours after their regular job.
Iโve heard claims and read a few studies suggesting that high testosterone is linked to higher income, driven by increased motivation and ambition.
When I first felt the effects of testosterone (at a small dose),
I kind of understood why that might be the case
I can speak to that a bit, as well
As being around 50 myself with more aggressive sauce use in my mid to late 20's and someone with Dx'd ADHD at 25yo.
Gear helps a bit, but if you're talking motivation to get way out of your comfort zone- I don't think adhd meds or gear is a cure for getting motivated to and
staying motivated, like for starting a business or to
consistently work harder, it lets you do more by improving energy and recovery, and in the short term that can help keep you motivated.
Eventually you get used to whatever you're using and will want more. This is a dark path.
For me ADHD is mostly moving too quickly, forgetting important but not urgent things, like I gave up on keeping a wallet at 17 because I would just lose it - so fuck it! Also had extreme tendancies and still do - just really extreme thrill seeking behavior, broken bones, crashing cars, and laughing my ass off about all of it. Still wanted to go bugger, faster, thats when I really felt alive. Slow me down and I's lose the plot. Focus on something basic turned to boredom, and knowing I had to do some easy boring shit was when procrastination would become a problem.
Long term motivation is what you're talking about. Thats different. Thats where you need a
why so big it puts tears in your eyes when you think about it.
For example, I graduated college years later after getting a GED, without ADHD meds and I successfully coached myself to be a high level athlete earning thousands of dollars a year (joke/semi-pro I guess), and I never procrastinated at those tasks because they were meaningful. Racing as a pro was a childhood dream. Getting a college degree would ensure a better life for my wife -who we married young by todays standards, and I would do anything to provide for.
I believe in using drugs as tools, but they will never be the engineer of how those tools are applied. Thats you're "why" and you have to really develop that before anything else makes sense.
Just my dumb opinion.