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ashwaganda Options
 
proto-pax
Senior Member
#1 Posted : 1/8/2011 10:41:19 PM
I'm starting a regiment of this daily intake, anyone else try it?
blooooooOOOOOooP fzzzzzzhm KAPOW!
This is shit-brained, this kind of thinking.
Grow a plant or something and meditate on that
 
polytrip
Senior Member
#2 Posted : 1/8/2011 11:02:29 PM
I have tried a small batch of it once. The taste reminded me of licorice, but i didn't notice significant effects.
 
The Traveler
Administrator | Skills: DMT, LSD, Programming
#3 Posted : 1/9/2011 1:20:33 AM
Taken daily it's relaxing. And taking it before sleep enhances the sleep.

It's also an aphrodiziac according to my wife, but only after taking it for about a week, with just one daily dose you notice nothing.


Kind regards,

The Traveler
 
proto-pax
Senior Member
#4 Posted : 1/9/2011 8:49:56 AM
So it's more of a buzz than a general mood lift? Take a lot if you want to feel it basically? more of a drug than a medicine?
blooooooOOOOOooP fzzzzzzhm KAPOW!
This is shit-brained, this kind of thinking.
Grow a plant or something and meditate on that
 
Phlux-
Chemical expertSenior Member
#5 Posted : 1/9/2011 11:01:49 AM
i take it daily - its one of my top 3 medicinal herbs - its made a major positive impact on my life.
antrocles wrote:
...purity of intent....purity of execution....purity of experience...

...unlike the "blind leading the blind". we are more akin to a group of blind-from-birth people who have all simultaneously been given the gift of sight but have no words or mental processing capabilites to work with this new "gift".

IT IS ONLY TO THE EXTENT THAT WE ARE WILLING TO EXPOSE OURSELVES OVER AND OVER AGAIN TO ANNIHILATION THAT WE DISCOVER THAT PART OF OURSELVES THAT IS INDESTRUCTIBLE.


Quote:
‹Jorkest› the wall is impenetrable as far as i can tell


Quote:
‹xtechre› cheese is great


He who packs ur capsules - controls your destiny.

 
Swarupa
Senior Member
#6 Posted : 1/9/2011 1:25:58 PM
I switch between this & maca weekly, mixing it into fruit smoothies, lovely stuff

 
Aegle
Senior Member | Skills: South African botanicals, Mushroom cultivator, Changa enthusiast, Permaculture, Counselling, Photography, Writing
#7 Posted : 1/9/2011 4:42:42 PM
Proto-pax

Ashwagandha is an incredible and powerful adaptogen, it has a long medicinal history stemming back 4000 years. I think that everyone should be taking it daily.

Ashwagandha


Chronic

How on earth do you stomach Maca root? I find it to taste so awful i am unable to take it sadly.


Much Peace and Understanding
The Nexus Art Gallery | The Nexian | DMT Nexus Research | The Open Hyperspace Traveler Handbook

For small creatures such as we the vastness is bearable only through love.

The fate of our times is characterised by rationalisation and intellectualisation and, above all, by the disenchantment of the world.

Following a Path of Compassion and Heart
 
jamie
Salvia divinorum expert | Skills: Plant growing, Ayahuasca brewing, Mushroom growingSenior Member | Skills: Plant growing, Ayahuasca brewing, Mushroom growing
#8 Posted : 1/9/2011 6:03:18 PM
oh my god I love maca..im drinking it now..it tastes like vanilla...are you sure you had maca? The maca minxx has here is not even slightly bitter..I love the taste of it.
Long live the unwoke.
 
Swarupa
Senior Member
#9 Posted : 1/9/2011 6:06:53 PM
Aegle wrote:
Proto-pax

Ashwagandha is an incredible and powerful adaptogen, it has a long medicinal history stemming back 4000 years. I think that everyone should be taking it daily.

Ashwagandha


Chronic

How on earth do you stomach Maca root? I find it to taste so awful i am unable to take it sadly.


Much Peace and Understanding


I usually mix it into a fruit smoothie & it only adds a slight taste to it i find, but maybe trying some from a different source would be a good idea

I also heard that Ashwagandha is good for neural protection:

http://www.lef.org/magaz...2006_report_ashwa_01.htm

Smile




 
PsilocybeChild
#10 Posted : 1/9/2011 6:21:08 PM
Quote:
i take it daily - its one of my top 3 medicinal herbs - its made a major positive impact on my life.

May I ask what the other two are?
―λlτεrηιτγ→
Kambo.me Forum
​Internet Security Walk-Through
[url=https://kambo.me/smf/index.php?topic=395.0]Tobacco Disinformation

PM me about personal Herbalist consultations.
Can do it over PMs as to not reveal personal information.
 
Aegle
Senior Member | Skills: South African botanicals, Mushroom cultivator, Changa enthusiast, Permaculture, Counselling, Photography, Writing
#11 Posted : 1/9/2011 6:52:51 PM
Chronic wrote:
I usually mix it into a fruit smoothie & it only adds a slight taste to it i find, but maybe trying some from a different source would be a good idea

I heard Ashwagandha is good for neural protection, definitely an essential for us psychonaughts... let me see if i can find the link...

http://www.lef.org/magaz...2006_report_ashwa_01.htm

Smile


Chronic

My source is a good one i guess having it in a Maca only milkshake isn't the way to go, ill definitely try and mix it into a fruit smoothie in the future. Wink


Here's a link to my source... Organic Maca Powder



Much Peace and Sunshine
The Nexus Art Gallery | The Nexian | DMT Nexus Research | The Open Hyperspace Traveler Handbook

For small creatures such as we the vastness is bearable only through love.

The fate of our times is characterised by rationalisation and intellectualisation and, above all, by the disenchantment of the world.

Following a Path of Compassion and Heart
 
Phlux-
Chemical expertSenior Member
#12 Posted : 1/10/2011 5:29:13 AM
ginko biloba and sutherlandia frutescens
antrocles wrote:
...purity of intent....purity of execution....purity of experience...

...unlike the "blind leading the blind". we are more akin to a group of blind-from-birth people who have all simultaneously been given the gift of sight but have no words or mental processing capabilites to work with this new "gift".

IT IS ONLY TO THE EXTENT THAT WE ARE WILLING TO EXPOSE OURSELVES OVER AND OVER AGAIN TO ANNIHILATION THAT WE DISCOVER THAT PART OF OURSELVES THAT IS INDESTRUCTIBLE.


Quote:
‹Jorkest› the wall is impenetrable as far as i can tell


Quote:
‹xtechre› cheese is great


He who packs ur capsules - controls your destiny.

 
Swarupa
Senior Member
#13 Posted : 1/11/2011 12:32:57 PM
Just incase anyone missed the link i posted...

"Over the past five years, the Institute of Natural Medicine at the Toyama Medical and Pharmaceutical University in Japan has conducted extensive research into the brain benefits of ashwagandha. The Institute’s scientists were looking for ways to encourage the regeneration of nerve cell components called axons and dendrites in validated models of the human brain. This important research may one day benefit those who have incurred brain injuries due to physical trauma, as well as those who suffer cognitive decline due to destruction of the nerve cell networks from diseases such as dementia and Alzheimer’s.

Using a validated model of damaged nerve cells and impaired nerve-signaling pathways, re-searchers noted that ashwagandha supported significant regeneration of the axons and dendrites of nerve cells. Furthermore, ashwagandha extract supported the reconstruction of synapses, the junctions where nerve cells communicate with other cells. The investigators concluded that ashwagandha extract helps to reconstruct networks of the nervous system, making it a potential treatment for neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s.5

In another study at the same institute, researchers found that ashwagandha helped support the growth of nerve cell dendrites, which allow these cells to receive communications from other cells. This finding suggests that ashwagandha could help heal the brain tissue changes that accompany dementia.6


Finally, in a third published study, the researchers noted that ashwagandha helped promote the growth of both normal and damaged nerve cells, suggesting that the herb may boost healthy brain cell function as well as benefit diseased nerve cells.7

These findings provide tremendous hope that ashwagandha extracts may one day help heal neurodegenerative diseases in humans, freeing patients from the mental prisons of dementia and Alzheimer’s. Clearly, this is just the beginning of research into ashwagandha’s ability to encourage physical re-growth of the brain.

Ashwagandha also shows promise as a treatment for Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases, chronic neurodegenerative conditions for which there currently are no cures. In a recent study using a standardized model of human Parkinson’s disease, ashwagandha extract reversed all the parameters of Parkinson’s-type neurodegeneration significantly and in a dose-dependent manner.8 Remarkably, an earlier study showed that ashwagandha extract inhibits acetylcholinesterase, an enzyme responsible for breaking down one of the brain’s key chemical messengers. Drugs currently used in the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease, such as Aricept®, act in this very manner to slow the progression of this frightening, mind-robbing disease."
 
Bancopuma
Senior Member
#14 Posted : 1/11/2011 1:34:09 PM
^^This is really interesting stuff. I've read/heard that MDMA damage comes from damage to the axons of neurons, so I wonder of ashwaganda would be of benefit to heavy MDMA users. Combined with Iboga which produces glial cell line-derived neurotophic factor (GDNF) which is highly neuroprotective and can cause new neuronal sprouting, these two plant medicines used together could be highly beneficial for the brain.
 
polytrip
Senior Member
#15 Posted : 1/11/2011 7:38:39 PM
Bancopuma wrote:
^^This is really interesting stuff. I've read/heard that MDMA damage comes from damage to the axons of neurons, so I wonder of ashwaganda would be of benefit to heavy MDMA users. Combined with Iboga which produces glial cell line-derived neurotophic factor (GDNF) which is highly neuroprotective and can cause new neuronal sprouting, these two plant medicines used together could be highly beneficial for the brain.

Isn't ibogaine an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor as well? I can imagine that you wouldn't want too much inhibition either so i don't know about combining the two.
 
jaguar
#16 Posted : 1/11/2011 11:06:51 PM
It's definitely an aphrodisiac, also for males. And it gives me very strong and long lasting erections during the night when taken before bed. Sometimes they last so long that I almost feared it could be some sort of priapism, but it was OK.

Another effect: When I take it before bed: I awake after about 5 hours and feel refreshed and may get up. It's probably like the quality of sleep during the first few hours gets so superb, that you would not need the additional 3 hours you normally take. So this is very good when you have no time and have to get up early.
 
rOm
Senior Member
#17 Posted : 6/16/2011 8:51:41 PM
Bancopuma wrote:
^^This is really interesting stuff. I've read/heard that MDMA damage comes from damage to the axons of neurons, so I wonder of ashwaganda would be of benefit to heavy MDMA users. Combined with Iboga which produces glial cell line-derived neurotophic factor (GDNF) which is highly neuroprotective and can cause new neuronal sprouting, these two plant medicines used together could be highly beneficial for the brain.


Just start using ashwagandha extract from a reliable source and I mini-dosed iboga this morning also.
I'll try the two daily for a few days.
New connections hmmm...
Smell like tea n,n spirit !

Toke the toke, and walk the walk !
 
Metanoia
#18 Posted : 6/17/2011 2:49:27 AM
Phlux- wrote:
i take it daily - its one of my top 3 medicinal herbs - its made a major positive impact on my life.

Same here. I also take Gingko biloba daily. I'll have to try out the Sutherlandia frutescens you mentioned.
 
 
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