I started doing a cold brew of caapi with about 1g/5oz in batches of a gallon recently. With maya's white, this was wonderful. But I'm trying a new bunch of caapi from another source, and it's not strong enough so I'm currently soaking a bit at 1g/3oz to see how that goes.
Grind it up, add bottled water, shake when you walk by it, and strain through a funnel with cotton balls after a day or two.
I don't like boiling it, no hard proof that there's any difference except what it feels like. Batches that I don't drink within two week start to taste sour (fermenting? fungal growth?) so with my next bit @ 1g/3oz I'm gonna just do a half gallon.
Drink a whole cup to feel what that's like, then try half a cup and sip the other half throughout the day, get a thermos and sip it from sun rise til sun set, try doing using more or less than a cup, etc, until you find what you like for your desired effects. I've been working on finding the right amount and rate to plateau the micro-effects throughout the day and come off it into relaxation in the evening. More than a little bit of coffee with caapi makes me tired, but I've found that I don't really need any coffee when I've got caapi.
I developed some serious memory issues among other things a while back and went on a thorough "brain diet" which I consider to have been very successful. I'm youngish, so I didn't get into everything on the market as a lot of it is for people who are a bit older and it just plain won't work for kids (people under 50). Keep in mind this is just what I found to work for me, and everything works differently for everybody, but I've outlined what I found to work best with minimal changes to personality and largely positive changes in mood:
If you're into regrowing your brain, I totally recommend looking in to
acetyl-L-carnitine, or "ALCAR". Bulk powder is cheapest.
Find some legit
fish oil, like companies that have reliable content, and add that to the ALCAR regimen. You may want to try to get a proper ratio of omega-3 to omega-6, I don't know if that has been proven to matter but it's still a detail to consider. I've heard that
flax is considered by some to be not a good choice because of it's overabundance in n-3, but I've also heard other people swear by it.
B-Complex is incredibly useful fuel for neurogenesis, and also provides a bit of mental energy. There's some hoopla about vitamins not being bio-available, but that's refering to the generic crap on the shelf at your local supermarket. Check the literature, maybe some forums, to find whatever form is all the rave these days. I remember reading about n-acetylated vitamins being awesome, and also that they were less than good. Probably studies funded by conflicting marketing departments and my knowledge of biology is still budding.
Ginkgo biloba's great in general, goes well with most nootropics because it gets more blood flowing in the brain.
Nothing has done more for me than regular
biking.
Brain Diet:ALCAR
Omega-3/Omega-6 (fish oil or flax)
B-Complex
Ginkgo bilobaExercise 3-5 times a week
Sleep 8 hours at the same time each night
Eat 3-4 meals a day, minimize junk and balance the healthy stuffAaand for those who do the mdma thang, piracetam the day after is supposed to work wonders (but not miracles). Can't speak from experience though, just stuff I've seen round the net.
I've just used piracetam by itself for all the crap it's supposed to be good at, some of which it is slightly effective for, but overall it made me a bit of an asshole - thus it and a few others are not included in the list above. Everything effects everyone differently and all that. Exercise did everything I wanted the piracetam to in one way or another, to a greater degree.
Quote:Quote:People who use ayahuasca frequently are basically happier than those who don't, research shows.
Yes and they also belong to a tight nit church group. You could find the same kind of statistical correlation with many churches. But I do think something more is going on with ayahuasca. Making a medical claim that it can cure depression based on the current evidence is going to far right now. Although I think it can I just don't think anyone has proven it in a way that should be done to consider it a medicine (in the western sense).
Someone I used to know had aya sessions once to twice a week was quite happy, and were member to no church (case study, I know). They said they did not adhere to a dosage amount or schedule. Plants used were caapi or rue combined with mimosa or chaliponga, a selection of any/all of the four.
From talking to them about their journies, I'd say the happiness was a product of psychological self-examination. That's just my personal opinion on that though, they vehemently disagreed when we discussed it. They moved recently, but over the month before the holidays they said they were tapering off their sessions because they were getting too excited with the things they could do with their time. I haven't wanted to bother them lately so they can get settled in to their new abode.