Lobotomize-me athletic logs
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Two extra conclusions I had to find out the hard way:
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Isotonic drinks must be combined with protein.
Sugar increases muscle uptake of most amino acids, except tryptophan, which can then freely enter the brain.
(Without added protein, you risk unbalancing amino acid uptake.) -
I misjudged my fat intake from minced meat.
The crushed/Bolognese meat I was eating contained 18g of fat per 100g, and I was eating around 600g per day.
I thought I was on a low-fat diet — but I was actually consuming around 120g of fat daily.
This caught me off guard, and I immediately switched my protein source to steak after realizing it.
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@NoeticJuice I have reread your message now:
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The effect you mentioned , I realized it may be connected to GABA and dopamine.
I felt exactly as you described when taking phenibut.
Sadly, it does seem to affect my memory negatively,
but it makes me feel like the man of my dreams for around two days (dose: 900mg orally with orange juice)(Of course, I space my doses out to the safe range). -
Ginger doesn’t seem to affect me much.
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You have piqued my interest with the Kanna I will look more into it
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dude you drop every supplement under the sun but you dont include any calcium NGMI. you are not ray peat you are bryan johnson
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@lobotomize-me said in Lobotomize-me athletic logs:
Isotonic drinks must be combined with protein.
Sugar increases muscle uptake of most amino acids, except tryptophan, which can then freely enter the brain.
(Without added protein, you risk unbalancing amino acid uptake.)Did you notice any difference when adding protein? If so, what kind of difference and how noticeable was it?
@lobotomize-me said in Lobotomize-me athletic logs:
The effect you mentioned
By "the effect" do you mean "intuitive perception and movement"?
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@samson I recently started supplementing with calcium carbonate after realizing my phosphorus problem. However, as I mentioned in my other comment, I stopped taking most supplements that I don't consider 100% essential, like B1 or calcium. Now I am reintroducing them with more careful testing
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@NoeticJuice 1.
I often noticed during games or training that sometimes I would suddenly get blurry vision, my voice would weaken, i will feeel overwehlmed(seratongenic feeling overall) etc. (That’s why I started looking into what I was taking mid game in the first place ) Then I realized it was this mistake that was causing the drop in performanceExactly overall, less stuck inside my head and more actually doing things. Made me the man i dream to be for around 2 days(sadly i have to space it out 1 a week for safety. Dosage=900mg phenibut HCL )
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@lobotomize-me smart, godspeed!
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Feeling as if anytime I start playing well, I regain consciousness and start being amazed by my skill, and then when I am mentally amazed, I play worse
Tldr i am inside my head and i cannot get out. Any ideas how i can fix this
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@lobotomize-me a couple of ideas:
- Being consciously aware of your peripheral vision.
- Acting as if being amazing is your natural state.
I've been practicing being aware of my entire visual field, of every object within it, for, I think, a bit more than a week now. I started by practicing it every time I walked in the nearby forest. I usually do this 2 or 3 times a day, 15-30 minutes at a time. As I became better at it, I started to practice it occasionally at other times as well, even when reading books. I'm doing this with the intention of achieving the ability to maintain this kind of awareness throughout each day.
When I am aware of everything within my entire visual field for more than just a few seconds, I notice that my mind becomes more quiet. My sense of depth and of inhabiting 3-dimensional space also increases. Peripheral vision is processed mainly, if not only, by the right hemisphere of the brain. The right hemisphere is overall larger than the left, and it's also more associated with the subconscious than the left. I can sense expanding visual awareness, and increasing right hemisphere activity, as being beneficial for sports and for other aspects of life as well.
As you've noted, you're capable of great skill. But it appears that when you notice you're performing much better than what you're used to, that awareness holds you back. So, perhaps if you acted as if it's normal for you to be great, it's just part of who you are, it could help.
There are some things I think can make this easier. If you become aware of the difference, perhaps you could try to move your awareness elsewhere. Pushing the feeling or thought away probably won't work, paying attention to something else might. Another thing you could try is visualization. You could visualize yourself playing with great skill, and perhaps that will help make it feel natural over time. Lucid dreaming could possibly help in a similar way.
These are just some ideas I thought of. The only thing here I have experience with is expanding my visual awareness, and I don't play sports. The two ideas can be combined.
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@lobotomize-me try to keep challenges in place. If you're always challenging yourself you don't feel complacent or satisfied.
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@Corngold feeling satisfied is based thoughbeitever
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@evan-hinkle said in Lobotomize-me athletic logs:
This is not what you want to hear, but if you’re not having fun playing soccer you should quit. It sounds like your life is totally devoid of joy. I don’t say this lightly, I say it as someone who had a similar experience playing competitive sports. I now wish I never played sports, and believe strongly that my time spent playing them caused most of the health issues I have today, (but more so, my playing sports in the first place was a symptom itself of my lack of energetic living). I hope you find your happiness, whatever that is for you. I have, and it took me til I was about 40. I hope you don’t have to wait so long. Be well.
What's wrong with competive sports ?
It increases body temperature and T3 so at least one can have glimpse of what it is like having high energy level without using drugs.
What health issues did you get from it ?