Any news from you noopept takers? Have you guys noticed anything different?
It take 2-3 weeks to have any effect so I will have to be patient.
Posted 10 May 2009 - 04:41 PM
Any news from you noopept takers? Have you guys noticed anything different?
Posted 13 May 2009 - 03:14 AM
Edited by yowza, 13 May 2009 - 03:19 AM.
Posted 13 May 2009 - 04:06 AM
Posted 13 May 2009 - 04:37 AM
You might want to read carefully for what I said. I pretty much did take 3 at once.Tell us if you take more than 30 mg at once.
I might try it too. I suspended my trial of noopept since I'm having so much success with tianeptine that I don't want to stop. I will try noopept again when I will be sure I can discriminate the effect from tianeptine. I have so many things in my trial pipeline now I can't try them all.
Edited by yowza, 13 May 2009 - 04:38 AM.
Posted 13 May 2009 - 02:03 PM
You might want to read carefully for what I said. I pretty much did take 3 at once.Tell us if you take more than 30 mg at once.
I might try it too. I suspended my trial of noopept since I'm having so much success with tianeptine that I don't want to stop. I will try noopept again when I will be sure I can discriminate the effect from tianeptine. I have so many things in my trial pipeline now I can't try them all.
You don't want to get distracted though. If you trial 1, I'd stick with it for a bit and maybe take notes each day on the effect.
You didn't go up to a higher dosage at all before quitting after a very short period (at least for what you reported).
It seems you may be having trouble deciding what route to go. I'd suggest 1 thing at a time. With each new supplement you try take both subjective (personal experience) and objective considerations (try to take notes/memorize the mode of action/concept that each supplement is used under).
Posted 13 May 2009 - 10:07 PM
Posted 14 May 2009 - 12:48 AM
Hmmm... Must have misinterpreted the first part somehow...
If Stablon's working out for you great!
Here's an update on the noopept:
I had been taking Phenotropil each day (usually about 1 100mg pill per day but sometimes 2) for about a week before taking the noopept. The day after taking the noopept (yesterday), I experienced some brain fog especailly after taking 1 tablet of phenotropil along with some vitamins (mainly b6, PS mixture, Folapro). The brain fog abated later on in the day as the stuff wore off. It appears that the noopept (taking 4 tablets the day before) was the culprit. All in all I don't know which racetam I prefer more. I'll try the noopept at a smaller dosage and see what it's like. I'm guessing that one or the other (noopept or phenotropil) are best for promoting hemipheric integration. This at lower dosages with a nicotonergic could probably yield interesting results.
I'd have to compare subjective effects then research both of these in order to really get a feel in terms of how to describe how these differ in terms of their subjective effect (for me at least).
Please feel free to ask me any questions about my trial since that'll maybe help me explain it better if anyone would like.
Posted 14 May 2009 - 04:08 AM
That doesn't sound good (the brain fog the day after). It's not something common with nootropic. You have a theory on why you had this side effect?
Posted 10 June 2009 - 10:19 PM
Edited by anony4mous, 10 June 2009 - 10:21 PM.
Posted 18 June 2009 - 01:31 AM
I spoke to my friend who has been taking Noopept for about a 1.5 months now. He told that the effect was hardly noticeable and it might be placebo. However it's is important to mention that he has not responded to any nootropic yet
Posted 06 September 2009 - 09:33 PM
Posted 06 September 2009 - 11:47 PM
Posted 07 September 2009 - 04:24 AM
Posted 07 September 2009 - 04:53 AM
Posted 11 September 2009 - 12:27 AM
Posted 11 September 2009 - 12:50 AM
Hmm now that you mention it, it does kind of make me a little schizo, but only in that it puts me on a mission to show everyone I'm better and I that have enough security in some internal teamwork to do it!Noopept makes me crazy. Really crazy and angry. Gets me motivated though. Sadly comes with a deep seated loathing for all mankind.
Posted 12 September 2009 - 11:47 AM
Hmm now that you mention it, it does kind of make me a little schizo, but only in that it puts me on a mission to show everyone I'm better and I that have enough security in some internal teamwork to do it!Noopept makes me crazy. Really crazy and angry. Gets me motivated though. Sadly comes with a deep seated loathing for all mankind.
No distinct anger or hatred tho.
Posted 13 September 2009 - 07:11 PM
Hmm now that you mention it, it does kind of make me a little schizo, but only in that it puts me on a mission to show everyone I'm better and I that have enough security in some internal teamwork to do it!Noopept makes me crazy. Really crazy and angry. Gets me motivated though. Sadly comes with a deep seated loathing for all mankind.
No distinct anger or hatred tho.
Anger is probably the wrong word. Very, very, very highly irritable, is probably a better way of putting it. I become a bit of a haughty tyrant that doesn't suffer fools.
Edited by Mortuorum, 13 September 2009 - 07:17 PM.
Posted 14 September 2009 - 03:56 AM
Posted 09 November 2009 - 02:12 AM
Posted 09 November 2009 - 03:50 AM
Posted 27 November 2009 - 05:42 PM
Posted 27 November 2009 - 07:49 PM
Well I got curious so now have several packs of it . The crap seems pretty worthless to me, I guess my old buddy just was naturally crazy. I can literally take a whole pack of it with ZERO effect. Just reinforces my belief that 'nootropic' is a shady word of false hope.
Posted 27 November 2009 - 08:38 PM
Posted 09 March 2010 - 06:34 PM
Noopept in terms of cost-to-benefit ratio is probably my favorite nootropic. I've tried piracetam, oxiracetam, pramiracetam, phenylpiracetam as far as the noticably useful cognitive nootropics go. Noopept takes it to a whole different level. I work from 7 am to noon every weekday (just for the summer) doing routine paperwork and filing, so I've been able to compare all the nootropics at this level of function demand. Phenylpiracetam was nice in that it let me memorize some ten 5-digit numbers all at once easily (pulling file jackets from a cabinet)... noopept was somewhat the same but with less stimulative instinct to do wild things like that, even as the ability was fathomable.
The best way I could talk about noopept is by saying it increased my unconscious thought processes. While I was just going about my work, new ideas were just popping up in my head about how to make the tasks more efficient, how I could solve issues in my personal life, and anything else that seemed somewhat challenging to me at the time. I didn't consciously consider any of those, but through repeated use, I found that noopept was the key component to epiphanies of various types. Outside of work, I found that I could look at a difficult conceptual puzzle without luck, pop some noopept, and by the end of the day I would either have figured it out or been on the brink of realizing the solution.
Of course, others' experiences will vary. But I would generally advise that noopept works unconsciously better or as well as it works for conscious cognitive ability.
Posted 10 March 2010 - 12:08 AM
I guess I do write in an odd way... but I do like noopept where it's applicable. I'm in college and before I lost my passion for nootropics (I don't post around here anymore, just browse), I used to take noopept before my classes and it was actually very helpful. Then I reverted back to cramming so I don't deal with nootropics much any longer--but noopept + stimulants makes for quite the cramming combination.Noopept in terms of cost-to-benefit ratio is probably my favorite nootropic. I've tried piracetam, oxiracetam, pramiracetam, phenylpiracetam as far as the noticably useful cognitive nootropics go. Noopept takes it to a whole different level. I work from 7 am to noon every weekday (just for the summer) doing routine paperwork and filing, so I've been able to compare all the nootropics at this level of function demand. Phenylpiracetam was nice in that it let me memorize some ten 5-digit numbers all at once easily (pulling file jackets from a cabinet)... noopept was somewhat the same but with less stimulative instinct to do wild things like that, even as the ability was fathomable.
The best way I could talk about noopept is by saying it increased my unconscious thought processes. While I was just going about my work, new ideas were just popping up in my head about how to make the tasks more efficient, how I could solve issues in my personal life, and anything else that seemed somewhat challenging to me at the time. I didn't consciously consider any of those, but through repeated use, I found that noopept was the key component to epiphanies of various types. Outside of work, I found that I could look at a difficult conceptual puzzle without luck, pop some noopept, and by the end of the day I would either have figured it out or been on the brink of realizing the solution.
Of course, others' experiences will vary. But I would generally advise that noopept works unconsciously better or as well as it works for conscious cognitive ability.
This looks like an advert from the seller, registered a few days before the post
Posted 10 March 2010 - 01:58 AM
http://www.pharmacy1010.com/ Search it here. $16 for 50.how does this nooept cost? Any links?
Thanks
Posted 10 March 2010 - 04:38 AM
Scroll up. The downside is that being super smart means being super schitzo and irritated with the world. That'll push the price down.http://www.pharmacy1010.com/ Search it here. $16 for 50.how does this nooept cost? Any links?
Thanks
How can it be this cheap if it works?
Posted 10 March 2010 - 07:39 AM
Uggghh...
Dude, I don't mean to seem rude but could you maybe look thru the posts? There's some good info. on dosages and other stuff that's already been posted.
If you search the internet (using yandex; a russian search engine) you'll find a Russian site with the instructions. Google translate it and you're good to go.
Posted 10 March 2010 - 11:48 PM
I guess I do write in an odd way... but I do like noopept where it's applicable. I'm in college and before I lost my passion for nootropics (I don't post around here anymore, just browse), I used to take noopept before my classes and it was actually very helpful. Then I reverted back to cramming so I don't deal with nootropics much any longer--but noopept + stimulants makes for quite the cramming combination.Noopept in terms of cost-to-benefit ratio is probably my favorite nootropic. I've tried piracetam, oxiracetam, pramiracetam, phenylpiracetam as far as the noticably useful cognitive nootropics go. Noopept takes it to a whole different level. I work from 7 am to noon every weekday (just for the summer) doing routine paperwork and filing, so I've been able to compare all the nootropics at this level of function demand. Phenylpiracetam was nice in that it let me memorize some ten 5-digit numbers all at once easily (pulling file jackets from a cabinet)... noopept was somewhat the same but with less stimulative instinct to do wild things like that, even as the ability was fathomable.
The best way I could talk about noopept is by saying it increased my unconscious thought processes. While I was just going about my work, new ideas were just popping up in my head about how to make the tasks more efficient, how I could solve issues in my personal life, and anything else that seemed somewhat challenging to me at the time. I didn't consciously consider any of those, but through repeated use, I found that noopept was the key component to epiphanies of various types. Outside of work, I found that I could look at a difficult conceptual puzzle without luck, pop some noopept, and by the end of the day I would either have figured it out or been on the brink of realizing the solution.
Of course, others' experiences will vary. But I would generally advise that noopept works unconsciously better or as well as it works for conscious cognitive ability.
This looks like an advert from the seller, registered a few days before the post
Just trying to be helpful, in case anyone else might experience the same effects. I feel like when it comes to describing sensations of a mental nature, it becomes increasingly difficult to paint an accurate description of what's going. You have more nerves at the bottom of your body than the top (painful to stub your toe, won't notice your brain being cut into for surgery), so it makes for an interesting challenge to describe the effects of nootropics. If it read like an advert, maybe I was just a little too sensational in my writing.
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