Piracetam must be taken for a number of weeks/months before it reaches effects. There are more sources available but I find it tedious to search through all the links on my iPad.
Yes, and not one of them is a primary or academic source! For all I know y'all are pulling this out of your collective ass.
All I am saying is that it may be a quality of racetams that they need to build up in the system, with daily dosing, before the real pronounced effects
Yes and all good theories deserve to be tested. Experience is the true test of knowledge. And majority rules, while in this case I'm not sure they ruled in your favor. That's why you're swimming upstream and peppering your replies with phrases like "the boards consider" and "may have been overlooked".
Attack dosing is considered something that only needs to be done once. You don't see many people recommending it as maintenance therapy simply because of the unknowns, probably also because of the negatives. There is wisdom in the Bounty Toilet Paper commercial: less is often more.
May I ask how long you've been taking it? How long have you believed it to be a great aid?
It’s also not hard to notice for example, when your are concentrating better, less distracted and remembering things more often without applying it to tests.
That's a purely subjective thing, and unless clearly and reasonably substantiated, not something likely to hold up in a court of law.
the colour saturation, euphoria etc does disappear
If you're just taking piracetam to get high and arrive at some seemingly valid insights, there are much safer substances out there.
the cognitive changes that can last months, years after racetam usage
Are these positive or negative changes? Perhaps both, perhaps neither?
a benefit has been achieved
Because swapping a recreation drug for a research chemical is preferred to quitting the recreational substance altogether? If I may be permitted a purely negative moment: your posts are dangerous, my friend. The line you walk is a thin one, blurred by many things, the desire of the subject and the lens through which he views reality.