I've had my blood pressure checked whilst on noopept for the last few days. For the sake of science - 130/100. The 100 was a bit high but that's not the value that mattered according to my GP. Had some other things checked as well (heart ), and I'm healthy as can be. Given that I could lose 20lbs I'm feeling pretty good about this.
Having said that, I have a tendency to have low blood pressure (90/65), so these values clearly indicate that noopept increases blood pressure. I'm just lucky enough that my blood pressure tends to be on the low side, so the increase doesn't effect me too much.
Anyway, the increased blood pressure is the main reason I think noopept should be cycled. My guess (but a
guess) is that the blood pressure drops after a few days to normal. And the effects of noopept seem to persist nicely, I've noticed that while on noopept I'm making structural changes to my life that persists. The relatively benign pramiracetam+alpha gpc+oxiracetam stack (or a subset of that stack) seems to be good enough when cycling. I am feeling pretty safe being middle-aged and cycling like this:
AlphaGPC (1x600mg at breakfast and lunch)+Pramiracetam (1x300mg, breakfast)
On demand 1x500mg Oxiracetam at breakfast or lunch.
Fish oil, multivitamin
Cycling noopept 1.5-2 months on, 2 months off: 2x10 mg or 1x20 mg
Also, there is a very simple objective measure of success for me personally: my turnover as an independent contractor has doubled over the last 9 months. And my employers are all extremely satisfied as I consistently outperform other team members by a factor 2. Granted, I'm no slouch, but the consistency over the long period plus the doubling of gross margin and turnover for me (sole proprietor) in that period is telling, especially as those numbers directly relate to my performance as a consultant.
I'm more sociable, my spatial awareness is much improved etc. but these are all pretty subjective. The numbers don't lie (to me at least) and it's rather funny that I only just recently realized that there is a strong correlation between the increase in turnover and the stack I've figured out.
Let me be very clear about this: I am not saying that a working stack will "make you money". What I am saying is that my capacity to perform at work (
knowledge work) has improved dramatically and that is reflected in my numbers - which makes it a solid measure. Given that performing better results in better appreciation, more confidence, etc. the quality of life gets a secondary, indirect "boost"
in my case.
Edited by @now, 31 January 2013 - 09:58 AM.