You recommended in your AMA about Adaptogens cycling off Lion’s mane after 4 weeks. What if I’m taking it for taking care of my memory? There are some studies in humans (e.g. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/18844328/) and mice about the benefit of Lion’s mane to cognitive function - but only as long as you take it. In the study I mentioned elderly people took Lion’s mane for 16 weeks and as long as they took it, their scores improved – only to decline again once they stopped using it.
How do you know which part of a NSDR method is essential and what causes the dopamine restoration (and which one is just “jazz hands”)? I’ve been listening go all kinds of meditation, relaxation, hypnosis and guided visualization journey recordings since 2006. Some of them make me feel refreshed, some of them relaxed and some of them hyped up. The NSDR protocols you have recommended make me feel similar as some hypnosis tapes (e.g. from Paul McKenna and Wendi Friesen) calm and awake. That makes me wonder how much the content of the NSDR/yoga nidra really matters (e.g. if you have to really switch your focus from right to left etc.) and how much of it is something else (the focus itself, listening someone guiding you etc.) If this hasn’t been tested, how can you know it’s the protocol (the content and order of instructions) causing the effect? Thanks! Katri from Finland (who also asked about the Lion’s mane and memory).