What’s up everyone? Another report incoming.
Table of Contents
1. Weekly Summary
2. Comparison of Different Usage Patterns (4 loops/6 loops/8 loops/10 loops)
3. Subconscious and Conscious Cooperation
4. Partial Execution (Effects on Cognition and Performance)
Weekly Summary
The items listed in the table of contents are no accident. They represent some of the major insights and observations I’ve gleaned over this past week. Compared to the previous week this was the week where my usage patterns fluctuated quite a bit as well as the average amount of sleep per night. The combination of these factors lowered my efficiency but not to pre-MLS levels.
At school, the moments where I was fully executing got me high praise from my professors. One of whom told me that had I applied myself correctly (in other words, had I been able to grab a time machine and use MLS 5.75G from the start of my doctoral degree) I’d be blowing the rest of my classmates out of the water due to my exceptional ability to reason. Unfortunately, the up and down nature of my effects this week definitely cost me on an important examination but thankfully the class average (and nationwide average) was low enough to where it most likely won’t hurt me but it does highlight that there are areas of my education that I need to improve on.
Overall, this week highlighted that I still have a way to go in my profession but with [Rule 4] and MLS in tow I’m confident I can easily close those gaps.
Comparison of Different Usage Patterns (4 loops/6 loops/8 loops/10 loops)
Reading over my past reports have led me to conclude that I function best when the loops are in the 8-10 range. I can get by with 4-6 loops however too many days at this level seems to open the door for eventual resistance. In general, I believe that with subliminals below the 5.8G range I typically need to run a high number of loops to break down my overactive subconscious and then cycle down ever slightly in order to prevent complete mental overload.
Subconscious and Conscious Cooperation (How they Improve Results with MLS)
Cooperation between the subconscious and conscious is obviously critical but the way MLS makes these two work together is truly unique. When I am fully executing my subconscious flips from becoming saboteur to able-bodied assistant. Often times I will consciously bring up a problem and then mentally/consciously step away only for my subconscious to feed me back a solution. This often occurs in real time such as when I’m studying, and I’m presented with a great method to make the study process more efficient or instances like today where I was able to mentally write the table of contents and major highpoints of this forum post in my head before ever typing anything.
I would say this process showcases how, when fully executing, the subconscious can become an extremely powerful ally. Unlike the conscious mind the subconscious doesn’t truly sleep and so I’m often able to accomplish so much more due to the way these two piggybacks off each other and offer up solutions. Memory and recall are boosted as well whenever these two work together and as mentioned previously in the Weekly Summary of this post these moments of synergy sometimes produce truly spectacular moments of brilliance.
Partial Execution (Effects on Cognition and Performance)
When I’m only partially executing my ADHD peaks its head in subtle ways. The power of MLS prevents it from completely overtaking me but my distractibility, especially this week, can derail my efforts considerably. When you become accustomed to operating at a certain level of cognition any drop becomes noticeable. Consider that during the few days of partial execution I A) Studied only about 20-30% of what I wanted to B) Took much longer to complete simple assignments C) Memory and Recall compromised to where my near-photographic memory was fuzzy at best. These effects seem bad but believe me when I say that pre-MLS was worse. At bare minimum I’m able to at least be somewhat productive with partial execution.
Table of Contents
1. Weekly Summary
2. Comparison of Different Usage Patterns (4 loops/6 loops/8 loops/10 loops)
3. Subconscious and Conscious Cooperation
4. Partial Execution (Effects on Cognition and Performance)
Weekly Summary
The items listed in the table of contents are no accident. They represent some of the major insights and observations I’ve gleaned over this past week. Compared to the previous week this was the week where my usage patterns fluctuated quite a bit as well as the average amount of sleep per night. The combination of these factors lowered my efficiency but not to pre-MLS levels.
At school, the moments where I was fully executing got me high praise from my professors. One of whom told me that had I applied myself correctly (in other words, had I been able to grab a time machine and use MLS 5.75G from the start of my doctoral degree) I’d be blowing the rest of my classmates out of the water due to my exceptional ability to reason. Unfortunately, the up and down nature of my effects this week definitely cost me on an important examination but thankfully the class average (and nationwide average) was low enough to where it most likely won’t hurt me but it does highlight that there are areas of my education that I need to improve on.
Overall, this week highlighted that I still have a way to go in my profession but with [Rule 4] and MLS in tow I’m confident I can easily close those gaps.
Comparison of Different Usage Patterns (4 loops/6 loops/8 loops/10 loops)
Reading over my past reports have led me to conclude that I function best when the loops are in the 8-10 range. I can get by with 4-6 loops however too many days at this level seems to open the door for eventual resistance. In general, I believe that with subliminals below the 5.8G range I typically need to run a high number of loops to break down my overactive subconscious and then cycle down ever slightly in order to prevent complete mental overload.
Subconscious and Conscious Cooperation (How they Improve Results with MLS)
Cooperation between the subconscious and conscious is obviously critical but the way MLS makes these two work together is truly unique. When I am fully executing my subconscious flips from becoming saboteur to able-bodied assistant. Often times I will consciously bring up a problem and then mentally/consciously step away only for my subconscious to feed me back a solution. This often occurs in real time such as when I’m studying, and I’m presented with a great method to make the study process more efficient or instances like today where I was able to mentally write the table of contents and major highpoints of this forum post in my head before ever typing anything.
I would say this process showcases how, when fully executing, the subconscious can become an extremely powerful ally. Unlike the conscious mind the subconscious doesn’t truly sleep and so I’m often able to accomplish so much more due to the way these two piggybacks off each other and offer up solutions. Memory and recall are boosted as well whenever these two work together and as mentioned previously in the Weekly Summary of this post these moments of synergy sometimes produce truly spectacular moments of brilliance.
Partial Execution (Effects on Cognition and Performance)
When I’m only partially executing my ADHD peaks its head in subtle ways. The power of MLS prevents it from completely overtaking me but my distractibility, especially this week, can derail my efforts considerably. When you become accustomed to operating at a certain level of cognition any drop becomes noticeable. Consider that during the few days of partial execution I A) Studied only about 20-30% of what I wanted to B) Took much longer to complete simple assignments C) Memory and Recall compromised to where my near-photographic memory was fuzzy at best. These effects seem bad but believe me when I say that pre-MLS was worse. At bare minimum I’m able to at least be somewhat productive with partial execution.