07-06-2010, 09:55 AM
(07-06-2010, 03:31 AM)hayabbott Wrote:(07-05-2010, 08:50 PM)Shannon Wrote: Gentlemen, what you are experiencing is the intensity of how I make my subliminals. They engage both hemispheres of your brain and force it to work while the sub is in play - it's like how my dual core 2.5 gigaHertz processor usually idles at 800 mHz, but when the computations get heavy, it revs up to 1.6 and then 2.5 gHz to meet the demand for processing power.
If you find yourself too tired, or tired too often, try cutting back on it a couple hours every few days until you determine where you are good. In time, your brain/mind will get used to it, though; it's like exercising a new muscle.
I have found that if I have been working on a subliminal intensely, sometimes if I back off and only listen for 1 to 1 1/2 hours for one day, then I get an intense surge in the subs effectiveness. I discovered this on a day when my schedule did not allow me to listen for a long time. Anyways, it seems that my brain caught up and assimilated all of the suggestions. I like your analogy to working out a muscle. If you over train, you can get diminishing returns and you have to rest the muscle occasionally to allow it to catch up to your training.
Snap. I've noticed that if the circumstances prevent me from listening to the sub as often as I have the previous days, say I have a day where I can only fit 6 hours of exposure in compared to other days of 10-12+ hours then I get a surge in felt effects. That's not to say the change is slower at higher exposure, I just don't get the temporary surge. I'm more concerned with the "climate" than the "weather" though so the more exposure I get the better, even if it means no short term mood pumps. The interesting thing is though, what is it about shorter periods of exposure that causes the temporary mood pumps?
“To be normal is the ideal aim of the unsuccessful.” - Carl Jung