12-03-2020, 09:47 PM
(12-02-2020, 02:56 PM)Voytek Wrote: Thank you for your explanation.
How about finding that sweet spot? How to do that?
With 3G/4G, start with 8 hours a day and work your way up an hour per day for each week you use it until you find yourself experiencing good results. With 5G, do the same, but limit yourself to 21 hours a day max. With 5.5G plus, the sweet spot is provided for you in the instructions, and most people will get the best results with that. With 5.75G+, it should guide you to the sweet spot if that's not it.
Quote:Also, does it mean if it's too much a lot of data is going to be wasted or does it meant that the processing and execution are going to be slower?
As the subliminals get more and more complex, the amount of demand they place on your brain increases for the input-decode-process-execute phases while you're listening, and when you're not, the process-execute phases. It's almost impossible to exhaust yourself using a 3G sub, unless you use more than 3 at a time, and the same is true of 4G when used 1-2 at a time. It's 5G where it starts achieving exhaustion potential when used for a lot of hours per day with no days off and for longer periods of time.
With 5.5G, there is a phenomenon that requires an ASRB to balance, which is basically the program giving your brain more data to input-decode-process-execute than it can handle. If we didn't have the ASRB, you would still become exhausted. With 5.75G and later, this becomes so pronounced that I had to invent the ASRB2 to balance it, whereby we not only take breaks during play in the form of ASRB, but also take days off to allow your brain and mind to rest. We also started having to specify the number of loops to use.
If you exceed the capacity your brain has for the input-decode-process-execute process speed it can handle, it seems to form a "queue" of recorded, but un-processed data as a backlog. The exhaustion that slowly results happens because your brain does not have the ability to do everything necessary at once, and it slows down in processing as it becomes more and more overloaded and backlogged. Eventually, it will be unable to continue building the backlog, and the effort to do everything will exhaust you to the point, if you let it get bad enough, that you will fall asleep involuntarily. It will be difficult to get to that point, though, since it will become very apparent long before that happens for most people that they need to take a break.
So... with 5.5G and later subs... they have ASRB built in, and you have ASRB2 to help balance the rest of the issues that may result. Specific numbers of loops should therefore be followed unless and until it becomes apparent that more is needed.
Subliminal Audio Specialist & Administrator
The scientist has a question to find an answer for. The pseudo-scientist has an answer to find a question for. ~ "Failure is the path of least persistence." - Chinese Fortune Cookie ~ Logic left. Emotion right. But thinking, straight ahead. ~ Sperate supra omnia in valorem. (The value of trust is above all else.) ~ Meowsomeness!
The scientist has a question to find an answer for. The pseudo-scientist has an answer to find a question for. ~ "Failure is the path of least persistence." - Chinese Fortune Cookie ~ Logic left. Emotion right. But thinking, straight ahead. ~ Sperate supra omnia in valorem. (The value of trust is above all else.) ~ Meowsomeness!