constant escape

winter withered, warm
@Matthew

Any thoughts on Docosahexanoic Acid (some kind of fatty acid? Not sure about the taxonomy there) and/or hesperidin?

Just started taking daily pills, 1000 mg and 500 mg respectively, after watching this:


He mentioned that exercise seems to prompt a heightened neurogenesis, but that these new neurons were relatively short-lived, and that hesperidin played a role in extending the lifespan of these new neurons. Not sure, in any more precise way, how it all works.

Understanding-wise, right now I;m at the point where I can begin to understand how (edit: certain, if not all) physiological mechanics can be reduced down to whether or not certain cells have certain receptors lodged through their membranes, and whether or not those receptors are activated by the molecules they are supposed to receive - that is, whether or not those target molecules, or perhaps even macromolecular structures/complexes as far as I know, are frequent enough in such-and-such intercellular spaces to bind to their appropriate receptors with the sufficient regularity. Thats where I am.
 
@Matthew

Any thoughts on Docosahexanoic Acid (some kind of fatty acid? Not sure about the taxonomy there) and/or hesperidin?

Just started taking daily pills, 1000 mg and 500 mg respectively, after watching this:


He mentioned that exercise seems to prompt a heightened neurogenesis, but that these new neurons were relatively short-lived, and that hesperidin played a role in extending the lifespan of these new neurons. Not sure, in any more precise way, how it all works.

Understanding-wise, right now I;m at the point where I can begin to understand how (edit: certain, if not all) physiological mechanics can be reduced down to whether or not certain cells have certain receptors lodged through their membranes, and whether or not those receptors are activated by the molecules they are supposed to receive - that is, whether or not those target molecules, or perhaps even macromolecular structures/complexes as far as I know, are frequent enough in such-and-such intercellular spaces to bind to their appropriate receptors with the sufficient regularity. Thats where I am.
Receptors are the filing system, the content of experiences is stored as flecks of reality on the quantum scale. Procedural panpsychism.
 
Sadly, I also deleted many of those posts. DHA allows quantum electron tunnelling and is essential for precision transmission of signals in the retina and throughout the brain. It's been this way for several hundred million years.
Prof Michael Crawford goes on to speculate that pi electron configuration in psychoactive molecules like psilocin and DMT also allow tunnelling. I suggested that this alternative tunnelling may gate perception of information originating in orthogonal dimensions, including information about the entities and hyperspatial geometry therein, which is pretty wild but possibly true.
 

Mr. Tea

Let's Talk About Ceps
*checks off 'midwit' from HMGovt bingo card*

I've skimmed the article but I can't see any reference to contacting Yog-Sothoth via orthogonal dimensions.
 
It's cool. This is my specialist subject though, I've been chewing on the mind body problem for over 25 years and this DHA-mediated electron tunnelling idea is really something. I've cooked it up with Andrew Gallimore's alien information theory, which requires this gating effect. Serotonin has 3 sites with higher electron density, and psilocybin 4. There's an actual mechanism for tripping right there. I wouldn't just toss that out as mumbo jumbo, I'm not a crystal clutcher.
 
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