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Herbal Energy Recommendations

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fluhdoobel

Rising Star
Hello everyone, I am looking for plants/herbs that have stimulating properties to them. Things that are generally safe to consume of course, with similar results to energising kratom strains. I am already aware of raw cocoa, cordyceps, ephedra, and ginseng, but I am curious if there are stronger, yet still safe alternatives to those listed. Or if not, ideally things that can be combined into a brew to give substantial energy. I also know phenethylamine is a good option, but I am not sure on the safety of doing it regularly. Also, I am not looking for any substantial mind-altering effects, just energy. If any suggestions give slight effects that's ok, just as long as a person would be able to function properly like do work with it. Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
 
Well it's a shroom not a plant, but ophiocordyceps for the win. It's my favorite supplement, to be honest. It's not like other stimulants, as in it won't put your sympathetic nervous system into overdrive, in fact it's not a neurotropic at all. It just improves the cellular life functions of the body, increases ATP production (that's actually scientifically proven), and so reduces fatigue, makes you feel healthier and more capable...
 
PsyDuckmonkey said:
Well it's a shroom not a plant, but ophiocordyceps for the win. It's my favorite supplement, to be honest. It's not like other stimulants, as in it won't put your sympathetic nervous system into overdrive, in fact it's not a neurotropic at all. It just improves the cellular life functions of the body, increases ATP production (that's actually scientifically proven), and so reduces fatigue, makes you feel healthier and more capable...

Is this the shroom which grows inside insects and kills them?
 
grollum said:
Is this the shroom which grows inside insects and kills them?
Yes! 😁 It's awesome.

Though if you want the natural harvested ones, which actually grew on a caterpillar, that shit is expensive. And I don't mean "aw man that's expensive" expensive, but rather "what the actual fuck" expensive. So I recommend getting cultivated.

I hear Chinese cultivated cordyceps tends to be better than American, something about using animal matter as a substrate rather than only grains.

lobo said:
Powder Coca Leaf... Is the best.:thumb_up:
I only had the luck to get some Bolivian coca candies from a friend, and... yes I can totally second this. Love. But a bit hard to access outside South America. ;)
 
Try Mucuna Pruriens. I've been taking a Mucuna standardized extract twice a day for about a year now, so far i really like it, it can help with energy (especially when paired with Caffeine/Coffee) but i use it to replenish Dopamine and Noradrenaline for my Autism/Aspergers, but it may have some interesting effects for you. Mucuna seems pretty safe and haven't noticed any side-effects yet. They say you should cycle it but i've just been taking it every day, works fine. Also maybe some B12.
 
Is cordyceps meant to smell like a wet dog when you're cooking it (I have whole fruiting bodies)? Am I doing something wrong? Considering it was the cheap stuff from a Chinese supermarket, it's probably just inferior material, right? (Dammit!)
 
downwardsfromzero said:
Is cordyceps meant to smell like a wet dog when you're cooking it (I have whole fruiting bodies)? Am I doing something wrong? Considering it was the cheap stuff from a Chinese supermarket, it's probably just inferior material, right? (Dammit!)

Wait, no, REISHI smells like a wet dog when you're cooking it. What! This is awesome.

I guess it's the terpenes.

Wet dogs cultivate and reticulate microbiotic landscapes, perhaps the immune-modulating effects of medicinal mushroom terpenes have a similar effect and thus are perceived the same by the body.

weeeeeeee
 
RhythmSpring said:
downwardsfromzero said:
Is cordyceps meant to smell like a wet dog when you're cooking it (I have whole fruiting bodies)? Am I doing something wrong? Considering it was the cheap stuff from a Chinese supermarket, it's probably just inferior material, right? (Dammit!)

Wait, no, REISHI smells like a wet dog when you're cooking it. What! This is awesome.

I guess it's the terpenes.

Wet dogs cultivate and reticulate microbiotic landscapes, perhaps the immune-modulating effects of medicinal mushroom terpenes have a similar effect and thus are perceived the same by the body.

weeeeeeee
:lol:
 
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