agnetha
Bluelighter
@Electrodevo: I have EGCG(s) but have not given that a lot of attention because I was under the impression that the proposed health effects would not be noticeable. Can you provide information that these compounds are actually known to work noticeably, and more specifically: as nootropic?
Green tea shows considerable synergy with all the racetams in my experience. In a pinch I value green tea higher than all of them. I'm able to withstand stressful phases without noopept or piracetam, but without green tea I struggle considerably harder to keep up. Tea provides a funny mixture of alertness and calmness I haven't been able to mimic with any chemical (modafinil is not unsimilar though). But capped extract isn't really appealing for me. I just drink loads of _good_ (i.e. superb quality and freshly harvested) green tea. I brew and drink between 1-2 litres a day, and don't mind spending a few minutes preparing the stuff and filling a thermos (I even enjoy the ritual to some extent). If you spend some time looking around you can get high quality tea without spending a fortune (or significantly more than those caps cost). The taste is sublime and every cup I pour and drink gives me five minutes respite from the onslaught, especially on really hard and intense days at work. No stomach problems, no disturbance of my sleep cycle no significant side effects at all. Why would I chug capped extract and deny myself the pleasure of drinking this delicous beverage? Dropping capped extracts doesn't fit in my definition of 'convenience'.

Edit: Just a small remark Not all the racetams are working for me, Piracetam has considerable effect on me, as does Noopept (albeit only at rather high doses) the rest just shows no perceptible effect. Green tea potentiates the subjective effect of both. After much experimenting with a lot of different supplements I found that, for me, high doses of Piracetam, Noopept and strong batches of green tea and vitamin C (capped or fresh fruit) are the most effective agents for recovering from strenuous/exhausting drug experiments.
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