Author Topic: Binaural Beats  (Read 7942 times)

Funny thing is, I actually lucid dreamed barely when listening to one of these. Only problem is I couldn't move my arms or legs.

I have recorded an isochronic tone and gave it to someone to listen to without them knowing what it was. It worked without them knowing anything about it.

Explain this please.

Also there seems to be some kind of problem with things being placebos. I do not loving understand why the hell it matters if the effect is real or imagined. If its the same god dam effect why the hell does it matter whatsoever?

"Its a placebo."
"Oh so its worthless then."

That's the general response i keep seeing to these things.

I prefer the calm binural beats and not the WRYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYDAAAAAAAAAAAAAAWUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU creepy-ass noises that too many people think is I-Dosing.

Pure theta binaural beats are really loving low...

But really damn awesome. I don't know if it will speed up the process of REM sleep, but if it does I can WILD effectively. <3

I have recorded an isochronic tone and gave it to someone to listen to without them knowing what it was. It worked without them knowing anything about it.

Explain this please.
Its not placebo, refer back to someones post on page 4, where they explain that it changes the frequency of your brain relaxing you, allowing you to lucid dream easier, and allow you to easily OBE.

Whatever anyone says about placebo is misinformed, its scientific fact.

Here's how idoser works.

1. You want to get high.
2. You buy iDoser stuff thinking it will make you high.
3. The fact that you want to get high and the natural need to validate the time or money into purchasing or acquiring iDoser tracks work together to convince you that you are high.
4. You think you're high purely through the power of suggestion.

There was a study where people were given various nonalcoholic beverages and were told they were alcoholic. Lo and behold, these people started to act drunk despite consuming no alcohol.

Becoming high is 100% a chemical process. If you're not consuming some kind of drug you will not get high. We're assuming "high" is specifically referring to the feeling of a drug induced high, not runner's high or something. Binaural beats may have something to them. Maybe you can feel sad or anxious by listening to particular sounds, musicians have been exploiting this for hundreds of years. There is nothing to suggest that you can induce a high by listening to some randomly generated noise, and if you're going to fall for it then you might as well start stocking up on magnetic healing bracelets and cleansing Japanese foot pads because they're just as effective at what they do.

In fact, in the Wikipedia article you link to, iDoser is all but specifically named in the unverified claims section. Binaural beats themselves do not necessarily make you study better, get high, or diet. You convince yourself that these are working, and as a consequence, you actually DO study better and concentrate harder. But it's purely by tricking yourself. I could give you a sugar pill and tell you that it would make you study better, and if you actually believed it worked, you would actually study better.

If you think iDoser is working, it's purely through the power of your mind. Please, by all means, go on believing it works, because the second you stop believing it works it won't work. We wouldn't want your investment to go to waste.
i never said idoser worked 8)
just suggested it because it sounded like something a guy was working for

Stuntman, GTFO. Thanks :)

~love kaed <3


Stuntman, GTFO. Thanks :)

~love kaed <3


because...
also
EVERYONE READ HERE, ESPECIALLY STUNTMAN

In Binaural Beats, the frequency listed is not the tone being played, it is the difference between the two tones.  Since they're panned out into different earbuds, the tones don't physically cross, or else they'd produce the beating sound that a slightly out of tune instrument makes.  Your brain hears both tones though, so it actually collides in your brain and beats at the frequency listed.

This is why it doesn't really matter what headphones you use, because they aren't actually producing subsonic frequencies.

/science
welp i am dumb continue thread


I guess that I'm mostly in a delta wave/4 hz sleep because I sleep so deeply and I sometimes have no dreams. I don't think that's good, though. It happens to me mostly, I almost never have dreams anymore.
« Last Edit: October 29, 2011, 10:36:49 AM by Sami2ss »

To my knowledge, when you fall asleep your brain doesn't change frequencies, but dreams or the lack of them come from being in a relaxed happy state of mind. If your overly stressed dreaming becomes less frequent. Binaural beats just help you dream by giving your brain a little push, listening to them isn't a sure fire way to trigger a dream, rather it helps immensely.

To my knowledge, when you fall asleep your brain doesn't change frequencies, but dreams or the lack of them come from being in a relaxed happy state of mind. If your overly stressed dreaming becomes less frequent. Binaural beats just help you dream by giving your brain a little push, listening to them isn't a sure fire way to trigger a dream, rather it helps immensely.
Is there any kind of sound that can trigger lucid dreams?

If not, are there any you can listen to while WILDing that can speed up the process of pre-sleep paralysis?

Is there any kind of sound that can trigger lucid dreams?

If not, are there any you can listen to while WILDing that can speed up the process of pre-sleep paralysis?
WILDing? I have never heard of that, explain please