

P.S. : Sorry if that is non-understandeable I just did it 3-6 min ago

Dude you are in mostly right... this is 100% placebo... but who cares if you can trick your mind believing it... and yes I "might" have imagined... but the most real to me was that woman's voice whispering me... freakykr3wskater wrote:Are you sure you didn't just imagine those in your head. I could easily imagine those noises right now and then convince myself that i heard them, knowing deep down that they're not real. I'll tell you now (I'm really not trying to be a dick, i just want people to understand this so things don't get blown out of proportion as far as hallucinating on i-doser) - You listened to the dose, you had read about i-doser before trying it (i'm sure), and you were hoping it could give you a really cool effect like you were under the influence of some drugs; so you were sitting there with your eyes closed, waiting for effects you imagined a noise and then that was your chance: you convinced yourself 98% that it was real and you actually heard it, but you know deep down that you never actually heard anything, if you did have an auditory hallucination you would NOT have thought it was cool (i can tell because of the mindstate you were in), you would have immediately became paranoid.
And while im on the topic of imagining things only to convince yourself they're real: most CEVs from i-doser are imagined. I have experienced REAL CEVs (not from idoser) and they are 100% "realer" than i-doser, they don't require thought/imagination to make them appear, they are objects/patterns that will appear on their own, they don't require you to listen and think until you see them.
I'm not saying i-doser isn't fun, it can surely provide mild CEVs, but you're not gonna see fractals or beautiful landscapes with rainbows and smiley faces, it can give you some good buzzes if you use it right, but it definately helps to know what a real high/psychedelic experience is like first before you go using i-doser.
if you set it on speakers the binarial beat floats into the roomkr3wskater wrote:^ That's 100% false. Binaural beats work by sending a different frequency to each ear. On speakers your ears will be hearing a mixture in each ear rather than an isolated frequency in each, and then you're brain won't sync to the difference of the frequencies.