Re: So, how do you guys stay up late in the studio ?
Posted: Thu Sep 29, 2011 7:55 pm

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$100 says it's not the mate or diet making this equation an effective one....atticuh wrote:Yerba mate, nutrition (keep your blood glucose level relatively stable), and Vyvanse.
Teknicyde wrote:smoke alot of weed (works for me, if it makes you tired or lazy your plain weird)
Vyvanse keeps me functional in this f'd up world. But I'm opposite too, I have to take a pill to sleep when I'm wanting to work on a track.atticuh wrote:Yerba mate, nutrition (keep your blood glucose level relatively stable), and Vyvanse.
Seeing as how the third is only obtainable legally with a prescription, I would say your two realistic options are yerba mate and healthy, spaced out snacking. However, yerba mate alone does work wonders. Look it up.
Exercise regularly, eat right = need only 5/6 hours sleep a night, max, with plenty of allowance for burning the candle at both ends when you need to in order to get some tunes done.topkat wrote:I have sick ass ideas for a track, i really need time to put stuff together and make new sounds, but unfortunately i have work in three hours -_-, so i was thinking why not just work on the track throughout the night? ive tried in the past but i tend to fall asleep and have NO drive at all to produce, its weird. So my question is what do you guys do to stay up throughout the night ?
I'm not sure that's a very fair statement considering the majority of people who mentioned prescription medications take them because they were diagnosed with a medical condition and are completely dysfunctional without the focus such a medication grants. In such a context, you might as well be saying that chemotherapy is also for pussies. Is taking a medication which helps you function/survive as a normal human being really the easy way out?kaiori breathe wrote:Alternatively, if you're a pussy, take the easy way out and just cram yourself full of shit loads of prescription medication.
Yes.atticuh wrote: Is taking a medication which helps you function/survive as a normal human being really the easy way out?
+1 I was on antidepressants for 16 years and now that I'm off and learned to deal with it I've been way more "antidepressed."kaiori breathe wrote:Yes.atticuh wrote: Is taking a medication which helps you function/survive as a normal human being really the easy way out?
Fixed.kaiori breathe wrote:eat right if you're a pussy, or take the easy way out and just cram yourself full of shit loads of prescription medication.
With all due respect, there are way too many factors as to why anti-depressants didn't work for you and why you may feel less depressed now as opposed to earlier in your life. Furthermore, to attribute the inefficacy of your treatment solely on the idea that "pharmaceutical treatments" don't work is incredibly short-sighted simply due to the complexity of that particular class of psychotropic medications. Causality, especially in pharmaceutical treatments regarding psychiatric conditions, is extremely difficult to establish without proper experimentation and control groups, and even then, every individual's body chemistry is so different that the various outcomes and adverse reactions can only be predicted as percentages of a population with fair margins of error.Mammoth wrote: +1 I was on antidepressants for 16 years and now that I'm off and learned to deal with it I've been way more "antidepressed."
atticuh wrote:With all due respect, there are way too many factors as to why anti-depressants didn't work for you and why you may feel less depressed now as opposed to earlier in your life. Furthermore, to attribute the inefficacy of your treatment solely on the idea that "pharmaceutical treatments" don't work is incredibly short-sighted simply due to the complexity of that particular class of psychotropic medications. Causality, especially in pharmaceutical treatments regarding psychiatric conditions, is extremely difficult to establish without proper experimentation and control groups, and even then, every individual's body chemistry is so different that the various outcomes and adverse reactions can only be predicted as percentages of a population with fair margins of error.Mammoth wrote: +1 I was on antidepressants for 16 years and now that I'm off and learned to deal with it I've been way more "antidepressed."