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Anonymous 2014-05-03 02:16:01 No. 61
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binaural_beats Here's a zip of the audio I used:
https://mega.co.nz/#!vdZkUArY!skBek_lJC3pq8KmmqIlrqnsJEX_xLVVK1qagMOXBj5g If you're trying to lucid dream or have more clear dreams you'll want either the 6 Hz or the 7.83 Hz waves. The others will probably just make you angry or cause your eyes to explode or something.
Also be sure to use headphones since the whole wave thing is predicated on stereo sound.
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Anonymous 2014-05-09 21:25:46 No. 80
>>59 binaural beats are kinda trippy but I don't think they have very much of an effect. Did you try binaural beats with the intention of lucid dreaming? 'Cuz thinking about dreaming/lucid dreaming makes both more likely.
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Anonymous 2014-05-10 05:40:24 No. 84
I have a fuckton of sooper compressed drug binaurals that come with there own special player so they can stay compressed. I'll post a mega here in a bit.
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Anonymous 2014-05-10 05:45:51 No. 85
>>84 Alright files are at
https://mega.co.nz/#!FNdSWJgb!usKN1AJ9eFO3EJLKG976PG2EItfWbpPFufrJzvAi15s And since the program needs different ways to play across OS's, the site link is here.
http://uazu.net/sbagen/ Have fun guys.
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Anonymous 2014-05-13 17:31:41 No. 93
>>59 I really liked Giles Corey's self titled, and the dude made a binaural beats album:
http://gilescorey.bandcamp.com/album/deconstructionist Turned me into a cellphone
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Anonymous 2014-05-13 21:39:46 No. 95
I can't listen to them for long without panicking for some reason
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Anonymous 2014-05-18 01:20:46 No. 100
>>95 are you listening to the right ones?
Waves of different frequencies have different effects on people. Certain waves cause fear and panic. Don't listen to those ones if you want to sleep.
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Anonymous 2014-05-25 05:45:11 No. 111
>>100 I tried some that were supposed to be for relaxation, but got the opposite. I don't know much about the frequencies. Which would you recommend?
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Anonymous 2014-05-28 21:19:26 No. 113
>>111 I've just gone by what it says on wikipedia.
I think people have made music that has binaural effects but I haven't tried any of it.
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Anonymous 2014-05-29 13:55:24 No. 114
>>85 sbagen is a pain to run on 64bit Linux
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Anonymous 2014-06-02 07:25:20 No. 123
>>113 >literally random Greek letters, not even in order Why do people do this?
>Alpha, this is Bravo. There's beta-radiation coming from pi meters from here, and it seems to be causing gamma-waves >>
Freedoms 2014-06-09 12:37:08 No. 147
>>61 Holy shit. I downloaded the files you uploaded and put the 6Hz and the 7.83 Hz files in a playlist and listened to it all night long. not only did i sleep way better but i had so many dreams and they were much clearer. I didn't land a lucid dream how ever. Thank you so much for the share.
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Anonymous 2015-01-29 07:12:07 No. 655
I was listening binaural beats for a while, and my brain was palpitating or something after that, so it was kinda cool experience
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Anonymous 2015-02-05 04:28:21 No. 713
>>712 The explanation on how one brainwave is bad for you at one point or another is on page six or something…
You should know the differences between brainwave states too to understand what I'm getting at. Trying to get some theta waves in right now. 'night!
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Anonymous 2015-02-05 08:51:00 No. 714
Can anyone upload the files to pomf.se?
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Anonymous 2015-02-12 20:46:56 No. 729
Does it matter what volume you have them on? I've trouble sleeping with background noise, so I wonder if I were to lower them to where I practically couldn't hear them if they'd still have effect.
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Anonymous 2015-02-20 12:00:51 No. 751
Listen to a hardstyle mix. Like one of those "radio" mixes by a big artist. It will activate your REM dreaming and memory and your eyeballs will be spinning around (according to my friend who woke me). Felt so good to wake up to pounding hardstyle.
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Anonymous 2015-03-12 06:43:43 No. 797
>>114 Just install libc6-dev-i386