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Nucalm Review: Is The Nucalm Device Worth It For Personal ...

I would listen, through earphones, to binaural beat music music with two different rhythmic pulses that sets off Alpha and Theta brain waves, which are associated with the very first phase of deep sleep and meditation. Likewise, I would be blindfolded. And, in Doc Hollywood's office, I would do all of this while resting on a waterbed although the waterbed, I discovered, is not a standard or needed element of the treatment.

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Nucalm Review: Is The Nucalm Device Worth It For Personal ...

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  1. According to the company, 30 minutes of NuCalm amounts to 2 to 3 hours of restorative sleep. The NuCalm website boasts that the de-stressing treatment takes just two minutes to administer and less than 5 minutes to attain its impacts, making it the extremely definition of a fast fix. With its streamlined website and claims of modern, borderline-magic results, I half anticipated my NuCalm experience to occur in the literal future or, at extremely least, a center that reeked of sci-fi vibes. I think I was envisioning a workplace that appeared like the ship from Passengers and a large set-up reminiscent of the memory-implanting tech from Total Remember or maybe even a coffin-like pod right out of The 5th Element. My NuCalm treatment was not administered on the set of a motion picture, however it also wasn't administered in a dental expert's office. On the morning of my appointment, I drove across Los Angeles to Santa Monica to the workplaces of a bona fide physician to the stars, whose Hollywood clientele includes starlets, authors and inspirational gurus, and who boasts knowledge in energy medication, integrative medicine and bioidentical hormone replacement therapy. Instead, my NuCalm experience began in a (purposefully) poorly lit waiting space that looked more like the living- room of an eccentric, well-traveled college teacher than a medical facility. The doctor was fashionably late not with another patient, simply in getting to the workplace. While the tardiness may generally have frustrated me, here, it appeared like part of the experience, practically like a sneak peek of the outcomes of the state-of-the-art treatment that awaited me. During a quick consultation, the physician described the NuCalm procedure and summed up the science behind it (more on that later). The gist of the system, I learned, was this: I would chew a tablet of gamma-Aminobutyric acid, or -aminobutyric acid (or GABA, for short), a repressive neurotransmitter indicated to reduce activity in my nerve system. I would listen, through headphones, to binaural beat music music with 2 different rhythmic pulses that sets off Alpha and Theta brain waves, which are related to the first phase of deep sleep and meditation. Also, I would be blindfolded. And, in Doc Hollywood's office, I would do all of this while pushing a waterbed although the waterbed, I learned, is not a requirement or needed component of the treatment.

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