Integration as the missing layer in microdosing protocols
Most users plateau by month three. Not because the formula stops working — because the body's substrate quality determines whether the work compounds or evaporates. Integration is what turns a temporary state into a durable trait.
What "integration" actually is
Integration is the process by which an acute neurochemical experience becomes a stable change in baseline function. In practice this means: BDNF upregulation produces new synaptic strength only if the body has the metabolic and mineral substrate to consolidate it. NGF triggers dendritic growth only if the cell has the energy to actually build the new structures.
Most microdosing failures aren't the molecule's fault. They're the substrate's. People take the formula on a stressed system, with low magnesium, dehydration, sleep deprivation, and a high-stimulant baseline — and then wonder why the effects don't stick.
The four substrate variables
Magnesium status is first because most adults are deficient and because magnesium is required for over 300 enzymatic reactions including NMDA receptor function, intracellular hydration, and the calcium-channel stability that lets neurons fire on rhythm rather than flooding. Without adequate magnesium, BDNF effects don't consolidate.
Sleep architecture is second because slow-wave sleep is when the brain actually does the consolidation work — the day's neuroplastic events get committed to long-term structure during deep sleep. Sleep-deprived users get the formula's acute effects without the durable changes.
Stress baseline is third. High cortisol opposes BDNF expression directly. Running NEUROGENESIS or CORTEX on a chronically stressed nervous system is like pressing the gas and brake at once.
Inflammation load is fourth. Chronic low-grade inflammation degrades the antioxidant substrate the formula needs to work cleanly. This is why every MYKO formula includes Chaga (oxidative defense) and most include Shilajit (cellular delivery).
Practical integration protocol
- Magnesium daily — non-negotiable. 200–400mg glycinate or L-threonate, taken 2–4 hours before or after the formula.
- Sleep window protected — 7+ hours, with the last 2 hours of any dosing day kept screen-light-free if possible.
- Reflection practice — 5–10 minutes of journaling, walking, or quiet time after dosing. This isn't ceremony; it's giving the nervous system a substrate of attention to consolidate against.
- One change at a time — don't start NEUROGENESIS the same week you change diet, switch jobs, or quit a stimulant. Integration needs a stable baseline to attach to.
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