I Tried Euphoric Nootropics So You Don’t Have To (But I Kind of Think You Might Want To)

Quick map of where we’re going:

  • What I mean by “euphoric”
  • What I actually used (real brands, real days)
  • The highs, the lows, the weird parts
  • Who this helps, who should skip
  • My plain talk verdict

Note: I’m not your doctor. I’m just Kayla. This is my real week, my real brain. If you’ve got a condition, talk to a pro first.

Wait—what’s “euphoric” here?

Not party wild. Not fake happy. I’m talking a bright lift. A little glow in the chest. Music feels warmer. Work feels lighter. That kind of thing. Like a sunny patch lands on your desk, even if the sky’s gray.

If you’re skimming and want the full blow-by-blow of my week with these boosts, I laid out every detail in my longer diary of euphoric nootropics.

What I Actually Used

I paid for all of these myself.

  • Kanna (Zembrin) from Nootropic Depot — plant extract that softens stress and gives a gentle, social buzz (quick primer on kanna benefits)
  • TeaCrine (theacrine) capsules from Compound Solutions line (mine came as “TeaCrine” labeled caps) — clean, steady energy without a hard crash
  • Sulbutiamine (vitamin B1 derivative) — brightens mood, helps me talk more easily
  • Rhodiola Rosea (Nordic Naturals bottle this time) — calm energy and a bit of “I’ve got this”
  • Coffee + L-theanine (I used a simple theanine powder) — smooths the coffee jitters and adds a tiny lift
  • Genius Joy (store-bought blend) — includes SAM-e, Rhodiola, and friends for a “smile and focus” vibe

Plant-based, mood-tilting compounds like Kanna brush up against the broader world of entheogens; for the curious, here’s my candid, task-by-task rundown of entheogenic nootropics I trialed in a separate week. And yes, I’ve also gone full fungus—first with a straight shoot-out of nootropic mushrooms and later with a slick proprietary mushroom blend to see if branding actually matters.

For a deeper dive into safe sourcing and smart dosage ranges, I leaned on this clear guide from Best Brain Doping.

I also have history with two that I don’t use now: phenylpiracetam (too pushy for me) and phenibut (nope; tolerance and low mood next day). I’ll explain.

Real Days, Real Feels

Monday: The Kanna Zoom Test

Rainy morning. Two meetings. I took Kanna (Zembrin). For more on how kanna and its Zembrin extract can support calm focus, here's a thoughtful expert deep dive. Ten minutes in, my shoulders dropped. I didn’t feel loud or silly—just easy. Words came out smooth. I caught myself nodding more. Even the picky client felt less prickly. The lift sat right in my chest, warm but not hot. Music sounded round and cozy, like a soft coat.

Side note: I felt a dry mouth. I drank water. No crash by lunch. I did want a walk after, which is rare for a Monday.

Tuesday: TeaCrine + Coffee, No Shakes

I had a small coffee and a TeaCrine cap. That combo felt like a clean window. My typing got faster. No jitters. No “oh no, my heart.” The push was steady, not jumpy. I finished a sales deck and even fixed the charts I’d been avoiding. Around 3 p.m., I started to fade a little, but it was a gentle landing. I could still cook dinner and joke with my partner.

Taste note: TeaCrine caps are plain. The mood? Bright, but not goofy.

Wednesday: Sulbutiamine for Social Stuff

I had a lunch with a new client. Sulbutiamine makes me a bit more chatty, almost sunny. I told one too many stories (classic me), but I felt present. Food tasted a bit better too—salsa popped. After lunch, writing felt light, like the words slid where I wanted. Later, my face felt warm for a bit, and I slept a little late that night. Not bad, but I noticed.

Thursday: Rhodiola to Stop the Sighs

Rhodiola is my “I’m tired but I still care” herb. I took it before a backlog review. I didn’t get happy-happy. I got steady. I wasn’t irritable. Tasks felt doable. That quiet tilt from “ugh” to “okay, sure” is gold. It gave me more breath. No tummy issues, which I’ve had with other brands; this one sat fine.

Friday: Genius Joy on a Janky Schedule

I had a messy day—errands, dishes, last-minute edits. Genius Joy has a slow bloom. By late morning, I felt mild pep and good patience. It was a “hum under the hood” feeling. Not buzzy. I did notice my appetite dipped a bit, then came back at dinner. The mood lift lasted into the evening. Music during cleanup sounded brighter. I sang along, off-key but happy.

Weekend Mix: Coffee + L-Theanine for Soft, Sunny Chores

Saturday chores can drag. I mixed a small coffee with theanine. Picture a tiny buffer wheel for stress—that’s what it feels like. I got through laundry, replied to two sticky emails, and didn’t snap at the slow toaster. It’s simple and cheap, and it works almost every time. Not a big euphoria, but a nice “ahh.”

If chewing your boost sounds more fun than sipping it, catch my run-down of enjoyable nootropic gummies.

The Ones I Don’t Use Now (And Why)

  • Phenylpiracetam: Years ago, I tried it while traveling. It was strong—cold hands, razor focus, and a grin that felt a bit “forced.” I got a solid work sprint, sure, but I also felt edgy. Sleep wanted nothing to do with me. I retired it.
  • Phenibut: I used this in my early twenties for social ease. The next day was flat and gray. It also builds tolerance fast. Hard pass now.

I also dabbled with inhalable stacks—my full verdict on three nootropic vapes lives elsewhere if clouds are more your speed.

What Felt Euphoric vs. Just “Nice”

  • Real euphoria: Kanna (Zembrin) — warm social glow; music got pretty; stress felt padded.
  • Clean uplift: TeaCrine + coffee — no crash, clear head.
  • Chatty light: Sulbutiamine — brightness and easy talk.
  • Calm power: Rhodiola — not joy, but steady confidence.
  • Gentle smooth: Coffee + L-theanine — kinder caffeine.
  • Blend boost: Genius Joy — slow mood bloom, less edge.

Side Effects I Actually Noticed

  • Kanna: Dry mouth, more friendly than usual (which is cute, until it’s a lot).
  • TeaCrine: Mild afternoon fade; no stomach drama.
  • Sulbutiamine: Warm face, later bedtime once.
  • Rhodiola: None this round, but I’ve had slight tummy rumble with other brands before.
  • Genius Joy: Lower appetite for a bit, then normal.
  • Coffee + Theanine: All good; a few more bathroom breaks because coffee is coffee.

Who This Might Help

  • Folks who get tense on calls and want a soft social bump (Kanna).
  • People who love coffee but hate the shakes (theanine, or TeaCrine + coffee).
  • If you need steady courage for boring work (Rhodiola).
  • If you want bright mood and easy chatter (Sulbutiamine).
  • If you prefer a ready-made blend and don’t want to mix (Genius Joy).

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