Originally Posted by
atomic sagebrush
I understand and I'm just explaining that I simply can't know some of these things. :)
What you guys have to understand is that there are theories of swaying, and then there are observations that we make. The theories of swaying are 99% bullshit that sounds great on paper but have NEVER really been investigated at all. So things like "wow let's all ingest amino acids to raise our T levels and sway blue" sounds great. But we don't even KNOW that high T levels actually sway blue. It's only a theory and not at all proven, and in fact some evidence (such as, Clomid raising T levels yet swaying strongly pink) casts some doubt onto this theory. And male T levels = more boys is even LESS proven and yet everyone just totally buys into the idea.
So I tend to put at least as much stock into the things I've seen with my own two eyes - like men drinking energy drinks = girls conceived, even if, on paper, they should raise T and thus sway blue, the fact is we have no clue how any of this even works and for all we know some things have negative effects that may undermine their good effects, etc.
L-arginine, for example, was something we originally used until I saw several people (women) taking it and their cycles went berserk and they ended up conceiving girls in the end. Maybe this was because they gave up on swaying, maybe it was the effect of the l-arg...I just cannot know but I cannot recommend things unless I've seen people using them in a real world application because the theories are based on such slim and improbable data that I refuse to focus on them at the expense of keeping an open mind towards things possibly working entirely differently than we first thought.
RE sucralose it was supposed to lower pH. I do not know if it really does anything or not.