Laniska Dopamine Patches
She Scrolled For Two Hours And Felt Nothing. Not One Thing.
The quiet numbness nobody talks about — and the
small daily ritual 60,000+ people are using to feel something again.

Two hours. Gone. You couldn't tell anyone what you actually watched.
Your thumb just kept moving. Video after video. Nothing landed.
You used to feel things — excited for a trip, happy about a song, actually present at dinner.
Lately everything just feels... grey. Flat. Muted.
You're not broken. Your brain isn't malfunctioning.
It's something researchers have a name for — and there's a small, deliberate ritual that's helping people feel present again.
Mark, 41, sales director, three kids, one mortgage he refreshes his banking app about too often.
He used to be first in, last out — the guy leadership pointed to when they needed someone to close the tough account.
Somewhere around 38, the mornings stayed sharp. But the afternoons started collapsing.
He'd walk into a 2pm call rehearsed, prepared, ready — and twelve minutes in, he'd feel his own attention sliding off the table like a glass of water tipped sideways.
Sarah, 32, marketing coordinator, three roommates, a group chat that never stops buzzing.
She used to be the friend who got genuinely excited about things — a new restaurant, a Sunday hike, a good playlist.
Somewhere in the last two years, the excitement started arriving late, or not at all.
Somewhere in the last two years, the excitement started arriving late, or not at all.
The moment it broke her: her best friend's birthday dinner, candles lit, everyone laughing.
She looked down and realized she'd checked her phone four times in twenty minutes — at her own friend's birthday.
Her friend caught her doing it a fifth time and just went quiet for a second before changing the subject.
Sarah excused herself to the bathroom and sat there, phone in hand, wondering why she couldn't just be there. Actually there.
She didn't even open an app. She just sat with the awful, hollow feeling of it.

We call it "Dopamine Fatigue."
Behavioral researchers describe how a constant stream of tiny stimulation hits — a notification, a like, an autoplay video — can leave your brain's reward system feeling worn down over time.
The result: things that used to feel genuinely good start to feel flat by comparison, and only the next scroll seems to register at all.
More scrolling doesn't fix the flatness. It's the thing feeding it.
Sarah didn't need another app or another habit tracker. She needed a small, physical moment that pulled her attention back into her own body instead of her screen.


That's the entire idea behind Laniska Dopamine Patches.
No app to open. No new subscription competing for your attention. No guilt-inducing screen time report.
Just one small patch, pressed onto clean skin each morning, built around a simple ritual: a cooling, grounding sensation that gives your attention somewhere real to land.

Each patch is infused with Mentha Arvensis (wild mint) extract — a cooling botanical people have used for centuries as a small sensory reset.
It's blended with Tocopherol (Vitamin E) and a gentle skin-conditioning base (Beeswax, Petrolatum, Mineral Oil) so it sits comfortably for up to 8 hours.
Peel. Press onto a clean, dry area — shoulder, neck, or chest. That small, deliberate two seconds is the whole ritual.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Individual results may vary.

Sarah started applying a patch each morning while her coffee brewed — before she let herself pick up her phone.
The first week, she just noticed the cooling sensation whenever her hand drifted toward her phone out of habit.
By week three, she'd left her phone in another room during dinner twice without thinking about it.


A month later, at her roommate's actual birthday dinner this time, she looked up and realized she'd laughed — really laughed — at a story someone told.
Her friend across the table smiled and said, `"There you are. I missed you."`
Her friend across the table smiled and said, `"There you are. I missed you."`

Her roommate Priya noticed within two weeks — mentioned it over coffee one morning.
"You've been putting your phone down first at dinner instead of last. What changed?"
"You've been putting your phone down first at dinner instead of last. What changed?"

One patch, applied to clean skin each morning. Worn up to 8 hours. That's it.

Screen time limits? You just tap 'ignore limit' the second it pops up.
Deleting the app? You redownload it within a week — the urge doesn't disappear, it just gets rerouted.
A new phone case or 'digital detox' retreat? Expensive, and the numbness is waiting for you when you get home.
A patch you apply once in the morning works with your habits instead of fighting them — no willpower contest required.


A patch you apply once in the morning works with your habits instead of fighting them — no willpower contest required.
Laniska Dopamine Patches use a simple 5-ingredient formula: Mentha Arvensis Extract, Tocopherol, Beeswax, Petrolatum, and Mineral Oil.
No stimulants, nothing to swallow — just a topical patch applied to clean, dry, hair-free skin.
No stimulants, nothing to swallow — just a topical patch applied to clean, dry, hair-free skin.
Try it for 60 days. If you don't feel more present, send back the empty pack for a full refund.
We'd rather you get your money back than keep something that isn't doing anything for you.

Right now, new customers get 50% off their first order.
That's less than what most people spend on one streaming subscription they barely use.
50% off ends at 11:59 PM (Only 7 units left)
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