Mechanism
What L-Theanine Actually Does (and What It Doesn't)
A regulator rejected the biggest claim ever made for L-theanine. The molecule still does one modest, real thing — just never the thing a capsule was sold to do.
There’s a bottle of L-theanine in a drawer somewhere in your apartment. You bought it after reading a thread that promised smooth, jitter-free focus. You took it for two or three weeks. You felt nothing. You stopped.
So when a tea brand tells you L-theanine is part of why its tea works, your guard goes up. Reasonably. You think you’re being sold the same bottle in nicer packaging.
You’re half right. Most of what gets said about L-theanine online is overstated, and one of the biggest claims was rejected outright by the people whose entire job is to check. Here is the honest version: what it does, what it doesn’t, and why the capsule in your drawer was always going to disappoint you.