SKU: 93921586778

ELEVATE: Nitric Oxide Cellular Energy Blend

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Description

ELEVATE: Nitric Oxide Cellular Energy BlendFeel the Flow. Fire Up Your Focus. Fuel Your Workout. ELEVATE is your all in one cellular energy ignition system formulated to increase nitric oxide for optimal blood flow, enhanced energy, and full body vitality. Whether youre hitting the gym, tackling a packed schedule, or need a mental pick me up, this pre workout + focus fuel gives you a clean, powerful lift that lasts. What It Is Elevate is Freeman Formulas powerful nitric oxide and cellular

Feel the Flow.

Fire Up Your Focus.

Fuel Your Workout.

ELEVATE is your all-in-one cellular energy ignition system formulated to increase nitric oxide for optimal blood flow, enhanced energy, and full body vitality. Whether you’re hitting the gym, tackling a packed schedule, or need a mental pick-me-up, this pre-workout + focus fuel gives you a clean, powerful lift that lasts.

What It Is

Elevate is Freeman Formula’s powerful nitric oxide and cellular energy activator, designed to improve circulation, boost oxygen delivery, and ignite performance from the inside out. It helps your body generate natural energy by improving blood flow at the cellular level — so your muscles, brain, and organs receive the nutrients and oxygen they need to thrive.

This formula isn’t just about physical energy.
It supports the frequency and intention behind your movement, aligning your spirit, mind, and body so you can operate at your highest potential.

Elevate helps you feel awake, alive, and fully switched ON.

🔥 Why You'll Love It:

  • 5000 mg Citrulline Malate for skin splitting pumps and vascular performance
  • Beta-Alanine for lasting muscular endurance (yes, the tingle means it’s working 😉)
  • Electrolyte Hydration Blend to support hydration and prevent performance dips
  • Taurine + Betaine for razor-sharp mind-muscle connection
  • Alpha GPC to enhance mental clarity, focus, and neurological performance
  • Natural Caffeine (250 mg) = the perfect pre-game energy jolt
  • Georgia Peach Rings- Flavor

💪 No jitters. No crash. Just clean, focused power.


🧬 Key Benefits:

  • Elevated Morning Ritual
    Start your day or training session with clarity, vitality, and purpose.
  • Cognitive & Physical Synergy
    Blend of adaptogens, nootropics, and electrolytes to support peak mental + muscular performance.
  • Hydration & Energy Support
    Balance your internal battery and keep your body running at high frequency.
  • Boosts nitric oxide for stronger circulation
  • Enhances energy and stamina
  • Supports healthy blood pressure
  • Improves nutrient & oxygen delivery to cells
  • Promotes endurance and athletic performance
  • Helps with cognitive clarity and mental sharpness
  • Supports vascular health
  • Reduces feelings of fatigue and heaviness
  • Clean, natural cellular support formula

🧪 Supplement Facts (Per Scoop / 12.5g):

  • Citrulline Malate: 5000 mg
  • Beta-Alanine: 2000 mg
  • Electrolyte Blend: 250 mg
  • Taurine: 250 mg
  • Betaine Anhydrous: 250 mg
  • Caffeine: 250 mg
  • Alpha GPC 50%: 100 mg

🥤 How to Use:

Mix 1 scoop (12.5g) in 8 oz of cold water and drink 20–30 minutes before training or high performance activity. Start with ½ scoop to assess tolerance. Not recommended to exceed 1 scoop daily.


⚠️ Warning:

Contains 250mg caffeine. Not for use by children or individuals sensitive to stimulants. Always consult with a healthcare professional if you are on medication or have a medical condition.


🌟 Freeman Formula Quality Promise:

✅ FDA Registered Facility
✅ GMP Certified
✅ Lab Tested
✅ Made in the USA

Why It Belongs in Your Daily Ritual

Every intention you set needs a physical pathway for energy to move. Nitric oxide opens that pathway.

Whether you’re training, working, or needing reliable all-day energy, Elevate supports:

• Better blood flow
• Smoother energy levels
• Greater mental clarity
• Higher physical performance
• Improved endurance
• Cellular vitality and resilience

This is the daily circulation support that keeps you aligned, energized, and primed to perform.


Who Should Use It

Elevate is ideal for:
• Men and women needing more energy without stimulants
• Individuals with cold hands/feet or poor circulation
• Athletes wanting more endurance and better pumps
• People feeling sluggish, foggy, or easily fatigued
• High performers needing sharper focus and oxygen flow
• Adults wanting to support heart and vascular health
• Anyone wanting a natural nitric oxide boost


Why You’ll Love It

You’ll love Elevate because the effects feel clean, stable, and uplifting… not jittery, shaky, or overstimulated.

Most users report:
• Better blood flow & “warmth” through the body
• More stamina during work or workouts
• Faster recovery
• Sharper thinking
• A more energized, uplifted mood
• Consistent energy without a crash

It feels like your body finally has the oxygen and flow it has been needing.


Science-Backed Formula

L-Arginine & L-Citrulline
Powerful amino acids that support nitric oxide production for improved circulation and vascular function.

Beet Root Extract
Clinically shown to enhance blood flow, endurance, and oxygen efficiency.

Antioxidant Support
Helps protect blood vessels from oxidative stress and inflammation.

Cellular Hydration Minerals
Support conductivity, mineral balance, and energy production.

The formula supports the Freeman Formula principle:
When your cells receive what they need, your thoughts, energy, and performance elevate.


What Makes Ours Different

Elevate stands apart because:

• It uses a dual-phase nitric oxide support system
• Clean formula — no sugars, dyes, or artificial fillers
• Supports BOTH mental clarity and physical endurance
• Works at the cellular level, not just surface-level energy
• Designed for spirit–mind–body synergy
• Crafted to support energy that feels natural, intentional, and elevated

This is nitric oxide support, refined.


FAQs

Q: Does Elevate contain stimulants or caffeine?
No — it provides energy through circulation and nitric oxide production.

Q: When should I take it?
Morning for all-day energy, or 20–30 minutes before workouts.

Q: Can this help with blood pressure?
Nitric oxide supports healthy vascular relaxation, but consult your healthcare professional if you have a condition.

Q: How long until I feel the effects?
Many feel changes in circulation and energy within 20–30 minutes.

Q: Can I take this daily?
Yes — it is designed for daily use and ongoing circulation support.

Shipping Notes
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  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
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Exchange/Return Notes
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SKU: 93921586778

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4.2 ★★★★★
Based on 25 reviews
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Product Reviews
M
Verified Purchase
Mel Bridges
Dallas, US
★★★★★ 5
Great advice, guidelines, and suggestions: Bell writes with a contagiously inspiring attitude
Format: Paperback
I admire good organization when it comes to most things, especially in a book that purports to teach about structure. The organization of the book makes it easy to go back and reread a part; for example, if you are working on a beginning, middle, or end section in your fictional story, there are corresponding chapters for what you need. Each chapter has ending exercises that I imagine to be helpful, but I haven't actually worked them through although I've read them. You will read about elements that you need to know to how to do to write an appealing story, like characterization, settings, dialogue, and scene selection. It is recommended that you get a book with these elements as the main focus for a more detailed, expansive treatment (if you haven't done so already). Bell is most helpful on how to construct a scene. However, he does not have much to say about description, other than that it has a tendency to slow the plot and you should give details as needed but not more than that (on the line of a need-to-know-type of basis). Bell also has sections on how to brainstorm plot ideas and test whether the ideas are worthy of attention. This was something I needed to do with my last story idea that burned and crashed. Furthermore he tells of "plotting systems" used by many writers, which are the-strict-only-by-the-outline group (OPs) or the free-rein-no-outline group (NOPs) and writers using a little of both. The suggestions and tips are conveyed in a way that you can take and adapt them to your style. The chapter on common plot problems was very helpful. He even tells of how he squeezes in his writing time. Bell's way doesn't work for me, but you can take it and suit it to your own circumstances. What I like about Bell is that he writes in a non-demeaning way to new writers. There are some writing books which take punches at new writers, be it ever so subtly or blatantly (I would rather not name any names), even though these books may contain invaluable writing advice and tools. It is just refreshing to have Bell's attitude. He motivates me to write and be true to myself, especially in his introduction. So far it is one of the books I keep going back and rereading parts that are pertinent to what I am writing.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2006
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Ken Goldstein
Boise, US
★★★★★ 5
As Much About Life As Writing
Format: Paperback
Anne Lamott is not a cheerleader, more like the Burgess Meredith with the water bottle and bucket in Rocky's corner between rounds -- I'm also guessing she wouldn't wilt if she had to slash your eye open if like Rocky it got sealed shut. She knows you are going to get hit hard, and she reminds you that you know it too. She tells you not to get distracted by that which doesn't matter to the process of writing. Much of this she learned from her father, who was also a career writer. He taught her it was the doing that mattered, not the surrounding mechanical functions that seem like they matter. What struck me repeatedly in Lamott's mini-lessons was her deep understanding of process -- that output of a work is not so much the full work itself, but an assembly of building blocks, one at a time, each a commitment, and only in totality something more. She does not advocate bonehead process or ridiculous formulaic mandate - this is not a how-to manual -- she just wants us to care about what we are doing and accomplish it in a series of heartfelt steps. There are no shortcuts, it's a little more each day, a continuum that adds up to a satisfying and cohesive whole. This is not breakthrough thinking, but it's a lesson we need to learn over and over, and it's not just about writing. Creative process is the heart of innovation. Think of all the elements that make the iPad great. If all the elements weren't great, it would not be great. Same with a restaurant menu and wine list. Same with an office skyscraper or memorial monument. Same with a short story, same with a novel. Summary impression rests in the details, all the many tiny parts or moments -- and all those details require hard thought and careful design. Lamott is smart about this, she tells you that getting it right is not going to happen out of the gate and unnerving strides at perfection can be your worst enemy. She has an excellent descriptor for the real quality of the first drafts to which we aspire. I'll let you discover that on your own so the word does not get scraped here. Her point is, just get the words out, work on making them better later, a layer at a time. She also allows us not to obsess unnecessarily with locking the full road map before we explore, because again that can impede our work. How far do we need to see ahead? "About two or three feet ahead of you" is plenty she tell us, quoting E.L. Doctorow: "..writing a novel is like driving a car at night. You can only see as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way." She says this is "right up there with the best advice about writing, or life, I have ever heard." I tend to agree. There is tremendous empathy in Lamott's world view, she offers a sense of shared experience that is reinforcing and comforting. Lamott talks about the imaginary radio station playing in your head -- another colorful descriptor I will let you discover -- that tells us over and over again why we can't do something, why the work we are doing is neither good nor worth doing. Learning to turn off that radio is our key to moving forward, we all hear it from time to time, but when it becomes perpetual, that is when our ability to create interesting work stops completely. Lamott is just so honest and clear about all the factors that stop us from moving forward because she not only has experienced them, she continues to experience them. She does not position herself as a guru or weekend seminar success evangelist, but simply as someone who can reflect on problems of creativity because she deals with problems of creativity endlessly in her own life. She is even more honest in telling us that no one can make these problems go away once and for all, certainly not with any form of temporal success. All we can do is know that these obstructions will always be there, so we must embrace confronting them. Sometimes it really is good to know that none of us are experiencing roadblocks on our own, the fact that someone like Lamott tells you she is experiencing what you are experiencing is precisely the empathy that builds strength and resistance because the experiences are shared, bad and good. Her humility is reinforcing and refreshing and uncompromisingly inspiring. "Bird by Bird" is not a long book, it can be read if you wish initially in a single sitting, but it is the kind of book you will find yourself coming back to for this chapter or that, this phrase or that. Lamott writes with good humor, even when she tackles very difficult and personal matters of her own life and those around her. The more I think about her framework, the more I am convinced it is much more broadly applicable then perhaps she even considered. I see the guidance as useful in company life, in financial life, in family life, in political life, and in government life. All of these require effective process to get them right, there are no shortcuts, and the rewards can be the smallest where the challenges are the greatest. That does not mean the rewards aren't meaningful, but it is the context of those rewards and the expectations that one sets for success that truly inform us when we are steering toward a final draft. Review excerpted from my blog: [...]
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Reviewed in the United States on October 3, 2011
F
Verified Purchase
Farnoosh Brock
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Attention: Writers! This book is for all of us, new or old pros at the craft.
Format: Paperback
Some - because it's too many to list ALL - of reasons I loved Bird by Bird as a writer, an entrepreneur and a human being with stories to share and thoughts to voice - just like you. I wish I had read the Kindle version so I could highlight every chapter and re-read them later, but I got the physical book to add it to the small shelf of books I still keep in my office, and next to the copy of my most favorite book on the topic: On Writing by Stephen King. Bird by Bird is now the 2nd best and useful book I have read on writing. If I weren't inspired to write before, I felt my body fill up with reasons that now draw me to writing. If I had voices of doubt, the ones that slip into your head at 4am and whisper, "Who are you to write? What do you have to say that others want to read?", which I did, I am now courageous enough to ignore them. They don't go away but I can say, screw you, I'm writing anyway. I now can't not write and this feeling is one that I just can't put a price on. For that alone, I'm overjoyed. But there's more. For starters, it's the way she tells you to write about your childhood. It's the simplicity of this advice, and the way she just calls you to do it. I loved her just for that. Write about your childhood even if it was terrible, even if it was dark and lonely, for it shaped you into who you are and who you are is a unique voice for the world to hear. Okay I added all of that but she says it more beautifully and the gist of it says that thou must write about thy childhood especially when you do not know where to start. Make it a good story, turn the bad characters into a description that if they were to read your book, they would not recognize themselves except for their actions - that's apparently how you save yourself from libel - and then just write. I cried at various points in this book and the whole spiel about childhood was one of them, but the others were when she described why we write, and what brings us to the blank page, and how it's not about being published - and it really isn't, I've been published twice and my book has ranked among best-selling categories and sold thousands of copies and it was fun yes but writing is about so much more. If you weren't enough before you published, she quotes someone, then you won't be enough after, and that will stay with me. We all write for our own reasons, and if you feel drawn to writing, if you feel a call to writing and you have been resisting it, stop. Ignoring this urge is like neglecting hunger or thirst just because you are too stubborn to accept the laws of nature. Go with the flow, drop your excuses and write what you feel called upon to write. I also love the writing style of Bird by Bird. She does not break down writing into distinct categories and address each. She simply tells us stories and personal experience and her amazing nuggets of wisdom come through, just oozing out of the page. It is the stories that help you remember the bigger points she was making, and a very similar style as King's On Writing, which helps you learn not just about writing but about the writer's life and highs and lows and how writing integrates into their life, and the big picture. Bird by Bird is sweet, refreshing, funny, and even if Lamott over-dramatizes the life of an author - or perhaps, mine is under-dramatic, who knows - I love her for it. I love that she was oh so vulnerable, and how she dished out tough love and great advice and in the end, simply encouraged us to write. Just write those stories down and do it for reasons that go well beyond publication, fortune, fame, or other dreams that you may have for your writing, because writing is its own sweet delicious fulfilling reward. Add this book to your list of must-read books, my writer friends, and let's put our stories out in the world if not for anyone but ourselves.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 28, 2015
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Verified Purchase
Caryss Wood-Behan
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 4
Lamott's "Bird by Bird" is a real tweet
Format: Paperback
In "Bird by Bird," Anne Lamott relates the growing pains felt by all fledgling writers, including herself at one time, and the importance of staying on course until the job of writing is done. The book is sown with plenty of humorous anecdotes, zany analogies and colorful metaphors - in short, the emblematic, original style of writing for which Anne Lamott is best known. "Bird by Bird" does not deviate from this signature style by drifting into territories of discussion about proper grammar, form and other pedestrian aspects of writing. She feathers her nest in a creative, engaging format, filling it with stories of her earlier days as a writer and interspersing them with tips and lessons learned along the way. There is no elitism in "Bird by Bird." Lamott demonstrates her humanness in the incidents she shares. When a friend calls to say that her book has been published readers will empathize with Lamott's natural feelings of jealousy and inferiority. When she ends up writing about those unpleasant emotions, the lesson becomes apparent that any topic - especially one that is universally felt, experienced and, therefore, understood - has the potential to be fashioned into the written form. Later on, the author reveals the anxiety and knuckle-cracking anticipation she experiences while awaiting feedback on a manuscript submission. It is impossible not to feel jitters of sympathy as we wait for the outcome to be revealed. For the most part, "Bird by Bird" covers the emotional and creative expanse experienced by the writer from the moment he first coaxes his work onto paper until such time that he deems it finished. Lamott reminds writers that aspiring to have their works published should not trump the sheer joy of writing for writing's sake. The book could prove a valuable addition for a writer who has already begun to see some positive affirmation and movement where his writing is concerned. For a beginner, however, this book might miss the mark due to its absence of writing fundamentals. Lamott does address this subject, however, in a general sense when she alludes to writers' groups and writers' workshops. The few flutters of grandstanding that occasionally manifest as Lamott tells her story seem more than justified; she deserves recognition, to be sure. Despite a thorny start, Lamott has arrived - observing, reflecting and, finally, writing it all down from her position in the catbird seat.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 13, 2009
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Verified Purchase
Diana Paraskevas
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
One of the Most Emotionally Honest Books on Creativity
Format: Paperback
Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life endures not because it offers rigid writing instruction, but because it understands the emotional reality of trying to make art while remaining a functioning human being. Lamott approaches writing with humor, candor, and an unusual willingness to acknowledge the insecurity, vanity, paralysis, and vulnerability that often accompany creative work. What stands out most is the humanity of the book. The advice is practical, but the deeper value comes from the permission it gives writers to work imperfectly—to begin messily, doubt themselves, lose momentum, and continue anyway. Lamott treats creativity less as a performance of talent and more as a sustained relationship with attention, persistence, and emotional honesty. The prose itself mirrors the philosophy she advocates: conversational, alive, emotionally direct, and unconcerned with appearing overly polished. At times the tone can feel loose or anecdotal, but that looseness is also part of what makes the book feel companionable rather than instructional in a rigid sense. Beneath the warmth and humor is a serious understanding of observation. Again and again, Lamott returns to the importance of specificity, noticing, and telling the truth about experience without trying to force meaning prematurely. It’s ultimately less a manual on writing technique than a guide to surviving the psychological conditions required to keep writing at all.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 12, 2026

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