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Jimi's Daily Health Articles

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Jimi, modern pain science has uncovered something remarkable:

Your nervous system can become so overprotective that it continues sending pain signals long after the original injury has healed.

In other words… The alarm keeps ringing, even when the fire is out.

Researchers now call this central sensitization, and it's one of the reasons chronic stress and chronic pain are so deeply connected.

When your body spends months, or years, in survival mode, your nervous system becomes stuck on high alert.

Everything changes.

  • Your muscles stay tense.
  • Inflammation can become more difficult to regulate.
  • Your sleep suffers.
  • Your energy drops.
  • And your brain becomes more sensitive to pain.

This is why SO many people keep searching for the next supplement, medication, or therapy... yet never experience lasting relief.

They're treating the symptoms without helping their nervous system feel safe again.

That's exactly why I created my free live webclass: The Missing Link to Healing

This Friday at 12:00 PM EDT

I'll show you why nervous system regulation is one of the most overlooked pieces of the healing puzzle, and how it influences far more than stress alone.

I'll also guide you through a simple daily nervous system reset practice that takes about 10 minutes and has helped thousands of people begin shifting their bodies out of survival mode

And toward a state that supports rest, recovery, and healing.

Research shows that even brief sessions of slow, controlled breathing can activate your body's parasympathetic ("rest and digest") response,

With measurable effects on heart rate variability and stress physiology.

If you've been feeling stuck

If you've tried everything, or if you simply want to understand why your body may not be healing the way it should,,

I hope you'll join me

>>> Save My Spot & Learn How to Calm the Pain-Stress Cycle

I'll see you live on Friday.
Wishing you health and happiness,
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Plant-Based Foods Lower Cholesterol

By Chauncey Crandall, M.D.

Diets high in saturated fats, trans fats, and cholesterol — which are found in meat, dairy products, and eggs — raise body cholesterol levels, increasing heart attack risk. Foods high in saturated fat are especially dangerous because they can trigger the body to produce extra cholesterol.

Plant-based eating refers to diets that focus not only on fruits and vegetables, but also nuts, seeds, oils, whole grains, legumes, and beans. These diets are easier to follow for people who don’t want to become complete vegetarians or vegans, but want to work toward a healthier diet.

Special: Discover Why Your Spice Rack Could Be Your Medicine Cabinet

Plant-based meals will help lower your cholesterol. The point is that you don’t have to give up foods you love; you just need to be more strategic and use healthy substitutes.

For instance, if you love cheeseburgers, eating less meat (and leaner cuts) along with more vegetables, fruits, and whole grains can lower your total cholesterol by 25 percent or more.

Cutting back on saturated fat (found in meat and dairy products) and trans fats (such as partially hydrogenated oils) can reduce cholesterol by 5 percent to 10 percent.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
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Hey Jimi,
Most people think about cancer after something goes wrong.
A diagnosis.
A scare.
A family history that suddenly feels too close.
A follow-up appointment that brings back old fear.
But Dr. Joel Fuhrman, has spent more than 35 years helping people ask a different question:
What can we do now?
At the Plant-Based Cancer Solutions Summit 2.0, Dr. Fuhrman brings together 30+ experts to explore how nutrition, lifestyle, and smarter daily choices can support cancer prevention, recovery, survivorship, and long-term wellness.
>> Join Dr. Fuhrman and 30+ experts at the Plant-Based Cancer Solutions Summit 2.0! Register for $0 <<
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This summit is for anyone who wants clearer answers about:
  • What to eat when cancer risk feels personal
  • How to support the body during or after treatment
  • Which plant-based foods matter most
  • How to reduce confusion around supplements and lifestyle advice
  • How to make more informed decisions with your care team
Cancer can make people feel like everything is out of their hands.
But your daily choices still matter.
And this summit will help you understand which choices deserve your attention.
To wiser choices and stronger health,
Kim
P.S. If you’ve been waiting for clear, trusted guidance on nutrition and cancer, this is your invitation. Save your spot today.
Save your spot now!
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years

The Antibiotic That Was in Your Kitchen All Along​

New science confirms an ancient remedy outperforms a first-line pharmaceutical — without the side effects or the superbug problem.

Rand Paul Issues Subpoena Forcing Fauci to Testify Under Oath​

An inside source with knowledge of Sen. Rand Paul's plans told The Defender on condition of anonymity that Dr. Anthony Fauci is expected next month to testify under oath before the U.S. Senate Committee on Homeland Security & Governmental Affairs about "everything" - from his involvement in funding gain-of-function research that may have created COVID-19 to the subsequent cover-up of a possible lab leak.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Your immune system and nervous system are constantly communicating.
When your body spends long periods in a heightened stress response, it doesn't only impact your mood or sleep. It also changes how immune cells behave.
This helps explain why allergy symptoms often become worse during periods of chronic stress, even when pollen counts or environmental exposures haven't changed dramatically.
The goal isn't simply to reduce stress.
It's to understand how nervous system regulation, immune resilience, and inflammation work together so your body becomes less reactive overall.
Allergies & Asthma: From Struggle to Relief Naturally explores these connections through expert presentations on environmental medicine, immune regulation, nutrition, trauma, and natural therapies that support long-term symptom improvement.
Register free using the image above.
So thankful that you're making an investment in your health, your life and yourself.
Because health means everything,​
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Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Hi Jimi,

Thank you for joining me so far for my latest docuseries, The Human Shutdown!

Our brand-new Episode 2 has just gone live!

Use this link to watch this brand new episode now
Episode 2: Brain Under Attack: Alzheimer’s, Brain Fog, and Neurological Breakdown…

Focuses on something many people are quietly experiencing but rarely get real answers about, such as:

  • Unexplainable brain fog
  • Mood shifts that creep up out of nowhere
  • Memory that doesn't feel as sharp as it used to
  • Cognitive decline is showing up earlier and earlier in life

For most people, the answer they receive is a shrug and a prescription.

No investigation into what's driving it. No curiosity about why it started.

Just a label, a pill, and an appointment in three months.

But the brain doesn't break down randomly.

There are causes. There are patterns.

And there are researchers who have been finding them for years…

…even when the system has worked hard to keep those findings quiet.

That's why in this episode, we're joined by researchers and clinicians who are willing to go there… and say what most won't:

  • Dr. Chris Exley believes aluminum accumulation in brain tissue is the cause of Alzheimer's disease and explains why that research keeps getting suppressed.

  • Dr. Brian Hooker warns that if current trends continue, one in two children in the United States may carry an autism diagnosis by 2032.

  • Dr. Michael Karlfeldt says the brain demands 30% of all your energy at rest, and what happens to your mood, memory, and cognition when that energy supply begins to fail.

  • Martha Carlin's search for answers about her husband's Parkinson's diagnosis led her to discover that the disease may be preceded by up to 15 years of gut dysfunction.

  • Dr. Michelle Perro says glyphosate, now found in virtually all of us, kills the keystone gut microbes responsible for producing the neurotransmitters that run your brain.

That is where we are going in tonight's episode.

Watch Episode 2 of The Human Shutdown here
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years

Lime Juice Could Save 100’s of Thousands of Lives Each Year​



An impressive array of research on lime juice from the National Library of Medicine indicates that it could either cure or greatly accelerate healing time from a variety of life-threatening illnesses, including:

  • Sickle cell anemia (SCA): According to the CDC, SCA afflicts about 95,000 Americans and is diagnosed in 1 in every 500,000 African-American births. A hereditary blood disorder, SCA is characterized by an abnormality in the oxygen-carrying hemoglobin molecule in red blood cells. A clinical trial on lime juice was recently found to reduce painful episodes (50.0% lime juice intervention versus 92.7% control), febrile illness (46.6% lime juice intervention versus 87.3% control), and hospital admission rate (3.4% lime juice intervention versus 34.5% control) for sickle cell anemia in children.
  • Malaria: Malaria is a mosquito-borne parasitic disease, which the WHO estimates causes 219 million cases of illness resulting in 660,000 deaths each year. A wide range of highly toxic drugs are used to treat the disease, but a recent study found that lime juice greatly increased malarial clearance when combined with standard drug therapy.[1] They concluded: “Lime juice, when used with the appropriate antimalarial, may enhance malaria parasite clearance, especially in those with uncomplicated malaria.”
  • Bacterial Agents in Food: A recent study found that the popular food known as ceviche, naturally containing pathogenic agents from fish, could be completely sanitized with lime juice. Both Vibrio parahaemolyticus and Salmonella enterica (two common causes of food poisoning) were all reduced to below detection limits through the addition of lime extract.[2]
  • Disinfecting water: Lime has been found to enhance the disinfection of water by killing both norovirus and Escherichia coli.[3] Lime has also been found to kill the cholera pathogen, which is believed to affect 3–5 million people and cause 100,000–130,000 deaths a year as of 2010.[4]
  • Killing pancreatic cancer: Pancreatic cancer is a notoriously difficult-to-treat type of cancer. Lime juice was found to induce programmed cell death in pancreatic cancer cells.[5]
  • Stopping Smoking: Likely the most preventable cause of death on this planet, a clinical trial comparing nicotine gum to lime juice extract found “Fresh lime can be used effectively as a smoking cessation aid.”[6]
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Pain is not only something you feel in your body.
It also reshapes your brain.
When pain has been present for months or years, the brain and nervous system can become increasingly efficient at producing pain signals, even after the original injury or inflammation has improved.
Researchers call this central sensitization. The nervous system becomes more reactive, amplifying sensations that previously would not have caused discomfort.
Fortunately, the brain remains adaptable throughout life.​
The same process that allows pain pathways to strengthen also allows healthier pathways to develop through movement, nervous system regulation, stress reduction, and targeted therapeutic approaches.
Becoming Pain Free: Healing the Root Causes of Chronic Pain features experts who discuss the connection between the brain, emotions, movement, and chronic pain, offering evidence-based strategies that support lasting recovery.
Join using the image above and get great bonus talks and guides.
So thankful that you're making an investment in your health, your life and yourself.
Because health means everything,​
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Your brain is often treated as though it operates independently. It's some magical unknown creature.
In reality, your brain relies on constant communication with the rest of the body.
And one of the most important conversations happens in the gut.
The microbes that live there help produce compounds that influence neurotransmitters, support the production of short chain fatty acids, and interact with the immune system every moment of every day.
I'm not saying gut bacteria directly determine your thoughts.
But the environment inside your digestive system helps shape the chemistry your brain depends on.
When that environment becomes disrupted, the effects are not always limited to digestion.
Changes in focus, memory, motivation, and mental stamina can all become part of the picture.
My friend Jason Prall, integrative health practitioner and author of Beyond Longevity, has been studying these connections for years.
He is hosting a free live workshop called Fix My Broken Brain this week where he explains how gut health, immune activity, and brain function are connected, and why supporting one system often begins by understanding the others.
Save your seat for the Fix My Broken Brain workshop here.
So thankful that you're making an investment in your health, your life and yourself.
Because health means everything,​
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Here's a quick reminder about our webinar scheduled for today Raw Food: Does it really make a difference?

If you are already registered for it, great! If not...

Most of us have heard the various never-ending debates within nutrition circles about what the best diet is for human health. Carnivore, keto, paleo, vegan, etc. There is plenty of debate within the plant-based community as well. How much fat, protein, starches, fruits, vegetables, raw food, cooked food, etc. should be consumed. It's all very confusing!

If you would like to consider a rational, informative, scientifically-backed perspective on raw food diets vs. starch-based diets, we have a fantastic resource for you.

We invite you to join us today. The webinar is scheduled for two times:

Wednesday, July 1st at:
11 AM and 5 PM Pacific Time
2 PM and 8 PM Eastern Time
8 PM (Wednesday) and 2 AM (Thursday) Central European Time
4 AM and 10 AM Eastern Australian Time (Thursday)
etc.


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Click here to register for the webinar:

https://event.webinarjam.com/o8210/register/yl0kqh6l

In this webinar, you'll learn:
  • Why Raw - the numerous benefits of raw fruits and vegetables
  • The effects of selected "cooked food toxins" on the body
  • How to minimize carcinogenic substances in one's diet
  • How to have the most energy
  • The safest cooking methods and why
  • A scientifically-backed perspective on the spectrum of dietary health
  • The benefits of raw and plant-based eating compared to conventional eating
  • A rational, encouraging approach that doesn't make anyone wrong
  • And more!

We will also share details about our 12-month Mastering Raw Food Nutrition online and interactive program!

We invite you to join us for this free webinar.

We hope to see you there!
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years

🐿️ CREATURE FEATURE 🐿️

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Peacock Spider

The male peacock spider is no bigger than a watermelon seed, and somehow pulls off the most dazzling courtship display in the animal kingdom. When a female is watching, he raises a fan of iridescent flaps from his abdomen — like a tropical bird — and begins to dance, waving his legs in choreographed patterns. Researchers have found that females are brutally selective judges, and a male whose moves don't make the cut risks becoming her next meal rather than her mate.​
They're native to Australia, each with their own distinct color pattern and dance style. Most people have never heard of them, which makes this VIDEO something you won't forget.​


WORD OF THE WEEK
Noosphere:
The “sphere of human thought” – the collective field of ideas shaping life on Earth.

Your lungs shouldn't be your air filter

Your home's air can be up to 100x dirtier than what's outside. Dust, mold spores, pet dander, smoke, VOCs off-gassing from cleaning products, all of it circulating through the same air you breathe 20,000 times a day. If you've been dealing with unexplained congestion, itchy eyes, or that low-grade fatigue that won't lift, your indoor air might be the culprit.​


 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years

🍎 NUTRITION 101 🍎

SHILAJIT: A mineral-rich resin used in Ayurvedic medicine, known for boosting energy, stamina, and nutrient absorption. It's especially high in fulvic acid, which supports mitochondrial function. This is one to check out.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
If you're facing a chronic illness, chances are you've spent a lot of time asking one question:



"What else can I do?"



A different medication, a better supplement. a cleaner diet, another specialist?



But what if the real question isn't just what you're giving your body...



...but whether your body is in a state where it can actually respond?



This is something most people… including many healthcare providers… rarely talk about.



Medication and nutrition tell your cells what to do.



Your nervous system determines whether your body is in a state where it can respond.



When your nervous system is constantly stuck in fight-or-flight, your body shifts its priorities from repair and regeneration to survival.



That's why researchers now recognize chronic stress as a major contributor to many of today's leading chronic diseases,



Including heart disease, type 2 diabetes, autoimmune disorders, depression, gastrointestinal disorders, and poorer outcomes in people living with cancer.



The encouraging news? Your nervous system can be trained.



And one of the most powerful tools we have for doing that is meditation.



Not because meditation "cures" disease...



But because it helps create the internal conditions where your body is better able to do what it was designed to do: regulate inflammation, support immune function, restore balance, and repair damaged tissue.



This isn't just ancient wisdom anymore.



Modern research has shown that regular meditation can help lower blood pressure, improve heart rate variability, reduce stress hormones, decrease inflammation, improve sleep quality, and enhance emotional resilience…



All of which influence your body's ability to heal.



Yet most people have never been taught how to meditate in a way that creates these physiological changes.



That's exactly what I’ll share in The Missing Link to Healing on July 3rd at 12 PM EDT.



After nearly 20 years studying meditation, breathwork, nervous system regulation, and holistic healing with teachers and experts around the world,



I’ve has helped thousands of people understand one of the most overlooked principles of healing:



Your body cannot consistently heal while it believes it's in danger.



In this free online webclass, you'll discover why your nervous system may be the missing link in your healing journey



And how learning to regulate it can help support every other healthy choice you're already making.



If you've been doing everything you can and still feel like something is missing...



This is a webclass you won't want to miss.



Reserve your free seat today and discover why healing begins by teaching your body it's safe enough to respond.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Does cold exposure train your cells to age better
Cold plunges have gone mainstream.
Athletes swear by them. Wellness influencers dunk themselves into tubs of ice water at sunrise. Social feeds are full of shivering people claiming sharper focus, better recovery, and even longer life. But here’s the interesting part, science is starting to catch up.
A new study suggests that repeated cold exposure may actually change how your cells respond to stress in ways that could potentially support healthier aging. That doesn’t mean ice baths are a magical fountain of youth. But it does point to something fascinating about the human body, and that is that your cells can adapt. And sometimes, a little discomfort may help them become more resilient.

Your Cells Are Constantly Under Pressure

Every day, your cells deal with stress. Not emotional stress. Cellular stress. This includes things like:
  • Inflammation
  • Environmental toxins
  • Poor sleep
  • Intense exercise
  • Heat and cold
  • Oxidative damage
  • Normal wear-and-tear from aging
Over time, damaged proteins and worn-out cell parts start to pile up. If your body can’t clear them efficiently, the system gets messy. That mess is linked to aging and diseases like Alzheimer’s, cardiovascular disease, and metabolic disorders.
Thankfully, your cells come equipped with a cleanup crew. One of the most important systems is called autophagy. Think of autophagy as your cells’ recycling and repair program. It identifies damaged components, breaks them down, and reuses the useful pieces. It’s cellular housekeeping and it matters enormously for healthy aging. When autophagy works well, cells tend to function better under stress. When it doesn’t? Problems accumulate. That’s where cold exposure enters the story.

What the Study Found

Researchers recruited ten healthy young men and had them undergo cold-water immersion at 14°C (57°F) for one hour a day over seven consecutive days. Blood samples were taken before and after the cold exposure period to examine how their cells reacted. At first, the cold stressed the body significantly. That’s not surprising. Cold exposure is a shock to the system. But after repeated exposure, something changed.
The participants’ cells began showing stronger autophagic activity, meaning their cellular cleanup systems became more active and efficient. At the same time, markers linked to cellular damage and dysfunctional stress responses began to decrease.
So what does that mean in plain English? Their cells appeared to adapt.
Instead of struggling against the cold, the body started learning how to handle it better. The researchers described this as improved “cellular cold tolerance.” And that’s the really exciting idea here. Carefully controlled stress may help train cells to become more resilient overall.

Why Mild Stress Can Be Good for You

This concept isn’t new, exercise works this way too.
When you lift weights, run intervals, or do cardio, you’re technically stressing your body. Muscles get damaged. Energy systems get challenged. But afterward, the body rebuilds stronger. Scientists call this phenomenon hormesis.
Small doses of stress can trigger beneficial adaptations, and cold exposure may be another form of hormetic stress. The body responds by activating repair pathways, improving stress resistance, and potentially strengthening cellular maintenance systems. That doesn’t mean “more stress is always better.” Quite the opposite. Too much stress overwhelms the system. But the right amount, followed by proper recovery, can encourage adaptation.
It’s a bit like teaching your cells how to become more capable under pressure.

The Mitochondria Connection

Aging research increasingly points toward one tiny but critical structure inside your cells, and these are the mitochondria.
These are the “power plants” of the cell. They produce the energy your body needs to function. As we age, mitochondrial function often declines. Energy production becomes less efficient. Inflammation rises. Cells become more vulnerable to damage. That’s why researchers are obsessed with mitochondrial health right now.
Cold exposure appears to interact with these systems in interesting ways. When the body encounters cold, it has to produce more heat and energy to maintain core temperature. That process challenges mitochondria, potentially in a productive way.
Other research suggests that improving mitochondrial efficiency may help support healthier aging, exercise capacity, metabolism, and even cognitive health. Again, we’re early in the science. But the broader pattern is compelling. Cells that adapt well to stress tend to age better.

Before You Fill a Bathtub With Ice…

There’s an important reality check here. The previously discussed study was small. Very small. Only ten participants were involved, all of them young healthy males. That means we cannot confidently say the same effects happen in women, older adults, or people with health conditions. We also don’t know:
  • Whether the benefits last long-term
  • What the ideal cold exposure protocol is
  • Whether shorter sessions work just as well
  • How cold is “cold enough”
  • Whether the same effects come from cold showers or winter swimming
In other words, promising does not mean proven. Cold exposure isn’t safe for everyone. People with cardiovascular issues, circulation problems, or certain medical conditions should be cautious and talk with a healthcare professional first. More is definitely not better here. Extreme cold can be dangerous.

So… Should You Try It?

Possibly. But you don’t need to become an ice-bath warrior to potentially benefit. The bigger lesson from this research is that the body thrives on adaptive challenges. Modern life is often very comfortable:
  • Climate-controlled rooms
  • Constant food availability
  • Minimal physical stress
  • Endless sitting
Our biology evolved in a far more demanding environment. Strategic exposure to mild stressors like exercise, temperature changes, fasting, good sleep, and movement may help keep our cellular repair systems engaged. Cold exposure could be one useful tool in that toolbox. And importantly, it’s okay to start small.

Practical Ways to Experiment With Cold Exposure

If you’re curious, here are realistic approaches:
  • Finish your shower cold. Start with 15–30 seconds at the end of a warm shower and build gradually. You do not need to suffer heroically
  • Try outdoor walks in cooler weather. Without immediately bundling into maximum warmth. A little temperature exposure may help your body adapt naturally
  • Consider cold water swimming but carefully. If you enjoy it and can do it safely. Always prioritize safety, supervision, and gradual adaptation
  • Focus on consistency, not extremes. The study showed adaptation over repeated exposure. Tiny habits done consistently usually beat dramatic one-off challenges
And be aware that cold exposure cannot compensate for:
  • Poor sleep
  • Ultra-processed diets
  • Chronic stress
  • Lack of exercise
  • Smoking
  • Heavy alcohol use
The fundamentals to a healthy lifestyle still matter most.

The Key Takeaways

The most exciting part of this research isn’t really about ice baths. It’s about adaptability.
Your body is not static. Your cells are constantly responding to your environment, learning from challenges, repairing damage, and adjusting their defenses. That’s hopeful, because healthy aging may not come from eliminating every stressor in life. It may come from giving the body the right kinds of challenges, in the right doses, so it stays capable, flexible, and resilient over time.
Cold exposure might be one piece of that puzzle. Not magic. Not immortality. Just another reminder that the human body is far more adaptable than we often realize.​
Yours in good health,​
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
I came across a study this week that I genuinely wasn't expecting.



It wasn't about a new drug or a high-tech intervention. It was about garlic. Specifically, what happens to garlic when it's aged, and what that does inside your body.



And it has nothing to do with gut health or immunity, which is where most garlic research lives. This one is about muscle. The slow, quiet loss of strength and function that creeps in as we get older, the kind most doctors shrug off as just part of aging.



Except a research team in Japan just showed it doesn't have to be.



Here's the story.



When garlic goes through a slow aging process (not cooking, not fermenting, but a specific long-term transformation), it produces a compound that does something extraordinary in the body.



It activates an enzyme in your fat cells. That enzyme triggers a well-known anti-aging pathway called SIRT1. This causes your fat tissue to release a protective molecule called eNAMPT into your bloodstream. That molecule travels to your hypothalamus, the master control centre in your brain. And your brain responds by sending stronger signals to your skeletal muscles.



Fat talks to brain. Brain talks to muscle. And a compound from aged garlic starts the entire conversation.



It's a communication pathway between three organs that nobody had connected before. And it was hiding in garlic this whole time.



When the researchers tested it in aging mice, frailty scores dropped. Skeletal muscle strength increased. Even core body temperature, which typically declines with age, was restored.



In a human study, the same compound boosted circulating levels of eNAMPT, particularly in participants with adequate fat tissue.



And if you’re wondering what eNAMPT is: eNAMPT is essential for producing NAD+, a molecule your cells rely on for energy production, DNA repair, and cellular protection. NAD+ declines significantly as we age, and that decline is now considered one of the central drivers of aging itself.



This isn't just a muscle story. It's a cellular energy story. A resilience story. The kind of finding that makes you look at a humble bulb of garlic in a completely different way.



So if this study has you curious about aged garlic extract, it's widely available as a supplement and has been consumed for generations without reported adverse effects. And in the meantime, keep cooking with fresh garlic generously too. It may not contain this specific compound, but your gut bacteria love it all the same.





Yours for better health, naturally,
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
Take this free 7-question quiz to discover your metabolism type — Efficient Burner, Variable Pacer, or Slow Starter — and get personalized, practical tips for better energy, weight balance, and daily habits. For informational purposes only.


✍️ Take Quiz!
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
When most people think about allergies, they picture sneezing, itchy eyes, congestion, or a runny nose.
Allergies go beyond your sinuses.
And anti-histamines aren't built to ease those kinds of symptoms.
During an allergic response, immune cells release signaling molecules that communicate throughout the body. That communication can influence your sleep, your energy, your ability to focus, and even how mentally sharp you feel throughout the day.
If you've ever felt unusually tired during allergy season, struggled to concentrate, or noticed that your patience wears thin when your symptoms flare, it may not be your imagination.
Your brain is constantly responding.
Chronic allergies are often about much more than managing nasal symptoms. They reflect an ongoing conversation between the immune system, nervous system, brain, gut, and the environment around you.
Allergies & Asthma: From Struggle to Relief Naturally brings together experts in immunology, functional medicine, nutrition, environmental health, and natural therapies to explore these whole-body connections and the many factors that influence immune resilience.
Register free and receive your bonuses and guides using the image above.
So thankful that you're making an investment in your health, your life and yourself.
Because health means everything,​
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
  • Healthy Summer Cookout Survival Guide - Mama Z’s cookout guide helps you celebrate the 4th of July without feeling stuck between junk food and boring food. It is packed with gluten-free, sugar-free, and dairy-free ideas for appetizers, sides, mains, desserts, and drinks your family can actually enjoy.
  • Homemade DEET-Free Bug Repellent for Outdoor Time - Mama Z’s bug repellent guide gives you several DEET-free options for backyard gatherings, camping, fireworks, travel, and summer nights outside. It is a practical way to help your family enjoy the outdoors without reaching for harsh conventional sprays.
  • Improve Gut Health Naturally with Essential Oils - The gut is a command post for the body. It influences digestion, immune health, mood, metabolism, inflammation, and even mental clarity. That is why gut healing with essential oils should be a whole-body lifestyle plan, not a quick-fix protocol.
  • Homemade Southern Potato Salad for a Crowd Fav - Mama Z’s Southern potato salad gives you the creamy, classic cookout side people expect, but with cleaner, allergy-friendly ingredients. It is made for summer gatherings, potlucks, family cookouts, and holiday tables where you want comfort food without the usual junk.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years
New Episode · Libido, GSM & Vaginal Health · Part 1

WTF Is Happening to My Lady Parts?​

When estrogen starts to decline, the vagina is one of the first places you feel it—and one of the last things women talk about. In this episode, we’re going there.
 

Jimi

Diamond Contributor
Member For 5 Years

Kennedy Ends Emergency Use Authorization for Covid Vaccines​

HHS Secretary Kennedy Pulls Emergency Use Authorization for Covid Vaccines, But Insures They're Still Available for All Who Want Them​


 

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