I tried everything available. Medications. Omega-3s. Nootropics. Cognitive stimulation. Frequency therapies. Drugs like Namenda, Exelon, Aricept. Nothing worked. My father — the man who taught me to ride a bike, who watched me graduate from medical school — was still slipping away.
The DiscoveryThat's when I changed tactics. If the answer wasn't in modern medicine, maybe it was in the past. I began a deep investigation into remote regions of the world with unusually low rates of Alzheimer's. My research led me to an isolated village in the Himalayas. Local beekeepers harvesting a rare honey they called Sider honey. Legend said it cleansed the blood of poisons.
I took samples to Emory University. The results were striking. The honey contained a high concentration of natural compounds that appeared capable of binding to and flushing the exact toxic metal we had found elevated in those 40,000 brain scans.
What Happened Next