Newsletter
Dear Reader,

The root cause of tingling and numbness in your hands and feet isn’t age or blood sugar.

Your nerves are being starved of the 1 nutrient they need to repair and soothe pain:

>> 1 vitamin to erase nerve pain (I bet you’ve never heard of this)



If you’re taking any medication, you need to see this now.

Big Pharma’s most popular drugs drain your body of this nerve-repairing vitamin… leading to burning, tingling, and numbness.

It’s called drug-induced neuropathy… and it’s meant to keep you trapped in the medical system.

Then, doctors prescribe more nerve-pain drugs, which don’t fix neuropathy either…

They temporarily block pain signals, meanwhile your nerves continue to starve and decay… until you suddenly lose feeling in your feet, and by then the damage could be irreversible.

The $10 billion nerve-pain drug industry would hate for you to see this.

>> 1 vitamin to erase nerve pain (I bet you’ve never heard of this)






















 
wers, also known as blossoms and blooms, are the reproductive structures of flowering plants. Typically, they are structured in four circular levels around the end of a stalk. These include: sepals, which are modified leaves that support the flower; petals, often designed to attract pollinators; male stamens, where pollen is presented; and female gynoecia, where pollen is received and its movement is facilitated to the egg. When flowers are arranged in a group, they are known collectively as an inflorescence. The development of flowers is a complex and important part in the life cycles of flowering plants. In most plants, flowers are able to produce sex cells of both sexes. Pollen, which can produce the male sex cells, is transported between the male and female parts of flowers in pollination. Pollination can occur between different plants, as in cross-pollination, or between flowers on the same plant or even the same flower, as in self-pollination. Pollen movement may be caused by animals, such as birds and insects, or non-living things like wind and water. The colour and structure of flowers assist in the pollination process. After pollination, the sex cells are fused together in the process of fertilisation, which is a key step in sexual reproduction. Through cellular and nuclear divisions, the resulting cell grows into a seed, which contains structures to assist in the future plant's survival and growth. At the same time, the female part of the flower forms into a fruit, and the other floral structures die. The function of fruit is to protect the seed and aid in its dispersal away from the mother plant. Seeds can be dispersed by living things, such as birds who eat the fruit and distribute the seeds when they defecate. Non-living things like wind and water can also help to disperse the se