Newsletter

Dear,

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)

 






 
ny sets of legs that move in metachronal rhythm. Some echinoderms locomote using the many tube feet on the underside of their arms. Although the tube feet resemble suction cups in appearance, the gripping action is a function of adhesive chemicals rather than suction. Other chemicals and relaxation of the ampullae allow for release from the substrate. The tube feet latch on to surfaces and move in a wave, with one arm section attaching to the surface as another releases. Some multi-armed, fast-moving starfish such as the sunflower seastar (Pycnopodia helianthoides) pull themselves along with some of their arms while letting others trail behind. Other starfish turn up the tips of their arms while moving, which exposes the sensory tube feet and eyespot to external stimuli. Most starfish cannot move quickly, a typical speed being that of the leather star (Dermasterias imbricata), which can manage just 15 cm (6 in) in a minute. Some burrowing species from the genera Astropecten and Luidia have points rather than suckers on their long tube feet and are capable of much more rapid motion, "gliding" across the ocean floor. The sand star (Luidia foliolata) can travel at a speed of 2.8 m (9 ft 2 in) per minute. Sunflower starfish are quick, efficient hunters, moving at a speed of 1 m/min (3.3 ft/min) using 15,000 tube feet. Many animals temporarily change the number of legs they use for locomotion in different circumstances. For example, many quadrupedal animals switch to bipedalism to reach low-level browse on trees. The genus of Basiliscus are arboreal lizards that usually use quadrupedalism in the trees. When frightened, they can drop to water below and run across the surface on their hind limbs at about 1.5 m/s for a distance of approximately 4.5 m (15 ft) before they sink to all fours and swim. They can also sustain themselves on all fours while "water-walking" to increase the distance travelled above the surface by about 1.3 m. When cockroaches run rapidly, they rear up on their two hind legs like bipedal humans; this allows them to run at spe