Two gummies daily. That's the whole protocol.
Here's what I've watched happen, again and again.
Week 1: They Notice It After Loud Days
A long meeting. A workout with headphones in. A drive home through traffic.
Normally their ears would feel wrung-out for hours after — that muffled, full feeling that used to take half the evening to fade.
By day five, it fades faster. Sometimes within minutes.
Their sleep gets better too. That's just their nervous system finally getting magnesium it's been short on for a decade.
The ear recovery is the first sign it's reaching where it needs to.
Week 3: The Ringing Gets Quieter
The tinnitus they'd assumed was permanent — the whine on waking, the ringing after a long meeting — gets quieter.
Not gone entirely yet. Quieter.
One patient told me he sat in his car after work and could hear the engine clearly. Just the engine. No ringing on top.
He'd forgotten what that sounded like.
Month 2: They Start Catching Things
This is the month they tell me stories.
One patient at his daughter's recital. She was eight. One line in the whole show.
For two years he'd caught her words by bracing — leaning in, watching her lips, piecing it together. Coming home drained from the effort.
This time he just heard her. Every word, the first time, without trying.
He turned to his wife and said, "That was easy."
She didn't say anything. She just squeezed his hand.
She knew.
Month 6: They Stop Bracing
By month six, the small things start disappearing.
The morning hearing-check — gone. The dread before phone calls — gone. The TV volume creeping up one notch a week — gone.
Their partner notices first. "You stopped flinching when people talk to you from across the room."
They hadn't realized they were doing it.
Month 12: The Audiogram
Same audiologist. Same booth. Same beeps.
The line on their chart — the one that had been sliding downward for years — stops moving.
That's not supposed to happen. Audiograms drift one direction. Every audiologist knows the shape of that curve.
A flat line, at their age, with their listening habits?
That's the result I couldn't get for my son.