Path 1: You close this page.
Nothing changes. Tomorrow you forget something important. Again. Next month the sticky notes multiply. The confusion deepens.
Six months from now, you're in a neurologist's office preparing for your Alzheimer's diagnosis. Preparing to lose yourself.
When it might have just been magnesium all along.
Path 2: You check if SPNutrition is still in stock.
Takes 30 seconds.
Tonight you take 2 gummies before bed. This week your brain fog starts lifting. You remember conversations.
Next month you're sharp again. Present. Your family sees you're "back."
Six months from now? You're not worried about Alzheimer's anymore. You have your mind back.
The choice is yours.
But please—if you're experiencing cognitive symptoms—ask your doctor to test your magnesium levels before assuming dementia.
I almost gave up hope. I almost accepted I was disappearing like my father.
But I'm still here. Sharp. Present. Living.
Because someone told me to check one thing.
Now I'm telling you.
→ Check if they are still available (89 left)
P.S. I keep that bottle of magnesium oxide on my counter. The one that said "Magnesium Glycinate" on front but had oxide in ingredients. It reminds me I almost lost everything because I trusted a label. Check your ingredient list. Make sure what's on front matches what's on back.
P.P.S. If you're on PPIs (Prilosec, Nexium), diuretics, or blood pressure medication, ask your doctor to test your magnesium. These medications deplete it. You could be severely deficient without knowing. The brain fog, forgetfulness, confusion—it might not be dementia. It might be depletion. And that's fixable.
P.P.P.S. My granddaughter drew me a picture last week with the words "I love my smart Grandma." It's on my refrigerator. Every time I see it, I remember what I almost lost. Don't wait until you're terrified of a diagnosis. If you're forgetting things, check this first. Your family needs you present. And you deserve to keep your memories.