That claim is a classic example of a “miracle cure” message, and it’s not medically reliable.
First, it doesn’t even specify what you’re supposed to take “2 tablespoons” of. Any substance that supposedly cures all of these at once—bone pain, nerve pain, cartilage issues, anxiety, depression, insomnia, rheumatism, hemorrhoids, and fatigue—is a red flag for misinformation.
These conditions are very different in cause:
- Bone/joint pain & rheumatism can involve arthritis, vitamin deficiencies, or autoimmune disease
- Nerve pain often comes from nerve damage or diabetes
- Anxiety/depression/insomnia are mental health conditions involving brain chemistry and life factors
- Hemorrhoids are a vascular/intestinal issue
- Fatigue can come from dozens of medical causes
There is no single food, drink, or home remedy that can treat all of these at once.
What these posts usually are:
- Misleading health ads or social media “remedies”
- Sometimes based on a real ingredient (like honey, apple cider vinegar, turmeric, etc.), but massively exaggerated
- Designed to sound simple so people share them
If you want, tell me what the “2 tablespoons” substance is supposed to be, and I can break down:
- whether it has any real benefits
- what it actually can and cannot do
- and any safety concerns
And if you’re dealing with any of those symptoms personally, I can also help you sort out what might actually be going on in a realistic, medical way.