Health Insider Special Report|Stanford Research Briefing|Neurodegenerative Prevention|Health Insider Special Report|Stanford Research Briefing|Neurodegenerative Prevention|Health Insider Special Report|Stanford Research Briefing
Your Brain Is Not Aging. It Is Being Slowly Fried by Invisible Radiation. Dr. Attia's Arctic Protocol Can Rebuild What Was Damaged — Starting in Week One.
Make sure your sound is turned ON. Watch until the end.
Reader Responses
Margaret T.Clearwater, FL
★★★★★
My husband recognized our neighbor for the first time in two years
We have lived next door to the same couple for 22 years. Last spring my husband started calling the husband by the wrong name, then by no name at all. I watched this briefing three times before I convinced him to try the protocol. Three weeks later he walked outside, saw our neighbor trimming his roses, and said his name without hesitating. I sat down on the porch steps and cried. My daughter keeps saying she finally has her father back in the room with her.
214 people found this helpful
Robert K.Columbus, OH
★★★★★
My grandson called me "sharp" for the first time in years
My grandson is 14. Last Thanksgiving he looked at me with that patient look kids get when they think you are confused. I noticed it and it cut deep. I started the protocol in January. By week four I was the one correcting the crossword answers at breakfast. He looked at me differently at Easter. No more patience face. Just his regular face. My neurologist asked what changed and I told her exactly what I had been doing. She wrote it down.
187 people found this helpful
Carol M.Raleigh, NC
★★★★★
I drove to my sister's house alone for the first time in 18 months
My children had quietly taken my car keys from the hook by the door. They did not tell me directly but I noticed they were gone. That was the moment I understood how frightened they were. I watched this video on a Tuesday night and started the protocol that Thursday. Week five I asked for my keys back. My son looked at me, then at my daughter, then handed them over without a word. I drove to my sister's house — 34 miles — and called them from her kitchen to tell them I had arrived. My son could not speak for a moment.
301 people found this helpful
James W.Nashville, TN
★★★★★
Skeptical at first — my wife proved me wrong
My wife watched this and ordered without telling me. When the package arrived I rolled my eyes and said something I am not proud of. She just smiled and put it on my side of the bathroom counter. I started taking it out of guilt more than anything. By week three I was sleeping through the night without waking up disoriented at 3 a.m. By week six I gave a toast at our granddaughter's birthday without any notes, from memory, beginning to end. My wife has not let me forget what I said about the package.
156 people found this helpful
Patricia L.Scottsdale, AZ
★★★★★
My follow-up cognitive test surprised my doctor
I had a baseline cognitive assessment in October that came back with results my doctor described as "consistent with early-stage decline." I started the protocol in November. My 90-day follow-up was in February. My doctor reviewed the scores twice and then asked me what I had been doing differently. I told her about the briefing and the protocol. She asked me to print the information and bring it to my next visit. That is not something I expected a physician to request.
243 people found this helpful
Gary S.Augusta, GA
★★★★★
I remembered our entire first date — details my wife had forgotten
My wife and I have been married 41 years. About two years ago I started losing the edges of old memories, the small details that make a story real. Last month at dinner I started describing our first date — the name of the restaurant, what she was wearing, what song was playing — and she stopped eating and just stared at me. She said she had not thought about those details in decades. I had been so afraid of losing those memories. Turns out they were still there, just buried under the static.
Reader Responses
My husband recognized our neighbor for the first time in two years
We have lived next door to the same couple for 22 years. Last spring my husband started calling the husband by the wrong name, then by no name at all. I watched this briefing three times before I convinced him to try the protocol. Three weeks later he walked outside, saw our neighbor trimming his roses, and said his name without hesitating. I sat down on the porch steps and cried. My daughter keeps saying she finally has her father back in the room with her.
214 people found this helpfulMy grandson called me "sharp" for the first time in years
My grandson is 14. Last Thanksgiving he looked at me with that patient look kids get when they think you are confused. I noticed it and it cut deep. I started the protocol in January. By week four I was the one correcting the crossword answers at breakfast. He looked at me differently at Easter. No more patience face. Just his regular face. My neurologist asked what changed and I told her exactly what I had been doing. She wrote it down.
187 people found this helpfulI drove to my sister's house alone for the first time in 18 months
My children had quietly taken my car keys from the hook by the door. They did not tell me directly but I noticed they were gone. That was the moment I understood how frightened they were. I watched this video on a Tuesday night and started the protocol that Thursday. Week five I asked for my keys back. My son looked at me, then at my daughter, then handed them over without a word. I drove to my sister's house — 34 miles — and called them from her kitchen to tell them I had arrived. My son could not speak for a moment.
301 people found this helpfulSkeptical at first — my wife proved me wrong
My wife watched this and ordered without telling me. When the package arrived I rolled my eyes and said something I am not proud of. She just smiled and put it on my side of the bathroom counter. I started taking it out of guilt more than anything. By week three I was sleeping through the night without waking up disoriented at 3 a.m. By week six I gave a toast at our granddaughter's birthday without any notes, from memory, beginning to end. My wife has not let me forget what I said about the package.
156 people found this helpfulMy follow-up cognitive test surprised my doctor
I had a baseline cognitive assessment in October that came back with results my doctor described as "consistent with early-stage decline." I started the protocol in November. My 90-day follow-up was in February. My doctor reviewed the scores twice and then asked me what I had been doing differently. I told her about the briefing and the protocol. She asked me to print the information and bring it to my next visit. That is not something I expected a physician to request.
243 people found this helpfulI remembered our entire first date — details my wife had forgotten
My wife and I have been married 41 years. About two years ago I started losing the edges of old memories, the small details that make a story real. Last month at dinner I started describing our first date — the name of the restaurant, what she was wearing, what song was playing — and she stopped eating and just stared at me. She said she had not thought about those details in decades. I had been so afraid of losing those memories. Turns out they were still there, just buried under the static.
198 people found this helpful