That claim is not medically reliable and is a classic “miracle cure” style message.
No food or drink—taken in “two tablespoons” or any other amount—can make you “say goodbye” to:
- Bone, nerve, or cartilage pain
- Anxiety or depression
- Insomnia or chronic fatigue
These conditions come from different biological causes (nutrition, hormones, inflammation, nerve damage, sleep disorders, mental health factors), and they require specific diagnosis and treatment, not a single universal remedy.
🧠 Why these claims are misleading
They usually:
- Take one ingredient (often honey, vinegar, seeds, herbs, etc.)
- Attach exaggerated health promises to it
- Ignore dosage, individual health, and clinical evidence
Real medicine doesn’t work as a “one-size-fits-all cure.”
⚠️ What is actually true
Some natural foods can support health, but not cure multiple diseases:
- Diet changes may reduce inflammation slightly
- Exercise can improve mood and joint pain
- Sleep improvement helps fatigue and anxiety
- Proper medical treatment is required for chronic conditions
🚨 Red flags in that statement
Phrases like:
- “Say goodbye to all pain and diseases”
- “Prescription in exchange for a simple OK”
- “One remedy fixes everything”
These are strong indicators of non-medical or scam content.
