Dr. Anderson Found the Arctic Brain Butter.
What He Discovered About the Neurosludge Choking Your Memory —
And the Arctic Village Secret That Reverses It — Is In This Video.
Make sure your sound is turned ON and watch until the end.
4,218 people are watching this right now
What Viewers Are Saying
Verified responses from people who watched the full presentation
Margaret T.Clearwater, FL
★★★★★
My husband remembered our anniversary date without me reminding him for the first time in four years.
I almost didn't watch this — my daughter had to sit me down and hit play. My husband had been getting worse every few months. He couldn't remember the grandkids' names at Christmas dinner. I had already called two assisted living facilities. Three weeks after watching this and doing what Dr. Anderson explains, he told me a story about our first road trip in 1987. Details I had forgotten myself. I sobbed for ten minutes straight.
412 people found this helpful
Richard S.Columbus, OH
★★★★★
My neurologist scheduled a follow-up because she couldn't explain my test results.
My wife called it "another internet video" when I started watching. She's not saying that anymore. I had been losing words mid-sentence for two years — the kind that embarrass you at dinner with friends. I spent close to three thousand dollars on brain training programs and supplements that did nothing. The mechanism Dr. Anderson explains about the neurosludge finally made everything click. My doctor's office called last week to ask what changed. I read her a list of what I was doing and she went quiet for a long time.
389 people found this helpful
Linda M.Austin, TX
★★★★★
I drove to my sister's house in Buda without GPS for the first time in two years.
I was getting lost on roads I had driven for twenty years. My kids quietly took away my keys. I failed the cognitive screening my doctor gave me and she referred me to a specialist with a four-month wait. A neighbor sent me this video. I watched it twice that afternoon. I don't know exactly what week it changed, but my son noticed before I did. He handed me my keys one Sunday morning and said "Mom, I think you're back." I pulled out of the driveway without looking at my phone once.
361 people found this helpful
Dennis H.Raleigh, NC
★★★★★
I gave a toast at my son's rehearsal dinner last month — no notes, no blanks, no panic.
Six months ago I could not have done that. I used to rehearse stories three or four times before telling them because I'd lose the thread halfway through. My son knew. He'd finish my sentences and pretend it was normal. I found this presentation through a forum for caregivers — my wife has early-stage decline and I was researching for her. Turns out I needed it as much as she did. The part about the Arctic compound was the first thing in years that made scientific sense to me. We both watched it together and did it together.
298 people found this helpful
Carol W.Charleston, SC
★★★★★
My 7-year-old granddaughter stopped spelling my name on the door to my room. She said she didn't need to anymore.
She had started putting little labels on things so I wouldn't forget where I was. Breaks my heart to think about it now. My daughter set this video up on the tablet and told me to watch it before bed one night. I expected nothing — I had watched things like this before. But Dr. Anderson explains the neurosludge in a way that finally made me understand why nothing I had tried was touching the real problem. That was about two months ago. Last week my granddaughter peeled the label off my door herself. She didn't say anything. She just grinned at me.
What Viewers Are Saying
Verified responses from people who watched the full presentation
My husband remembered our anniversary date without me reminding him for the first time in four years.
I almost didn't watch this — my daughter had to sit me down and hit play. My husband had been getting worse every few months. He couldn't remember the grandkids' names at Christmas dinner. I had already called two assisted living facilities. Three weeks after watching this and doing what Dr. Anderson explains, he told me a story about our first road trip in 1987. Details I had forgotten myself. I sobbed for ten minutes straight.
412 people found this helpfulMy neurologist scheduled a follow-up because she couldn't explain my test results.
My wife called it "another internet video" when I started watching. She's not saying that anymore. I had been losing words mid-sentence for two years — the kind that embarrass you at dinner with friends. I spent close to three thousand dollars on brain training programs and supplements that did nothing. The mechanism Dr. Anderson explains about the neurosludge finally made everything click. My doctor's office called last week to ask what changed. I read her a list of what I was doing and she went quiet for a long time.
389 people found this helpfulI drove to my sister's house in Buda without GPS for the first time in two years.
I was getting lost on roads I had driven for twenty years. My kids quietly took away my keys. I failed the cognitive screening my doctor gave me and she referred me to a specialist with a four-month wait. A neighbor sent me this video. I watched it twice that afternoon. I don't know exactly what week it changed, but my son noticed before I did. He handed me my keys one Sunday morning and said "Mom, I think you're back." I pulled out of the driveway without looking at my phone once.
361 people found this helpfulI gave a toast at my son's rehearsal dinner last month — no notes, no blanks, no panic.
Six months ago I could not have done that. I used to rehearse stories three or four times before telling them because I'd lose the thread halfway through. My son knew. He'd finish my sentences and pretend it was normal. I found this presentation through a forum for caregivers — my wife has early-stage decline and I was researching for her. Turns out I needed it as much as she did. The part about the Arctic compound was the first thing in years that made scientific sense to me. We both watched it together and did it together.
298 people found this helpfulMy 7-year-old granddaughter stopped spelling my name on the door to my room. She said she didn't need to anymore.
She had started putting little labels on things so I wouldn't forget where I was. Breaks my heart to think about it now. My daughter set this video up on the tablet and told me to watch it before bed one night. I expected nothing — I had watched things like this before. But Dr. Anderson explains the neurosludge in a way that finally made me understand why nothing I had tried was touching the real problem. That was about two months ago. Last week my granddaughter peeled the label off my door herself. She didn't say anything. She just grinned at me.
447 people found this helpful