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Dear Reader,

The root cause of tingling and numbness in your hands and feet isn’t age or blood sugar.

Your nerves are being starved of the 1 nutrient they need to repair and soothe pain:

>> 1 vitamin to erase nerve pain (I bet you’ve never heard of this)



If you’re taking any medication, you need to see this now.

Big Pharma’s most popular drugs drain your body of this nerve-repairing vitamin… leading to burning, tingling, and numbness.

It’s called drug-induced neuropathy… and it’s meant to keep you trapped in the medical system.

Then, doctors prescribe more nerve-pain drugs, which don’t fix neuropathy either…

They temporarily block pain signals, meanwhile your nerves continue to starve and decay… until you suddenly lose feeling in your feet, and by then the damage could be irreversible.

The $10 billion nerve-pain drug industry would hate for you to see this.

>> 1 vitamin to erase nerve pain (I bet you’ve never heard of this)






















 
e is a sweet biscuit with high sugar and fat content. Cookie dough is softer than that used for other types of biscuit, and they are cooked longer at lower temperatures. The dough typically contains flour, sugar, egg, and some type of oil or fat. It may include other ingredients such as raisins, oats, chocolate chips, or nuts. Cookie texture varies from crisp and crunchy to soft and chewy, depending on the exact combination of ingredients and methods used to create them. People in the United States and Canada typically refer to all sweet biscuits as "cookies". People in most other English-speaking countries call crunchy cookies "biscuits" but may use the term "cookies" for chewier biscuits and for certain types, such as chocolate-chip cookies. Cookies are often served with beverages such as milk, coffee, or tea and sometimes dunked, which releases more flavour by dissolving the sugars, while also softening their texture. Factory-made cookies are sold in grocery stores, convenience stores, and vending machines. Fresh-baked cookies are sold at bakeries and coffeehouses. Terminology Traditional American Christmas cookie tray In many English-speaking countries outside North America, including the United Kingdom, the most common word for a crisp cookie is "biscuit". Where biscuit is the most common term, "cookie" often only refers to one type of biscuit, a chocolate chip cookie. However, in some regions both terms are used. The container used to store cookies may be called a cookie jar. In Scotland, the term "cookie" is sometimes used to describe a plain bun. Cookies that are baked as a solid layer on a sheet pan and then cut, rather than being baked as individual pieces, are called bar cookies in American English or traybakes in British English. The word cookie dates from at least 1701 in Scottish usage where the word meant "plain bun", rather than thin baked good, and so it is not certain whether it is the same word. From 1808, the word "cookie" is attested "...in the sense of "small, flat, sweet cake" in American English. The American use is derived from Dutch koekje "little cake", which is a diminutive of "koek" ("cake"), which came from the Middle Dutch word "koke" with an informal, dialect variant koekie. Acco