The brain fog, exhaustion, and inflammation you've been blaming on stress, aging, or burnout has a real cause.
And it's mold.
Not mold growing somewhere outside, in your walls or your basement.
Mold spores, already inside your body, that never left.
Here's exactly how that happens.
More than 70% of buildings in America have some form of past or current water damage, quietly releasing microscopic mold spores into the air without anyone ever seeing, smelling, or tasting them.
Each one of those spores carries what’s called mycotoxins, and once you breathe them in, they don't just pass through your body and leave.
They clog the exact pathway your liver depends on to filter and remove everything you breathe, eat, and absorb… your bile pathway.
It's the same pathway that's been quietly clearing harmful waste out of your body your entire life, without you ever having to think about it.
But it doesn’t stop there.
Once mold establises itself in your gut, it builds a protective shield around itself called a biofilm, a barrier specifically designed to keep your liver and immune system from ever reaching it.
That’s how it survives inside your body for years.
So instead of leaving your body the way it's supposed to, mold stays locked behind that biofilm and recirculates straight back into your bloodstream.
Over and over. Every single day.
Researchers studying mold-related illness and Chronic Inflammatory Response Syndrome (CIRS) have spent years documenting exactly how this cycle keeps people sick long after they've left the moldy building behind.
Your bile pathway isn't broken.
It's just blocked, by mold that's still inside you.
That’s why you still feel sick even after remediating, throwing out the furniture, and even moving out of a moldy place.