It tells the brain you are full and it triggers signals to speed up your metabolism.
K3 SPARK MINERAL CODE
She had gained over 50 pounds in her first year of med school, and it melted off: 52 pounds in 28 days! The fat-blocking code allegedly works by overcoming “leptin resistance”. She used the Harvard nutrition lab to put together the perfect combination of ingredients. She took notes and photocopied “all the juicy pages of info”. When she looked up, she found that she was in a restricted section. So what was it, a fat blocking code or a secret mineral? If it was secret, how did she learn about it? According to the story, she was looking for a book in the library, and found a book that was not the one she was looking for, but that had a chapter called “The Fat Blocking Code”. She apparently thinks she did that I don’t. It “seemed fake” to the Harvard professors (all two of them?), so she set out to prove them wrong. She claimed to have discovered a secret mineral that would enable anyone to lose 52 lbs in 28 days without dieting or exercise. It shows her from behind at a podium facing an almost empty auditorium with only two people in the audience. She is said to have defended her thesis on stage, but the picture is strange. They say “in her experiments for her senior thesis, she stumbled upon a new fat blocking code no one has heard of before”.
Medical students don’t have specialties, and nutrition is not a medical specialty. Is she really a medical student at Harvard? What does “top medical student” mean? They say her medical specialty is nutrition. They describe Emily Senstrom as “a top medical student at Harvard”. Is that really her? Are they legitimate pictures, or might they have been photo-shopped? It starts with “before and after” pictures of Emily Senstrom that look suspicious to me. The headline says “LIFE-CHANGING: Harvard Medical Student Discovers 1 Secret Mineral That Helps You Lose 52 lbs in 28 Days.” And “Big Pharma Doesn’t Want You To Know About This”. When I clicked on “Having Trouble Sticking to a diet?” it took me to this web page. Perhaps the most ridiculous was from “keto=happiness.” It features a picture of Mark Cuban from Shark Tank and asks, “Why did Mark Cuban and the other sharks invest millions in this product?” Cuban is quoted as saying on ABC News, “It may not be a ‘miracle cure’ – but the science says it’s the closest I’ve ever seen”. They are clumsy attempts to market products that promise incredible weight loss in a short time with no diet or exercise, by just taking a pill. The numbers don’t confirm anything they are just click-bait to get you to read an ad for a dietary supplement. I’ve been getting emails with “Confirmation numbers” in the Subject Line, numbers like 711, 526, 95311. Can obese people lose weight without diet or exercise, by just taking this pill? Pull the other one!