Saturday, May 02, 2026

Thyroid medication.

Your medication has a 6-stop journey through your body. Your doctor checks Stop 2. You live at Stop 5. And the gap between those two stops is why you feel terrible while your chart says fine. 

Stop 1. You swallow your pill. T4. Levothyroxine. It enters your stomach and dissolves. No problems here. You did your part perfectly. 

Stop 2. T4 enters your bloodstream. Your pituitary gland detects it and adjusts TSH accordingly. This is where your doctor looks. TSH responds to the medication being present. She sees a number in range. Says managed. Closes your chart. Stops looking. 

But the journey isn't over. It's barely started. 

Stop 3. Your gut is supposed to convert T4 into T3 — the active hormone. This is where the journey dies for most thyroid patients. Your gut is inflamed. Permeable. The enzymes responsible for conversion can't function in a damaged environment. T4 sits in your blood unconverted. The most critical step in the entire journey fails silently while nobody monitors it. 

Stop 4. T3 never forms. The active hormone your cells need to function is never created. 80% of your T3 depends on this conversion. Without it 80% of the fuel your body runs on doesn't exist. 

Stop 5. Your cells starve. Your brain fogs because neurons need T3 to produce acetylcholine. Your heart races because cardiac rhythm depends on T3. Your muscles weaken because mitochondria need T3 to produce ATP. Your hair falls because follicles need T3 to cycle. Your bones thin because osteoblasts need T3 to build. Every cell waiting for a delivery that never arrives. 

Stop 6. You feel terrible. Every system failing. Every symptom screaming. While your doctor points at Stop 2 and says everything looks fine. 

The gap between Stop 2 and Stop 5 is ONE organ. Your gut. The organ your doctor never checks because her training stops at Stop 2. The organ that determines whether the other 4 stops ever happen. 

The 28-day gut protocol in the link in bio fixes Stop 3 so the journey completes. Because your medication isn't failing. It's getting lost. And ONE organ decides whether it ever arrives.



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