Your pee will be blue. You've been warned.
Methylene Blue sounds less like a wellness supplement and more like something leaked from a government laboratory. Which, honestly, may be part of the appeal.
First developed in 1876 as a fabric dye, MB became one of the first synthetic drugs in medical history — used to treat malaria before penicillin existed, listed by the WHO as an essential medicine today, and backed by over 18,000 published studies on PubMed. And yet here we are, in 2024, with biohackers dropping it under their tongues and posting pictures of their blue tongues on social media.
How did a Victorian fabric dye end up in the supplement stacks of Silicon Valley and professional MMA fighters?
The answer is mitochondria.
This book covers: — What Methylene Blue actually is and how it works — The science behind the cognitive and energy claims (real, but more modest than the hype) — Why most MB sold online is NOT pharmaceutical grade — and why that matters — How to dose safely, starting with one drop — The trick that makes the blue disappear entirely (ascorbic acid — you're welcome) — The serotonin syndrome risk nobody talks about — MB combined with red light therapy — and the cancer research connection — The honest case against MB, written by someone who still takes it
No guru energy. No sponsored content. No pretending this is a miracle.
Just honest information from someone who went down the rabbit hole, took careful notes, and came back to tell you what's actually there.
Your pee will be blue. But now at least you'll know why.