Why The Burning In Your Feet At Night Has Nothing To Do With Aging Or Circulation
"I figured it was just age. Maybe circulation. The doctor wrote a prescription and shrugged." If that sounds like you, Dr. Louis Clark — a 27-year pharmaceutical industry insider — recently walked away to expose what's actually driving the upward creep. He partnered with Dr. Barbara O'Neal on the 10-second turmeric ritual using 3 ingredients already in most American kitchens. 42,000+ Americans have followed it. The full walkthrough is below.
▶ Dr. Clark opens the walkthrough with what's been happening inside your nerves. Dr. O'Neal then reveals the ritual. Watch from the beginning for the full picture.
Free · No email required · Watch before the creep moves further
How Many Of These Warning Signs Have You Been Ignoring?
Read the list. Count how many describe a recent night — whether your nerve discomfort started with diabetes, chemotherapy, an old injury, or seemingly out of nowhere.
- Burning or pins-and-needles sensations in your feet, especially at night
- Numbness that started in your toes and is now climbing toward your ankles or calves
- Feet that feel "dead," heavy, or like they're not even there when you walk
- Sharp, electric-like jolts that come out of nowhere
- Trouble sleeping because of the tingling, or losing your balance more often
If half of those describe a recent night, every one of those warning signs traces back to the same underlying cause — one that most prescriptions were never engineered to address. They were built to silence the signal. Not stop what's driving the upward creep.
The Most Surprising Part? The Answer Was Always 10 Feet From Your Stove.
When Dr. O'Neal first started sharing her findings, the reaction was unusual — not because the underlying research was unsound, but because of what the key ingredient turned out to be.
It wasn't a new drug. It wasn't a patented compound. It wasn't anything that required a prescription pad or a specialty pharmacy.
It was something most American households already have within ten feet of the stove. Something that costs less than a single co-pay. Something that — when used the specific way Dr. O'Neal describes, at the specific time of night when the underlying process is most active — reaches what most pain medications can't physically touch.
Which is why it's almost never the first thing brought up at a routine appointment. There's no billing code for what's already in your spice rack.
Most Treatments For Neuropathy Were Designed To Mask The Pain. Not Stop What's Driving It.
Gabapentin doesn't repair nerves. It was never engineered to. The same is true for most other prescriptions for neuropathy. Lidocaine creams numb the surface of the skin for a short window — but the underlying issue continues advancing beneath them.
The entire pharmaceutical approach around peripheral neuropathy was built on one thing: signal interruption. Silencing the alarm. Not stopping what keeps setting it off.
Dr. Louis Clark, after 27 years inside the pharmaceutical industry, walked away and began publishing on a different angle. In patients with chronic peripheral nerve pain, a specific substance begins building up around the nerves in the feet and legs.
Researchers describe it as "sticky plaque" — a slow buildup that eats away at the protective coating of the peripheral nerve, leaving it exposed like an electrical wire stripped bare.
That's why the burning, numbness, and tingling get worse over time, no matter how many medications are added. It's the same underlying process whether the nerve pain began with diabetes, chemotherapy, an old injury, or seemingly out of nowhere.
And it's also why a topical cream can't reach it. Why a painkiller can't dissolve it. And why a generic B12 supplement on its own doesn't undo it.
The full explanation of what the sticky plaque is made of — and the specific Okinawan turmeric extract Dr. Barbara O'Neal identified that dissolves it in roughly 10 seconds when used correctly — is in the short presentation below. She names it on screen. She shows the brand most American homes already have in the pantry. And she walks through exactly when, and how, to use it before bed.
Three Americans. Three Different Backstories. One Ritual That Changed Everything.
Individual results vary — these reflect personal experiences shared by users.
Linda, 68
Seattle, WA
★★★★★"I remember one morning trying to enjoy my coffee, and the burning in my feet was unbearable. It felt like walking on hot coals. I was skeptical — I'd tried everything. But after a couple of weeks following the ritual, the burning wasn't as intense. That was the first time in years I felt a little hope."
Tom, 52
Austin, TX
★★★★★"The tingling had started in my toes and was creeping toward my ankles. My doctor had nothing new to suggest — just a higher dose of gabapentin. I tried the protocol, and after a few weeks the tingling wasn't as frequent. Not a miracle, but the first thing in a decade that actually moved the needle."
Eleanor, 61
Chicago, IL
★★★★★"The numbness in my feet had been getting worse for years. I was nervous about what it meant. No one ever explained it to me the way Dr. O'Neal does in her presentation. After following the steps for a few weeks, I started feeling small changes — sensations coming back. I'm grateful for any bit of relief at this point."
Linda, Tom, and Eleanor were all on the same path — tingling climbing from toes toward ankles. All three found the same ritual in the same 23-minute presentation Dr. Barbara O'Neal recorded. It's still available below, free.
Common Questions About This Approach
Why is the burning in my feet at night actually a good sign?
It sounds counterintuitive — but pain is the nerve telling you it's still alive. Once peripheral nerves are damaged enough to stop firing, you stop feeling pinches, pressure, or something sharp under your foot. At that point, the conversation tends to shift from treatment toward managing ulcers and infections. The burning is the window where the underlying cause — what researchers describe as sticky plaque around the nerves — can still be addressed before sensation is permanently lost.
Is it safe to use alongside my current medications?
The approach is based on common natural ingredients and is not intended to replace any prescribed medication. If you're on insulin, blood pressure medication, gabapentin, or anything else, always consult your physician before making changes. The protocol is intended to complement — not replace — medical care.
How is this different from gabapentin or nerve creams?
Most conventional treatments for neuropathy are designed to block pain signals or temporarily numb the affected area. This approach focuses on the protective barrier that forms around peripheral nerves — addressing why the nerves are misfiring in the first place, not just masking the sensation.
Does it work if I've had neuropathy for years?
Many people who have dealt with chronic nerve pain for a decade or longer report improvements after following the protocol consistently. Earlier action tends to produce faster results, but later-stage neuropathy has also responded in many cases.
What's the next step?
Watch the free presentation to see exactly how the ritual works, which ingredients are involved, and whether it may be appropriate for your specific situation before making any decision.
One Thing To Understand Before You Decide.
Numbness and tingling in the feet isn't a small annoyance. It's the early stage of a process that, on average, isn't caught until someone can step on something sharp and not register it. From that point, the conversation shifts from treatment toward managing ulcers, infections, and complications.
If the sensation has already started climbing — toes, to feet, now toward your ankles or calves — the timeline matters more than most people realize. The sticky plaque advances when nothing addresses it. Earlier action tends to produce faster results.
Dr. O'Neal walks through exactly what's happening, why the 10-second ritual works at this stage, and how to apply it before the upward creep moves any further.
42,000 Americans Have Already Seen This Walkthrough.
Before another month of burning, tingling, or numbness — and before another prescription that masks but doesn't address — see what Dr. O'Neal walks through in plain English.