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YouTuber Dan Schaeffer says he “completely cleared” his sinuses by combining DMSO, purified water, and colloidal silver into a nasal spray. One squirt up each nose twice a day, and the results were “amazing.” “No pressure, no nothing.” Dan’s experience is not an isolated one. In 1992, Russian researchers...

270,360 просмотров • 5 дней назад •via X (Twitter)

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Erica Drum was told her son Jackson would never breathe on his own again. A hockey hit launched him headfirst into the boards. Broken neck & spine. Paralyzed. Odds of recovery: 1 in 1,000,000 Jackson is now walking and has recovered every fine motor skill he lost. What happened? His loving mother took a chance on a substance called DMSO. And what followed was nothing short of a miracle. ERICA DRUM: “[Doctors] said there was no hope of recovery… He is vent-dependent, feeding tube-dependent. We were told he is never going to eat or drink or be able to breathe independently.” “I had a friend, and she’s like, ‘Hey, I know of this thing [DMSO] that’s supposed to help spinal cord injuries, and it helps reduce the swelling.’ And I’m like, ‘Okay, well maybe we can try that.’ Because at this point, we didn’t have any options.” “We decided to try [DMSO] topically. We bought like a little rollerball one… We started that on day four or five, and by day seven, I would poke his feet or his legs, and he would open his eyes [despite being on intense painkillers].” “And then there was a PT working with him, and she felt his hip flexor fire. And they’re like, ‘Oh my gosh.’ He went from an Asia A to an Asia C, which usually is not supposed to happen.” “You’re either a severe spinal cord injury with no sensation, nothing, like an Asia A. You don’t go from an A to a C. From there, he was Asia C. And I’m still rubbing this stuff on him every chance I get.” “I mean, I would rub that thing on him probably ten times a day. What’s interesting is I was able to rub it on the left side of his body more than his right side. His left side is definitely stronger.” “The right side is slowly coming back. His hand grip on this side was like 1 pound probably four months ago. And now it’s up to 20 pounds. He literally has every single fine motor skill. It’s a matter of us now strengthening them.” “He hasn’t used his wheelchair in three weeks… We moved to the arm crutches. And now in therapy, he’s working on walking without the arm crutches.” “We were like ventilator-dependent, medication-dependent… And now we’re down to just the baclofen.” “My son is one of the only people I’ve met that does not have the nerve pain with his condition. So he is off of all nerve pain meds.” Jackson’s doctors can’t explain how he went from a quadriplegic to a walking, self-sufficient person again. But his mother attests it was the DMSO. The thing is, Jackson isn’t the only person with a story like this. 🧵

The Vigilant Fox 🦊

234,312 просмотров • 25 дней назад

Q: How do you design an amazing user experience? In the clip below, Airbnb co-founder and CEO Brian Chesky explains that one route to a great UX and word-of-mouth growth is designing the perfect experience for one person: “How do you make something for a million people? I don’t know where to start. But if you pick one person, study them, and take their journey, you can actually build something really personal. You can design something and keep iterating until they love it. Don’t stop improving it until that person loves it, and you’re not allowed to move to the second person until the first person loves it. Then you get the second person and keep iterating until they love it. And so on.” As Brian argues, designing the perfect experience for one person is a much easier place to start than trying to design something for a million people. And when people truly love your service, they become your marketing department. He uses storyboarding and tries to imagine a “10-star experience” for an Airbnb check-in as an example: “A 5-star rating typically means nothing bad happened. But what if there was a 6th star?” He proposes the following ever-improving scenarios: 6 stars: You get to your Airbnb and there’s a bottle of wine and fruit waiting for you with a hand-written note 7 stars: A limo picks you up from the airport, and when you get to the house there’s a surfboard because the host knows you like surfing 8 stars: You ride back from the airport on a giant elephant and there’s a parade in your honor 9 stars: You land at the airport and there’s 5,000 teenagers cheering your name and you do a press conference in the front lawn of your Airbnb (”The Beetles Check-In”) 10 stars: Elon Musk picks you up from the airport and says “we’re going to space” The point here is that while you might not be able to create an 8+ star experience for your customers, the act of thinking through the most perfect experience for one customer and figuring out a way to scale something close to that to all of your users can help you arrive at a user experience that is truly amazing.

Michael McGuiness

635,155 просмотров • 2 лет назад