People with diabetic neuropathy in the feet are using this simple nerve-reset ritual to help stop the progression — before numbness, instability, and loss of mobility get worse.
At first, diabetic neuropathy in the feet can seem like something you can work around.
A little burning. A little numbness. A little instability.
But over time, it stops feeling like a foot problem — and starts feeling like your body is becoming harder to trust.
Most people are led to believe that if they are trying a treatment for diabetic peripheral neuropathy, they are protecting their nerves.
But that may not be true.
In many cases, the problem is not just what you feel in your feet. It may be the hidden process underneath that keeps the damage active even while someone believes they are already treating the condition.
That helps explain why numbness can deepen, balance can weaken, and recovery never seems to fully begin.
According to this presentation, if that deeper mechanism is left untouched, the discomfort may change — but the damage may keep moving forward.
That is exactly what the 10-second nerve reset was designed to address.
According to this presentation, many people with diabetic peripheral neuropathy are never told that the damage may be tied to a deeper process happening quietly beneath the surface.
It is referred to here as "sticky plaque" — a harmful buildup believed to interfere with normal nerve function and make recovery harder in the feet and legs.
If that hidden buildup remains active, feeling, balance, and stability may continue to weaken even while different treatments are being tried.
That may be why the condition keeps taking more from people who believe they are already doing everything they can.
For many people, the hardest part is not only what diabetic neuropathy feels like now.
It is what may happen if the damage in the feet and legs keeps moving in the same direction.
When feeling becomes less reliable, movement stops feeling automatic. Balance changes. Confidence changes. Small routines start requiring more thought, more caution, more hesitation.
And little by little, the fear is no longer just about discomfort. It becomes about how much mobility, stability, and independence may be lost if the real cause is never interrupted.
That is why the right diabetic peripheral neuropathy treatment has to do more than mask symptoms — it has to target what may be blocking real nerve recovery.
Dr. Barbara O'Neill
Health educator and researcher presenting a nerve reset method designed to target the hidden "sticky plaque" process in diabetic peripheral neuropathy.
According to Dr. Barbara O'Neill, diabetic peripheral neuropathy may keep progressing when the hidden "sticky plaque" process remains active beneath the surface.
Her 10-second nerve reset was designed to target that deeper mechanism — not just the discomfort people feel, but what may be interfering with nerve recovery in the feet and legs.
Watch now to see how the 10-second nerve reset works.
In the presentation, Dr. Barbara O'Neill explains how this simple method was designed to target the hidden sticky plaque process that may be standing in the way of nerve recovery in the feet and legs.
See the explanation before more mobility, stability, and independence are lost.