That kind of claim is almost certainly misleading.
“Two spoons in the morning and forget about bone pain, diabetes, nerves and depression” is a classic clickbait-style promise that doesn’t match how any real medicine or nutrition works. Conditions like **diabetes, chronic bone pain, nerve disorders, and depression** are complex medical issues with multiple causes—there is no single food, powder, or home remedy that can “erase” all of them just by taking a couple of spoonfuls.
If something *did* reliably cure all of those conditions at once, it would be widely studied, prescribed by doctors, and backed by strong clinical trials—not shared as a viral slogan.
A few important points to keep you grounded:
* **Diabetes** requires blood sugar management (diet, activity, sometimes medication like insulin or metformin).
* **Bone pain** can come from vitamin D deficiency, arthritis, injury, or other conditions that need proper diagnosis.
* **Nerve problems** (neuropathy) often relate to diabetes, vitamin deficiencies, or nerve damage.
* **Depression** is a medical condition involving brain chemistry, life factors, and sometimes requires therapy and/or medication.
Some foods and supplements *can support health* (like vitamin D, calcium, omega-3s, balanced diet), but they don’t “cure everything.”
If you saw this claim online, it would help to know what exact substance they’re referring to (honey, turmeric, seeds, etc.). I can break down what it actually does and what science says about it.