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What You Should Know About 5 Vitamins for Neuropathy Support Before Starting Supplements

That headline is partly useful, but it often gets used in supplement marketing clickbait. Vitamins can support nerve health, but they are not a cure for neuropathy, and not everyone benefits from taking extra supplements. Peripheral neuropathy refers to nerve damage that can cause tingling, numbness, burning pain, or weakness—often linked to diabetes, vitamin deficiencies, …

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6 Chia Seed Side Effects You Should Know About

That headline is typical health clickbait. Chia seed is generally safe for most people when eaten in normal food amounts, but like any high-fiber food, it can cause issues in certain situations. 6 possible side effects (realistic, not exaggerated) Digestive discomfort (bloating, gas) High fiber content can cause bloating if you suddenly eat a lot. …

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Poor boy promised, ‘I’ll marry you when I’m rich,’ to the Black girl who fed him through a school fence. The sandwich cost her the only real meal she had, but it gave him a future that would one day be worth $47 million.

That’s another viral emotional storytelling hook, not something you can assume is a real documented event. It has the usual pattern: Extreme hardship (“poor boy,” “only real meal she had”) A single symbolic act (a sandwich through a fence) A dramatic promise (“I’ll marry you when I’m rich”) A massive future payoff (“worth $47 million”) …

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MY 13-YEAR-OLD SON DI:ED — AND A FEW WEEKS AFTER THE FUNERAL, HIS TEACHER CALLED AND SAID, “MA’AM, YOUR SON LEFT A LETTER FOR YOU. PLEASE COME TO THE SCHOOL IMMEDIATELY!”

That headline is very likely a fabricated or heavily dramatized viral story. It uses a pattern common in engagement posts: A tragic, emotional event (a child’s death) A delayed reveal (“weeks after the funeral…”) A mysterious message (“he left a letter”) A cliffhanger that forces curiosity (“come immediately!”) These stories are often: Fictional short stories …

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She was raped when she was 15 and then refused to have an abortion: 35 years later, her son is the world’s most famous star – you won’t believe who he grew up to be.

That headline is very likely clickbait or a fabricated “viral story.” It uses a common formula: A traumatic, emotional event (rape, teenage pregnancy) A long time jump (“35 years later”) A hidden identity twist (“world’s most famous star”) A cliffhanger (“you won’t believe who it is”) These elements are typical of engagement-driven fiction posts, not …

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She had been missing for fifteen years… until her brother found her underwear hidden under their grandfather’s mattress…

That’s another viral clickbait story hook, not a reliable or verifiable claim on its own. The structure is very typical: A long-term disappearance (“missing for fifteen years”) A shocking “breakthrough clue” A disturbing or sensational detail A cliffhanger meant to force “See more” Without a full article from a credible source (news outlet, police report, …