Recipe

The Oldest Doctor in Japan Reveals: Drink Only 1 Glass and CLEANSE Your Entire Colon in 10 Minutes!… You need to say something to continue receiving my recipes

That post combines three common clickbait tactics:

  1. Appeal to authority — “The oldest doctor in Japan”
  2. Miracle health claim — “cleanse your entire colon in 10 minutes”
  3. Engagement bait — “say something to continue receiving my recipes”

🚫 The claim is not medically credible

There is no drink that:

  • “cleanses” your entire colon in 10 minutes
  • removes toxins from your body
  • permanently fixes digestion

Your colon is constantly doing its job on its own. In healthy people, it does not need a special drink to be “detoxed.”

What might happen instead?

Some recipes contain ingredients that can act as laxatives, such as:

  • prune juice
  • large amounts of fiber
  • certain herbal products

These may cause a bowel movement, but that is not the same thing as cleansing your colon.

Why they ask you to comment

The line:

“You need to say something to continue receiving my recipes”

is usually there to:

  • boost comments and engagement
  • make the social media algorithm show the post to more people
  • increase the reach of the account

It has nothing to do with whether you can actually receive recipes.

Bottom line

This is almost certainly engagement bait plus a miracle-health claim. If a recipe sounds too good to be true—especially one promising instant detoxification, dramatic weight loss, or rapid healing—it usually is.

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