She was gone.
Not physically — we found her, eventually. But mentally? That day, it felt like we lost our mom.
We noticed the first signs on a Tuesday. She called me three times that afternoon — each time asking the same question, as if the previous calls never happened. I told myself she was just tired.
But then it got worse.
She started losing words mid-sentence. She'd trail off, staring at nothing, then come back with "what was I saying?" She stopped reading — she'd forget the beginning of a paragraph by the time she reached the end.
Then came the call I'll never forget.
My sister found her at the bottom of the backyard steps.
She wasn't hurt badly — a few bruises, a scraped knee. But when we got there, she looked at us and asked:
She was standing in her own backyard. The house she'd lived in for 31 years. And she didn't know where she was.
That was the day we almost lost Mom.
We had a choice: wait and watch it get worse — or fight like hell to bring her back.
We started the research rabbit hole. Diets. Puzzles. Brain exercises. But it all felt like trying to stop a flood with a paper towel. We needed something real.
That's when a close family friend told us about something his own father had been using. He'd watched the same decline — the forgetting, the confusion, the blank stares — and said one thing had actually turned things around.
"It sounds weird," he told me, "but look into lion's mane mushroom."
I was skeptical. A mushroom? But I was desperate. So I looked into it.
What I found surprised me. Peer-reviewed research showing that compounds in lion's mane stimulate Nerve Growth Factor — the protein your brain needs to maintain and repair neurons. A 2009 clinical trial showed significant cognitive improvement in older adults after just 16 weeks.
So we gave it a shot. Two droppers in her morning coffee, one in the afternoon.
The first two weeks — nothing. I was ready to call it another failed experiment.
Then, in week three, something shifted.
She finished a sentence without losing her place. She remembered what she'd had for breakfast. She called me once — and didn't call back to repeat the question.
"Little by little, Mom came back to us."
It's been over a year now. She's not "cured" — I want to be honest about that. She still has moments. But the fog that had swallowed her whole has lifted enough that she's reading again, cooking again, being her again.
Lion's Mane Extracts became non-negotiable. It wasn't magic — it was science.
About the Author: Luke Voigt is the founder of Lion's Mane Extracts. He started the company after watching the extract help his own mother, and has since helped over 80,000 customers across the U.S. He oversees every batch personally from their facility in Portland, Oregon. His mom still takes it every morning.