Every cleanse on that shelf is aiming straight at the parasites, and only one of them stops to dissolve the wall that's protecting them first.
Your cleanses never failed because the herbs were weak, or because you didn't take enough, or because you gave up too early. They failed because the biofilm shield was still standing, so nothing in them could reach what it was aiming at, and the eggs were always left behind to hatch and start the whole cycle over.
Picture a fortress. You can fire arrows at it with the oregano, send in a sniper with the ivermectin, throw the old siege weapons at it with the black walnut, or chuck a handful of darts at it with the Amazon kits, and the wall is still standing with everything safe behind it. Soursop Bitters dissolves the wall first, then clears out what was hiding, then flushes the eggs so there's no second wave. Break the wall, kill what's hiding, flush the eggs and waste, in that order. That's the one sequence every other option skips.
The ritual is simple. Two tablespoons every morning. It tastes terrible, and that bitterness is the wall coming down.
Most people see the parasites exposed in the first week, the flush and the 5 to 10 pounds of trapped waste in week two, and then instead of the usual week-three crash they get the puffiness dropping and the energy coming back.
Over 500,000 people have made the switch, with 4.8 stars across 7,234 reviews, and it's backed by a 60-day money-back guarantee. If your gut doesn't feel the difference, you don't pay.
If you've run cleanses before and they worked for two weeks then crashed, now you know exactly why. The wall was still standing and the eggs were still there. This is the one that does all three steps, in the right order.