FAMOUS DOCTOR REVEALS: EAT THIS AND THE PARASITES WILL DISAPPEAR IN 3 DAYS

I didn’t believe in parasites.
I thought they were something you caught on vacation. From bad water. In some faraway place.

Not in our kitchen. Not in our home.

But when my son Mateo started losing weight for no reason—and crying every night from stomach pain—we ran out of guesses.

The pediatrician said it was probably anxiety.
Gave us a referral. Suggested therapy.

But a mother knows.
I saw the way he curled into himself. The way he flinched when he ate.
I saw the fear behind his eyes.

That’s when I started reading everything I could. And I found a video—some old recording of a retired doctor from Ecuador. His name was Dr. Esteban Loma. Not famous in the way celebrities are. But known in herbal circles like a quiet legend.

He said, “If you suspect parasites, don’t start with pills. Start with what your grandmother used. Pumpkin seeds.”

I paused the video.
Pumpkin seeds?
As in, from pumpkins?

He went on to explain—how they contain something called cucurbitacin, a natural compound that paralyzes parasites. Makes them let go of the walls of your intestines so your body can flush them out.

“Eat them raw. On an empty stomach. Three days. You’ll see.”

I didn’t tell Mateo the details. I just made him a smoothie—banana, honey, and two handfuls of raw, green pumpkin seeds.

Day one, nothing.
Day two, his stomach pain got worse. I started to panic.
But Dr. Loma had said that might happen. “They fight back,” he warned. “That’s how you know they’re real.”

On the morning of day three, Mateo ran to the bathroom.
I won’t describe what happened.
But when he came out, he looked at me and said, “It doesn’t hurt anymore.”

He smiled.
He ate lunch.
And didn’t cry that night.

I cried instead.


That was six months ago.

And now? Pumpkin seeds are a permanent part of our life.

I started reading more about them. Not just cucurbitacin—but the zinc, the magnesium, the iron. I learned how they support the immune system, balance blood sugar, even help with sleep.

My husband Marco didn’t believe any of it. Until he got hit with what he called a “mystery stomach bug.” I told him it might be something else. He rolled his eyes.

I made him the same smoothie I made Mateo. Then roasted seeds with garlic and sea salt for snacks. I added them to his oatmeal when he wasn’t looking.

Three days later, he stopped clutching his stomach. He stopped needing the antacids he’d kept by his bedside for years.

He didn’t say “you were right.”
But he bought a bulk bag of seeds the next week.


What people don’t talk about is how alone it feels when the people you love aren’t getting better.

You take them to doctors. You try the pills. You follow every “expert” tip. And still—nothing.

And then someone online tells you something that sounds too simple. Too silly. Like eating a handful of seeds.

But when you’re desperate, you try. And when it works, you don’t keep quiet.

I told my sister Maribel. Her youngest, Elias, had been dealing with itchy skin and constant irritability. She said it was probably food allergies. I said, “Try the seeds.”

She texted me four days later: “What is this magic?! He slept through the night. And the rash is fading.”

It wasn’t magic. It was food. Real, healing food.


We’re not doctors. And we’re not claiming to cure anything.

But we are living proof that sometimes the solution is simple. Ancient. Forgotten.

The kind of thing your abuela knew, even if no one took her seriously.

Now I tell every parent I meet: “Pumpkin seeds saved my son’s smile.”

They always look surprised. Some laugh. Some nod quietly, eyes a little wide.

And more than a few come back weeks later, whispering, “It worked.”


Our kitchen looks different now.

There’s always a jar of raw seeds on the counter.
A grinder for making pumpkin seed butter.
A container of toasted ones with cinnamon for the kids’ lunchboxes.

Even my dad—Mr. “Modern Medicine Only”—has them with yogurt every morning now.

He won’t admit it, but I noticed he stopped complaining about his acid reflux.

Mama just shakes her head and says, “Should’ve listened to your grandmother.”


One day, I ran into a woman at the park. Her daughter was crying, clutching her belly. I offered her some of our roasted seeds.

She looked at me like I was offering her rocks.

But then she looked at her daughter. Pale, quiet, uncomfortable.

She took them.

Two days later, she messaged me through a mutual friend. “I need the recipe. She’s smiling again.”


Here’s the one we share most often:

Pumpkin Parasite Cleanse Smoothie
– 2 bananas
– ½ cup raw, organic pumpkin seeds
– 1 tbsp honey
– 1 cup water or coconut water
– A pinch of cinnamon (optional)

Blend until creamy. Drink on an empty stomach for 3-5 mornings straight.

That’s it.

No fillers. No chemicals. Just what nature gave us.


We’re not selling anything. Just sharing.

Because the world is loud with products and pills. But sometimes what your body needs… is quiet. Simple. Grown from the earth.

Sometimes it’s something your great-grandmother might have known but never wrote down.

And sometimes that knowledge shows up in your life right when you need it most.


Mateo is thriving now.

No more nighttime tears. No more skipped meals. He runs. He eats like a horse. And every so often, he grabs a handful of seeds and tosses them into his mouth.

I asked him once if he remembered how sick he used to feel.
He said, “Not really. I just remember the smoothie.”

That made me smile.

Because that smoothie didn’t just clean his system. It gave us our boy back.


I know this won’t go viral. It’s not flashy.

But if even one person reads this and tries it… and it helps them…
Then it’s worth every word.

Because we’re all walking around with things inside us we didn’t ask for.
And sometimes, healing starts with something as small as a seed.


If you’ve made it this far, thank you.

Please share this with someone who might need it.
Someone whose child can’t sleep.
Someone with belly aches no one can explain.
Someone who’s just tired of feeling off.

Let’s help each other heal.
Not with fear.
But with hope.

And a handful of pumpkin seeds. 🌱💚

Like and share this post if it spoke to you—you never know who might need this simple gift from the earth today.