This is not necessarly true.
In my opinion a good portion of this community is biased. They’ve decided the answers is in our gene/epigenetics, and that’s it till proven otherwise. So pretty much everything that doesn’t point directly to our genetics … is automatically crap.
The problem is this theory was never proved.
What we know for sure, is that a lot of people largely benefited with supplements of any kind.
Chances are, supplements won’t cure you. You are right. But a lot of people in here feels way better on a supplements then off it, and we react very differently to the very same substance.
Is Vitamin D effective in PFS? The answer is yes. And no. And also abosolutely not.
@spstriken swears by it, he’s been taking it for 10 years I guess, and he went as far as to say he’d be dead without it. @numbduck claimed his “90% recovery” was largely triggered by experimenting with Vit D, and there are many users who experienced benefits from it.
Now, the majority of the users who tried it didn’t feel any effect, and then we have those who reacted badly to it. I think @axolotl reported a temporary worsening after a 25k u dose, and @Demon experienced a nightmare crash he hasn’t recovered yet from.
This applies to virtually any kind of supplement.
I’m not claiming supplements are the answers, but a lot of people could benefit from the right one. @Jorden and @mariovitali claimed to be 100% recovered, and go read their stories and how many supplements they took.
Which one’s the right one? I don’t know, and we should be very carefull experimenting with them, because a lot of us got a lot worse on a variety of stuff, like @awor on Milk Thistle, @AnhedonicApe from betaine, @Demon on Vit D, @Rb26dett on TRT and tribulus I guess, another users on Vit K2 and so on.
There is no straight answer with PFS.