If the burning and tingling are already easing after just two weeks, your nerves are starting to respond. Most people don't feel a noticeable shift until week four or six, so what you're experiencing is genuinely encouraging.
It means the Stabilized R-ALA is reaching the nerve tissue and doing exactly what it's meant to do.
But please — don't stop now.
This is the part that catches most people off guard:
Early relief is the beginning of nerve repair, not the end. Nerves regenerate slowly — about a millimeter per month. The deeper, lasting healing (the kind that holds steady even on a bad day) builds quietly between months three and six.
When people stop the moment they start feeling better, the symptoms tend to creep back within weeks. We hear the same sentence over and over from customers who come back months later:
"I felt great so I stopped — and I really wish I hadn't."
You're in good company.
"Three weeks in, the burning at night was almost gone. I almost stopped because I felt fine. So glad I didn't — by month four my feet finally felt like mine again."
— Diane M., Florida
"I noticed a real difference around day eighteen. Two months in, I'm sleeping through the night for the first time in years."
— Robert T., Ohio
"The best advice I got was: don't stop when you start feeling better. I kept going for six months. Best decision I've made for my health."
— Margaret K., Arizona
Keep going. Your nerves are listening.
The next few months are where the real, lasting repair happens. Stay consistent, and let your body finish what it started.
P.S. If you ever want to share how you're doing, just reply to any of our emails. A real person reads every one.