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I am not curing anything. I cannot cure Leber’s Hereditary Optic Neuropathy.

I am improving the transportation of electrons to Complex IV and supporting the mitochondria and associated systems with my LHON Vision Quest 2.0 full-stack system.

Heal LHON

A patient-led vision recovery project

I’m not a company.

I’m not a lab.

I’m not a pharmaceutical trial.

I’m a patient.

I lost my vision to Leber’s Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) over 20 years ago. Like many others, I was told the same thing everyone hears: there is no treatment, the damage is permanent, and nothing can be done.

I didn’t accept that.

What I Did

I spent years researching mitochondrial biology, optic nerve energetics, oxidative stress, and real-world patient outcomes. I tested, adjusted, documented, and refined what I now call my Vision Quest.

This wasn’t theory.

This wasn’t hope.

This was experimentation on myself, with careful observation and accountability.

And my vision improved.

Why “Heal LHON”

“Heal LHON” doesn’t mean I believe every case will be the same. It means I reject the idea that nothing is possible.

LHON is a mitochondrial disease.

Mitochondria are about energy.

Energy systems can be supported, protected, and sometimes restored.

This site exists to:

  • Share what I actually did
  • Show what I actually take
  • Document what has actually changed
  • Give others a place to start their own thinking

No hype. No miracle claims. Just real work.

Who This Is For

  • People with LHON, especially those with the 11778 mutation
  • Parents and family members trying to help
  • Anyone questioning the idea that “nothing can be done”
  • Anyone who believes patients deserve access to information

What You’ll Find Here

  • My full supplement stack (exactly what I use)
  • Explanations of why each item matters
  • Videos documenting my progress and thoughts
  • A growing resource built step by step, openly

A Note on Accessibility

This site was built by someone with vision loss. That’s why you’ll see an “I can see / I am blind” toggle at the top. Accessibility should never be an afterthought.