Your Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO) Recovery Starts Here
46% Improvement in Symptoms in SIBO participants
In our latest randomised controlled trial, participants with SIBO saw a 46% improvement in symptoms.
It usually begins in the gut – bloating, unpredictable digestion, unexplained discomfort. But SIBO symptoms often ripple through your whole body, affecting energy and mood. If low FODMAP diets, antibiotics, or supplements haven’t worked, there is hope. Thousands have found lasting relief using our brain retraining approach.

Everything you need to know about Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO)
- Definition
- Cause
- Treatment
Our approach is different
We work where lasting change is possible: at the level of your brain and nervous system. Through brain retraining, we help rewire the gut-brain connection and restore normal digestive function.
This process:
- Calms the brain’s overactive stress response
- Supports proper gut motility and repair
- Reduces inflammation and digestive hypersensitivity
- Improves food tolerance and energy levels
- Rebuilds trust and safety between you and your body
When your nervous system feels safe, your gut can finally heal.

Recovery Stories
Across the world, people just like you, are using the power of their brains to heal their bodies. Hear their stories, see their success, and find inspiration for your own healing journey.
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Frequently Asked Questions
SIBO often returns because the treatments only address the bacterial overgrowth, not why it happened in the first place. Your small intestine has a natural “housekeeping” system called the migrating motor complex (MMC) that sweeps bacteria back to the large intestine. When your nervous system is stressed, it can disrupt this cleaning process, allowing bacteria to build up again. Brain retraining helps restore normal gut motility by calming the nervous system signals that control digestion, making recurrence much less likely.
Your gut and brain are connected through the vagus nerve, which controls digestion. When you’re stressed or anxious, your nervous system diverts energy away from digestive processes to deal with the perceived threat. This slows down gut motility, reduces digestive enzymes, and can make your intestines more sensitive to gas and food particles. Over time, this creates the perfect environment for SIBO to develop and persist, even when the original stressor is gone.
Yes, many food intolerances with SIBO are actually your gut being hypersensitive rather than true allergies. When your nervous system is stuck in survival mode, it can interpret normal foods as threats, causing bloating, pain, or other symptoms. As brain retraining calms your nervous system, people often find they can gradually reintroduce foods they couldn’t tolerate before. Our clinical trial showed 46% improvement in SIBO patients after just three months.
This is exactly why brain retraining can be so effective for SIBO. If you’ve tried multiple rounds of antibiotics or restrictive diets without lasting success, the issue likely isn’t just bacterial – it’s the nervous system dysfunction that’s allowing the bacteria to regrow. Many of our most successful members had tried everything else first. Brain retraining addresses the root cause that other treatments miss.
This goes far beyond stress management. Brain retraining specifically targets the neural pathways that control gut function – motility, acid production, immune responses, and bacterial balance. When you retrain these pathways, you’re literally changing how your brain communicates with your digestive system. This creates physical changes in gut function, not just emotional well-being. That’s why people see measurable improvements in symptoms like bloating and food tolerance.
While everyone’s timeline is different, many people notice subtle changes in their digestion within the first few weeks – things like less bloating after meals or improved energy. More significant improvements in food tolerance and overall gut function typically develop over 2-3 months of consistent practice. The key is that these changes tend to be lasting because you’re addressing the underlying nervous system patterns, not just temporarily suppressing symptoms.





