That phrase—“Read full article in comments… My nana knew best”—is a classic social media hook. It’s designed to make you curious and click, not necessarily to give reliable information.
🧠 What it usually means
Posts like this often:
- Promote a “secret” home remedy
- Claim old-fashioned wisdom beats modern medicine
- Lead to low-quality or ad-heavy websites
👉 Sometimes harmless, sometimes misleading.
👵 About “nana knew best”
There is some truth:
- Traditional remedies (like honey, ginger, saltwater) can help with minor issues
- Simple habits (rest, hydration, home cooking) are valuable
👉 But they’re not cures for serious conditions.
⚠️ Be careful of:
- “Miracle” results (instant cures, dramatic weight loss, etc.)
- Advice that tells you to avoid doctors or medication
- One ingredient solving everything
✅ Smart way to approach it
- Use home remedies for mild problems only
- Combine traditional wisdom with modern medical advice
- Question anything that sounds too good to be true
🧾 Bottom line
“Nana’s remedies” can be helpful—but viral posts often exaggerate them. It’s best to separate useful habits from clickbait claims.
If you paste the actual remedy or article, I’ll tell you whether it’s genuinely helpful or just hype.