I've spent most of my career in natural health publishing — reading the studies, interviewing the researchers, watching wellness trends rise and fall, and trying more supplements, powders, pills, drops, and protocols than I'd care to admit.
Most of them didn't work. Some of them worked a little. A few worked for a season. And maybe one or two actually moved the needle.
That experience made me a careful skeptic. The kind of person who reads a press release and immediately goes looking for the study it's citing. The kind of person who doesn't get excited about a new "breakthrough" until two or three independent labs confirm it.
Then, two years ago, something happened that changed everything.
My dad — the sharpest person I've ever known — started forgetting words mid-sentence. He was sleeping badly. Waking up foggy. Slowly disappearing inside himself. His doctor told him it was just age.
I wasn't willing to accept that.
And because of the career I'd built, I had an unfair advantage. I already knew where the real research was hiding. I knew which journals to trust and which to ignore. I knew which researchers had the receipts. So I went looking — not for hope, but for evidence.
That search led me to one of the most quietly remarkable bodies of research in modern medicine: the science of molecular hydrogen.
More than 1,000 peer-reviewed studies. A landmark 2007 paper in Nature Medicine by Dr. Shigeo Ohta at Nippon Medical School in Tokyo. Follow-up research out of Germany, Japan, China, and the United States. An antioxidant so small it could pass through cell membranes no other compound could reach — selectively neutralizing the harmful free radicals that drive nearly every symptom we've been taught to call "aging."
The science was there. What was missing was a clean, simple, affordable way to put it in the hands of the people who needed it most — people like my dad.
So I built it.
Lumia H₂ is the product I wish I'd had for my father the morning I realized he needed it. One tablet. One glass of water. The same molecule those thousand-plus studies have spent two decades documenting.
But the product isn't really what this company is about. It's the byproduct of what this company is about.
This company exists to close the gap between what the research already knows and what the public has been told. To educate instead of hype. To give the audience I've spent my career writing for — smart, skeptical adults over 50 who've heard every pitch in the book — a tool that's been hiding in plain sight. Without the markup, the mystery, or the marketing noise.
That's the mission. That's the promise.
And that's why Lumia H₂ exists.
— Matt D’Lando Founder, Lumia H₂