That line is another example of viral clickbait / chain-post style messaging, not something medically meaningful.
It’s written to:
- Create a “perfect health claim” (“35 years not sick, perfect vision, perfect blood pressure”)
- Build emotional trust
- Push you to respond with a phrase like “just say…” (often used to trigger engagement, shares, or spam forwarding)
Important reality check
No normal health or medical source guarantees:
- “Never getting sick for 35 years”
- “Perfect vision forever”
- “Always normal blood pressure”
Even very healthy people:
- Get mild infections sometimes
- Experience natural changes in vision with age
- Can have occasional blood pressure fluctuations
So this is not a scientific or medical statement—it’s social media persuasion language.
Why these messages are used
They are commonly used to:
- Increase comments (“just say yes / amen / continue”)
- Boost engagement in Facebook/WhatsApp chains
- Collect attention for recipe pages or spam accounts
- Sometimes redirect users to ads or fake “health secrets”
Safe way to respond
You don’t need to reply with any phrase. It’s best to:
- Ignore it, or
- Treat it as entertainment, not information
If you want, I can explain how to identify similar health scams or fake “miracle wellness” posts so you can spot them instantly.