People love to hear that cholesterol can be “fixed” with one magic pill. Personally, I think that fantasy is why we keep circling the same emotional problem: the belief that something complicated can be solved without changing how we live.
What makes this topic especially fascinating is that the most credible “natural” lever isn’t exotic at all—it’s soluble fiber, and more specifically psyllium. In my opinion, that’s a rare case where biology is unusually polite: if you give your gut the right ingredient, it can help drag down LDL cholesterol with a mechanism that’s almost old-school in its simplicity.
But here’s the deeper question I keep coming back to: why do we treat dietary fiber like an optional “wellness add-on” instead of a core cardiovascular strategy—especially for women after menopause, when the protection story changes dramatically?