
5,367+ adults have lowered their blood pressure naturally with Goodkind.
Most see their first meaningful movement on the cuff between week 6 and week 12. Real customers, real numbers, real conversations with their doctors.
"HCTZ and metoprolol stacked, ankles puffy by dinner, tired all the time. 4 months in, my doctor took me OFF the HCTZ entirely. My wife says I talk more now."
"Been on BP meds for 15 years. Six months on this and my doctor reduced one of my medications. More energy now than I had at 60. No beet taste."
"144/89 → 126/78. The money I've spent on beetroot products over the last 3 years is honestly embarrassing. It's the grape seed part. Been 9 weeks. The cuff finally moved."
The science your cardiologist was never taught.
In 1947, a researcher named Jack Masquelier at the University of Bordeaux isolated a family of compounds called procyanidins — and spent 23 years tracing their effect on human circulation. In 1970 he found their richest source: grape seeds. The part of the grape the famous "red wine theory" never looked at.
European cardiology has used standardized grape seed extract for circulatory support for over four decades. American medicine never picked it up — not because it failed, but because there is no commercial pathway in the U.S. for a non-patentable plant compound. No patent, no sales reps, no lunch-and-learns. Your cardiologist isn't hiding it from you. He was never taught it.
Your doctor says the medication is "working." Here's what they're not telling you.
Lisinopril blocks an enzyme. Amlodipine relaxes vessel walls. HCTZ pulls water and salt. Each one works a different mechanism — and the reading on the cuff goes down. That's what "working" means.
But none of them repair the system that's actually failing. Inside the lining of your blood vessels is an enzyme called eNOS — the switch that tells vessels to relax on their own. Starting around 40, its output drops roughly 10% a year. By 55, most adults have lost nearly half. The medication compensates for the broken switch. It never fixes it. That's why the dose creeps up every six months while the cough, the swollen ankles, the 7pm crash, and the brain fog stack on top.
Every six months your doctor calls it "working." Every six months the conversation gets heavier. If the medication were fixing anything, why does it keep needing more of itself?
Your current path — vs the path forward.
Most BP supplements are built to keep you taking them forever — same as your medication. Goodkind is built differently.
Medication alone — or stacked with another supplement.
- The number is "controlled" — but the cost compounds underneath
- Cough, fatigue, swelling, brain fog — every six months your doctor calls it "working"
- Your medication covers one artery. The damage is in the 60,000 miles of vessels behind it.
- Beetroot supplements (SuperBeets, Force Factor, BeetElite) only flood the same artery your medication already covers
- Dosages typically climb over time — most patients on BP meds for 5+ years end up on multiple
- "For life" — with no mechanism for ever coming off it
Repair the underlying system. Let your body do the regulating.
- Addresses the underlying second circulation — the part your medication can't reach
- The cough quiets, the fatigue lifts, the brain fog clears as the capillaries repair
- Numbers improve from your body's own restoration — not from another chemical override
- Once your second circulation holds for 60–90 days, you walk into your next appointment with numbers that change the conversation entirely
- Clinical-dose 95% procyanidin standardized grape seed — the European clinical-grade form your cardiologist wasn't taught about
- 180-day money-back guarantee — empty bottles included, no questions
How Goodkind reaches the 60,000 miles your medication can't.
Your doctor measures one artery in your arm. Behind it sits the capillary network — tiny vessels feeding every organ, every cell. About 60,000 miles of them. No cuff measures a single inch of it, and no prescription was designed to reach it.
Masquelier's procyanidins are one of the few compounds shown to turn the eNOS switch back on — restoring your body's own nitric oxide production inside that network. That's why beetroot alone never worked for you: beetroot is fuel. If the engine isn't running, fuel does nothing.
Goodkind is grape seed at the clinical dose, standardized to 95% procyanidins — with beetroot included as the fuel the engine needs once it's running again.
What makes Goodkind right for you.
You're on lisinopril, amlodipine, metoprolol, losartan, or HCTZ — and you've felt the trade: the number came down, the side effects moved in. Goodkind is additive. It works on the system your pill ignores. Keep your prescription exactly as written; let your doctor make every medication decision with better numbers in front of them.
You've already tried the natural route — the beet powders, the garlic, the CoQ10 — and nothing moved the cuff. None of those touch the eNOS switch. This does. Your past failures weren't your fault; they were aimed at the wrong target.
Your numbers are borderline and you want to avoid the prescription conversation entirely — you have the most repairable version of the problem. The earlier the switch gets support, the less compensation your system ever needs.
Who this is NOT for: anyone looking for an overnight fix. This compound accumulates — the published trials measure at weeks 4–12. If you won't give it 90 days of daily consistency, save your money.
What changes — and when.
Procyanidins reach the lining of your blood vessels and begin accumulating. Nothing visible yet — this works by building, not spiking.
The afternoon crash stops swallowing your evenings. Hands aren't cold all the time. The cough — if you've had the lisinopril cough — starts to quiet. You sleep through the night.
The morning reading is lower than yesterday's. Then the next morning, lower again. Your home cuff shows what your body has already started to know.
Your numbers stay lower without the medication doing all the work. You walk into your next appointment with very different numbers. The conversation changes.
Everything you should know before your first bottle.
*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Goodkind is not a replacement for prescription medication. Never adjust or discontinue medication without your physician. Individual results vary.
180-Day Money Back Guarantee
We're so confident in the quality of our product that we offer a satisfaction guarantee. If you're not completely satisfied with your purchase, simply return the item within 180 days for a full refund.