Debbie Shares Her Story
“I noticed after taking it a while that my memory was better, and I never looked back. It is an amazing product.”
Debbie, 61
Operations Manager
Pharmacy Technician
Debbie has been living for most of her 61 years in the environs of Las Vegas, the celebrated home of high hopes and busted bank accounts for unlucky risk-takers who come to this famous entertainment oasis in the desert and bet against the house.
What makes Debbie’s story so interesting is how she’s managed to steer clear of all that and instead has made a life and a living helping people find something to fix what ails them. Debbie is a licensed pharmacy technician and the operations manager of a large pharmacy just down the road from Las Vegas.
“The pharmacy I work at is in the town of Boulder City, Nevada,” she says. “It is kind of a small town, no gambling. A lot of retirees there.” The town is one of only two places in Nevada that prohibits gambling and is about 25 miles removed from the distractions of the Las Vegas Strip.
Debbie works in Boulder City but she’s lived for the last 58 years in Henderson, Nevada, the town that lies between Las Vegas and the world-famous Hoover Dam that was completed on the Colorado River back in 1936, creating the equally famous Lake Mead, which even after an alarming drop in its water levels in recent years is still the largest man-made reservoir in the United States.
About six years ago Debbie started noticing she was having some minor difficulties with memory.
She continues, “I’d seen Prevagen in our store and I said to myself, you know what, I’m going to try it. And I noticed after taking it a while that my memory was better, and I never looked back. It is an amazing product.”
Debbie adds, “I have a pharmacy tech license but I work in the front of the store and I talk to our customers. They'll come in the store and they'll ask, where's this product? I talk to so many people about trying Prevagen.”
Debbie comes to the end of her story with the words of a woman who maintains a healthy balance in her day-to-day life and a sensible view of the real risk many people take when they venture into this famous oasis in the desert: “ I work. I clean. I shop. I also do a little bit of bike riding, and you know, you don't spend too much time outside because you can get sunburned out here.”