Athlete Spotlight: John Cantrell Chooses LionBerry for Recovery & Focus

When it comes to sports performance, recovery isn’t optional — it’s essential. That belief is shared by John Cantrell, a heavyweight boxer known for his discipline, power, and commitment to training smart.

That commitment is why John has chosen LIONBERRY as part of his routine.

Built for Sports — Not Just the Game, But the Grind

Athletes at every level push their bodies hard — in training, competition, and everyday life. LionBerry was created for that exact reality: a regenerative hydration and recovery drink made from real, regionally grown ingredients, not lab-built shortcuts.

LionBerry combines:

  • Native elderberry & elderflower — rich in naturally occurring anthocyanins that may support a healthy inflammatory response
  • Tart cherry — long valued in athletic recovery for muscle and joint support
  • Lion’s Mane mushroom — widely used to support focus, cognitive clarity, and neurological wellness
  • Local honey — clean, natural energy straight from regenerative farms

No artificial dyes. No synthetic stimulants. No powdered isolates.

Just real plants, grown with intention.

Why This Matters in Sports

Contact, impact, and physical strain are part of nearly every sport — not just boxing. Yet many athletes are still expected to “shake it off” and keep moving without meaningful nutritional support.

LionBerry was designed with the whole athlete in mind:

  • Post-exertion hydration
  • Cognitive and mental clarity support
  • Clean recovery for training days and rest days alike

As John Cantrell puts it, LionBerry helps him stay sharp, recovered, and ready — not just for competition, but for the work that happens long before the spotlight.

From Farm to Athlete

LionBerry isn’t just about performance — it’s about regeneration.

Every bottle supports:

  • Regenerative farming practices
  • Midwest-grown ingredients from Kansas and Missouri
  • Shorter supply chains and stronger regional farm economies

It’s hydration that gives back — to the athlete, to the land, and to the communities growing the ingredients.

Recovery for Athletes. Clarity for Everyday Life.

While LionBerry is built for sports, it’s not exclusive to elite competition. Weekend warriors, outdoor enthusiasts, gym-goers, and fans all deserve hydration that actually supports the body — without neon colors or artificial formulas.

Whether you’re stepping into the ring, hitting the trail, or recovering after a long day, LionBerry shows up the same way John Cantrell does: grounded, focused, and ready.

This isn’t just hydration.
It’s regenerative recovery — built for real life, and real performance.

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When Words Lose Their Meaning

Lionberry 's Weekly Delusion and Re-illusion Update.

The phrase “food is medicine” has become the wellness world’s version of “thoughts and prayers.” Everyone says it. Everyone feels good saying it. And almost nobody means anything real when they do. That’s the danger—not the phrase itself, but what happens when language gets stretched so far it stops pointing to anything true.

The original use of the phrase belonged to grandmas, gardeners, and people who still know how to cook and where food comes from. In that world, “food is medicine” meant something simple and grounded. A piece of meat and some vegetables—and fruit when it was in season—was just a regular meal. And then there were the special things you made when someone didn’t feel well: mixtures built from botanicals, herbs, fruits, nuts, grasses, roots, seeds, and whatever the land offered that season. Things pulled straight from soil and pantry because they carried function, flavor, and a purpose. That usage was peaceful, instinctive, and honest.

Then came the influencers, using the same phrase while holding something powdered, flavored, and algorithm-optimized. “Food is medicine” became a caption under a neon shake that tastes like peach sorbet and contains a clinically irrelevant amount of plant dust. They didn’t inherit the meaning—they inherited the hashtag. And hashtags don’t carry wisdom; they carry trend cycles.

Then comes the USDA, NIH, and hospital systems, who use both phrases—but in different ways. “Food Is Medicine” is their broad, public-facing concept, the umbrella idea that nutrition is foundational for health. “Food As Medicine”—capital As—is the technical term for the clinical, billing-coded interventions:

produce prescriptions,

medically tailored meals,

medically tailored groceries.

This version has insurance pathways, reimbursement logic, metrics, screenings, and outcome evaluations. It isn’t a belief system. It’s a healthcare program.

So we end up with two phrases—Food Is Medicine and Food As Medicine—that sound almost identical but function in totally different worlds. And both of them, at their best, once pointed to something we still have right now: real plants growing from real soil, carrying real chemistry that does real things in the human body. Not ancient in the sense of “long ago,” but ancient in the sense of continuity—still alive, still growing, still here.

Once a phrase becomes universal, though, it becomes meaningless.

That’s what’s happening now.

A wellness word printed on plastic.

“Natural” stamped on a bag of potato chips.

“Immune-supporting” slapped on anything that wants to look virtuous.

Marketing fog replacing actual meaning.

It’s Peacekeepers in 1984.

It’s “community” in Big Tech.

And on the Idiocracy side, it’s the fictional Electrolyte Drink Brawndo—marketed so aggressively that the entire population believes “it’s got what plants crave.”

In the film, they irrigate crops with the Electrolyte Drink Brawndo instead of water because advertising has replaced knowledge. Marketing departments tell us what truth is. The soil dies. The crops fail. The land collapses into a dust bowl. That’s what linguistic drift does: it hollows meaning until the absurd becomes normal.

“Food is medicine” used to mean:

eat real plants,

respect soil,

trust the chemistry that grows in the field,

trust the phytonutrients that come from this earth,

food keeps you alive and makes you whole.

Now it means turmeric dust on junk food.

Or a wellness word added so a product can sell for $3 more.

This hollowed-out category is not a comfortable place for real food to sit.

The old category, where LionBerry sits—the one before wellness gloss, before powdered fantasy, before language drift washed the meaning out of the words—still exists. But sitting there is not accidental. People tell me all the time to cheapen it, powder it, plastic-bottle it, isolate it, dilute it, lab-flavor it, margin-boost it, and make it “scalable” by stripping out the thing that makes it real.

I don’t do it.

Not because it’s easy.

But because sometimes the right thing to do is always the hardest thing to do.

LionBerry sits in the old category because I fight for it to sit there.

Real plants.

Real chemistry.

Real soil.

Real function.

Zero powdered fantasy.

LionBerry is exactly what it says it is: a farm-crafted drink made out of actual food.

When I say “the phrase doesn’t need to be fixed,” I mean the phrase “food is medicine.”

We don’t need to invent a new set of buzzwords or rescue the old ones from misuse.

We don’t need to rebuild or replace the language itself.

What needs to change is this:

start making products that mean what the words used to mean.

Start making food products that are just food