Your Enzymes Are Outnumbered
Your gut runs on a workforce you never think about. Proteases: the enzymes that take the protein you eat and cut it into pieces small enough to cross into your bloodstream. No proteases, no absorption. The steak, the shake, the chicken you meal-prepped on Sunday all sit as raw material until an enzyme shows up to break them down.
Here is the part nobody mentions at the supplement counter. That workforce has a headcount. And on a heavy protein day, it gets outnumbered.
What a Protease Actually Does
Protein is a chain. Long strings of amino acids bolted together by what chemists call peptide bonds. Your body cannot absorb the chain. It can only absorb the individual links. A protease is a molecular cutting tool that locks onto a peptide bond and cleaves it, turning one long, useless strand into short, absorbable fragments. Different proteases attack different bonds, which is why your body runs several types at once rather than a single all-purpose blade.
That is the entire job. Cut the bonds, release the amino acids, hand them to the gut wall for absorption. When there are enough proteases working fast enough, digestion stays clean and quiet. The fuel goes where you sent it, and nothing is left over to cause problems later.
Your Daily Output Is Finite
Your stomach and pancreas produce a set supply of these enzymes per meal. That supply does not double the instant you double your protein. It does not read your macros and staff up. It runs at the pace your body built it to run, which was calibrated for a normal plate, not a heavy protein day stacked with shakes, bars, and a second dinner.
So picture the situation without inventing a single number. A finite crew. An oversized load. The crew works flat out and still cannot reach every bond before the meal moves on. Whatever they did not cleave in time leaves the stomach as intact protein. That surplus is where the trouble starts.
Where the Surplus Goes
Undigested protein does not vanish. It keeps moving downstream, still mostly whole. Further along the tract it meets bacteria that use raw protein as a feedstock and ferment it. Protein fermentation is a far messier process than the clean breakdown that was supposed to happen up top. It generates gas. It generates pressure. It is the heavy, sluggish, swollen feeling that shows up a few hours after a serious meal and refuses to leave.
None of that is a character flaw or a sign you are eating wrong. It is a supply problem. You brought more protein than your enzyme crew could process, and the leftovers went to the wrong tenants downstream. Most fiber products do nothing about this, because fiber does not cut peptide bonds. Clearing the pipes is useful, but it does not touch the protein that is already fermenting.
Reinforcements That Arrive With the Load
This is where supplemental enzymes earn their keep. Not as a replacement for your own output. As reinforcements that show up at the same time as the meal and add cutting capacity exactly when the crew is outnumbered.
Eviction Notice runs two proteases in Stage 02, The Demolition. The first is bromelain, the proteolytic enzyme from pineapple, dosed at 250 mg and rated at 400 GDU/g. The second is SEBPapain 70™, a concentrated protease standardized to 100 mg at 2,000 PU/mg. Those ratings are not label dressing. GDU and PU are activity units. They tell you how much actual cutting work the enzyme can perform, not just how much powder got poured into the stick. A high-activity protease at a real dose is the difference between an ingredient that looks good on paper and one that does the job in your gut.
Working together, they go after the protein your own proteases could not reach, cleaving peptide bonds before the surplus has the chance to ferment. Reinforcements, on schedule, in clinical doses.
Why a Lone Enzyme Falls Short
Cutting the protein is one stage of three, and that is the step most products skip. Eviction Notice is built as a sequence. Stage 01, The Sweep, uses psyllium, Fibalance™, and magnesium to clear the backlog and keep traffic moving. Stage 02, The Demolition, brings the bromelain and SEBPapain 70™ to break down the protein surplus. Stage 03, The Fortification, uses PepZinGI® and ginger to reinforce the gut wall and support the system that just did the heavy lifting. Seven clinical-dose actives, 6 grams of daily fiber, zero sugar. One job each, executed in order.
You run it once a day. One stick into 8 to 12 ounces of cold water, or dropped straight into your shake. That is the entire protocol.
Eviction Notice ships Summer 2026, and launch pricing is locked in now. It runs $42.49 every 4 weeks on Subscribe & Save, a 15% cut off the $49.99 one-time price, which works out to roughly $1.52 a day across 28 daily sticks. Every order carries the 60-Day money-back guarantee, and we accept empty boxes, so the only real risk is leaving your enzyme crew outnumbered for another protein season. Reinforce the line and claim your protocol on the product page.