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4/23/2026 0 Comments

The Midlife Metabolism Shift: Why You’re Gaining Weight in Perimenopause (Even When You’re Doing Everything Right)

If you’ve found yourself thinking…“I haven’t changed anything… so why am I gaining weight?” You’re not alone.
So many women in perimenopause are experiencing some or all of the following; unexplained weight gain, increased belly fat, slower metabolism, fatigue and low energy. And often, it comes with frustration… because what used to work no longer does. And when you understand why, you can begin to support it in a way that actually works for this season of life.

Why Metabolism Slows in Perimenopause
During perimenopause, your body goes through significant hormonal changes that impact how you burn energy, store fat, digest food, and respond to stress. This is often why women notice weight gain despite eating the same, more fat stored around the abdomen, and less energy for workouts. But from an Ayurvedic perspective, there’s even more to the story.

In Ayurveda, metabolism is governed by your Agni—your digestive fire.

When Agni is strong, your body digests food efficiently, uses nutrients properly, and eliminates waste effectively. But in midlife, Agni can begin to weaken. And at the same time, Kapha energy—which is heavy, slow, and stable—can increase.
When this happens, the body may hold onto weight more easily, feel sluggish or heavy, and/or experience slower digestion. It’s a natural shift that simply requires a different kind of support.

Why Dieting and Over-Exercising Can Backfire
Many women respond to midlife weight gain by eating less, skipping meals, or increasing workouts. But instead of seeing results, they feel more exhausted, stressed, and often… stuck. From an Ayurvedic perspective, this can weaken Agni even more. And when digestion is compromised, the body may begin to accumulate Ama (toxins), which can contribute to weight gain, bloating, fatigue and brain fog.  So the cycle continues.

The Missing Link: Your Nervous System
Your metabolism isn’t just about food, it’s deeply connected to your nervous system. When your body is in a constant state of stress or “go mode,” it shifts into survival. And in survival mode, your body holds onto weight, slows digestion, craves quick energy and prioritizes safety over efficiency. This is why pushing harder often doesn’t work.

How to Support Your Metabolism Naturally with Ayurveda
Instead of restricting, Ayurveda invites you to rebuild your metabolism with gentle, consistent support.
1. Eat Regular, Nourishing Meals
Skipping meals can slow metabolism.
Instead:
  • Eat at consistent times
  • Sit down and be present while eating
  • Allow your body to fully digest
2. Choose Warm, Cooked Foods
Warm foods are easier to digest and help strengthen Agni.
Focus on:
  • Soups and stews
  • Cooked vegetables
  • Warm grains
3. Use Warming Spices
Support digestion with:
  • Ginger
  • Cumin
  • Cinnamon
These gently stimulate metabolism without stress.
4. Create Daily Rhythm
Your body thrives on routine. Waking, eating, and sleeping at consistent times supports:
  • Hormones
  • Digestion
  • Energy levels
5. Move Your Body with Intention
Shift from punishment to support.
Focus on:
  • Walking
  • Strength training
  • Gentle, consistent movement

Weight gain in perimenopause is feedback. Your body is asking for more consistency, nourishment and balance. When you begin to listen… instead of push…Everything starts to shift.
​

Ready for Support?
If you’re feeling stuck in your body and unsure what to do next…
I work with women in this exact stage of life—helping you understand your body through Ayurveda and create a personalized plan that supports your metabolism, energy, and overall well-being.
✨ Book a free 10-minute discovery consultation
Let’s talk about what’s going on in your body and what support could look like for you. 
You deserve to feel at home in your body again!
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4/16/2026 0 Comments

Why Am I So Inflamed? Understanding Perimenopause Inflammation Through Ayurveda

If you’ve been feeling more inflamed lately: puffy face or belly, stiff joints, or just not at home in your body, you’re not alone. Many women in their 40s and beyond are searching for answers to symptoms like:
Unexplained inflammation
​
Bloating and water retention
Joint pain and stiffness
Fatigue and brain fog

And often, it comes with confusion…“I’m eating well. I’m taking care of myself. So why do I feel like this?” 
From an Ayurvedic perspective, there’s a deeper explanation, and more importantly, a gentle way back to balance.

Why Inflammation Increases in Perimenopause
Perimenopause is a time of hormonal transition, and these shifts can create more heat and intensity in the body. In Ayurveda, this is connected to an increase in Pitta dosha; the energy responsible for transformation, metabolism, and heat.
When Pitta becomes elevated, it can lead to inflammation, skin issues, irritability, overheating, and sensitivity in the body. But that’s only part of the picture.

The Missing Piece: Digestion, Agni, and Ama
In Ayurveda, digestion is everything. Your digestive fire—known as Agni—is responsible for breaking down not just food, but also emotions and experiences. When Agni becomes weakened (which can happen with stress, irregular eating, or overstimulation), the body begins to accumulate Ama.
Ama is a buildup of undigested material in the body… and it’s a major contributor to inflammation. 
When you combine increased heat (Pitta), with toxin buildup (Ama), you get the symptoms so many women are experiencing in midlife.

Common Signs of Inflammation in Midlife Women
Inflammation doesn’t always look like a diagnosis. It can show up as:
Feeling puffy or swollen
Tight rings or clothes
Joint discomfort or stiffness
Sluggish digestion or bloating
Brain fog or low energy
Skin flare-ups

This is your body asking for support.

Everyday Habits That May Be Increasing Inflammation
Without realizing it, many daily habits can add to internal heat and toxin buildup:
Eating on the go or skipping meals
Late-night eating
Too much caffeine or alcohol
Highly processed foods
Chronic busyness without rest
Pushing through exhaustion


How to Reduce Inflammation Naturally with Ayurveda
Ayurveda invites you to support your body, here are simple, effective ways to begin:

 1. Support Your Morning Routine
Start your day slowly. Drink warm water. Take a few quiet moments before checking your phone. This helps regulate digestion and calm the nervous system.

 2. Eat for Digestion, Not Just Nutrition
Focus on warm, cooked meals, easy-to-digest foods, spices like turmeric, fennel, and coriander. Eat at consistent times to strengthen Agni.

3. Cool the Body Gently
Inflammation is heat—so we bring in cooling, calming energy.
This might look like slowing your pace, spending time in nature, taking breaks throughout the day  

4. Create Space to Process

This is often the missing piece. Your body needs time to digest not just food, but life. Even 5–10 minutes of stillness each day can begin to reduce internal overload.

Inflammation in perimenopause is communication. It’s your body asking for less intensity, more rhythm, more nourishment or rest. When you begin to listen instead of push… everything starts to shift.

Ready for Support?
If you’re navigating inflammation, fatigue, or discomfort in midlife and want a more personalized, holistic approach…I’m here to support you.
✨ Book a free 10-minute consultation
✨ Learn how Ayurveda can help you feel like yourself again


You don’t have to figure this out alone. Healing doesn’t come from doing more. It comes from doing what your body actually needs. And often… that begins with slowing down enough to hear it.
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4/9/2026 0 Comments

Why You’re Waking Up at 3AM (And What Your Body Is Trying to Tell You)

Have you ever woken up in the middle of the night—wide awake, mind racing—and wondered…
Why is this happening?
You fall asleep just fine. But then sometime around 2 or 3AM, your eyes open… and suddenly your mind is on. Thinking. Planning. Replaying conversations. And no matter how tired you were before bed, your body now feels alert.
Does this sound familiar?
Waking up at 3AM is one of the most common sleep challenges for  women in midlife.

What’s Actually Happening in Your Body
There isn’t just one reason for waking up at 3AM—there are usually a few things happening together. Let’s walk through the most common ones.
1. Cortisol Spikes (Your Stress Hormone)
Cortisol is your body’s natural “wake-up” hormone. It helps you feel alert and energized in the morning. But when stress levels are high—whether from daily life, mental load, or even overdoing it physically—cortisol can become dysregulated. That means it may spike at the wrong time… like the middle of the night. So when you wake up feeling alert at 3AM, it may be because your body has released cortisol, signaling: “Time to wake up.” Even though it’s not.
2. Blood Sugar Drops During the Night
Another common cause is blood sugar imbalance. If your blood sugar drops too low while you’re sleeping, your body will release cortisol to bring it back up. And that cortisol spike can wake you. This is why what you eat at dinner matters more than you might think. If your evening meal is too light, too early or lacking protein or healthy fats, your body may not have enough steady fuel to carry you through the night.
3. Nervous System Overload
If you’re constantly “on the go” during the day—multitasking, rushing, managing responsibilities—your nervous system may stay in a fight-or-flight state. Even when you go to bed, your body may not fully shift into rest mode. So while you fall asleep…
you don’t always stay in deep, restorative sleep.

4. The Ayurvedic Perspective: Vata Time
In Ayurveda, the early morning hours—roughly 2–6AM—are associated with Vata energy. Vata governs movement, the nervous system, and the mind. When Vata is elevated, it can lead to light or interrupted sleep, waking during the night, racing thoughts, or anxiety.  So if you’re waking up at 3AM with your mind active, this is often a sign of Vata imbalance, combined with hormonal and nervous system shifts.
How to Support Better Sleep (Gently)
The body needs to be supported, so it feels safe enough to rest. And this is where small, consistent shifts can make a big difference.
Create a Calming Evening Rhythm
Your body needs a transition from busy → rest. Try: dimming the lights after dinner turning off screens earlier sipping a warm herbal tea sitting quietly for a few minutes before bed These simple cues tell your body: “It’s safe to slow down.”
Support Blood Sugar at Dinner Aim for a meal that feels nourishing and balanced. Including: protein, healthy fats and warm, cooked foods.  This helps stabilize blood sugar and reduce nighttime wake-ups. Calm the Nervous System Throughout the day (and especially in the evening), build in small moments of pause: slow, deep breathing stepping outside for fresh air slowing down while eating These moments help your body shift out of stress mode.
Add Warmth Before Bed In Ayurveda, warmth is deeply grounding and calming. Try: a warm shower or bath, wearing cozy layers, massaging oil onto the bottoms of your feet. This helps reduce Vata and prepare the body for sleep.
If You Still Wake at 3AM…
This is important. Try not to immediately go into frustration. Instead take slow, steady breaths and place a hand on your heart or belly. Gently remind yourself: “I’m safe. It’s okay to rest.” Even if you don’t fall back asleep right away, your body is still benefiting from rest.
A Simple Shift to Start With
Start with one small change:
✨ create a calming bedtime routine
✨ adjust your dinner to feel more nourishing
✨ practice gentle breathing if you wake

Consistency matters more than perfection.
Final Thoughts
Waking up at 3AM isn’t random. It’s often your body asking for support with stress, hormones, blood sugar, and/or daily rhythms. When you begin to support your body gently—through nourishment, routine, and calming the nervous system—sleep often begins to shift naturally. And over time, you may notice something else…You feel more rested. More grounded. More like yourself again.
A Gentle Invitation
If you’re ready to support your body in a more sustainable, nurturing way, I invite you to download your free guide: The Radiance Reset
Inside, you’ll learn:
✨ a simple morning routine for energy
✨ a calming evening ritual for better sleep
✨ gentle dietary shifts to support digestion and hormones
✨ how to reconnect with your body’s needs

Because your body is always working for you, sometimes it just needs a little support

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3/12/2026 0 Comments

Small Kitchen Shifts with Big Impact: Using Food as Medicine with Ayurveda

One of the most beautiful teachings in Ayurveda is this: The kitchen can be one of the most powerful healing spaces in your home.

We often think wellness requires big overhauls: new diets, complicated routines, or expensive supplements. But in Ayurveda, healing usually begins with small, consistent shifts. The way we cook, the spices we use, and how we support digestion each day can have a profound impact on how we feel.

These small kitchen practices help support:
• digestion
• hormone balance
• skin health
• energy levels
• nervous system regulation


The best part is that they are simple enough to integrate into daily life.
Today I want to share a few Ayurvedic kitchen practices that can create meaningful shifts in how your body feels.

Digestion Is the Foundation of Health
In Ayurveda, digestion is known as Agni, or digestive fire. When our digestion is strong, the body can properly break down food, absorb nutrients, and eliminate waste. When digestion becomes sluggish or overloaded, symptoms can begin to appear.
Some common signs digestion may need support include:
• bloating
• gas
• fatigue after meals
• skin concerns
• brain fog
• irregular elimination


Rather than jumping to restriction, Ayurveda often asks a gentler question:
How can we support digestion so the body can do what it already knows how to do? And this is where small kitchen shifts   can make a big difference.

Let Food Be Warm and Nourishing
One of the simplest Ayurvedic principles is choosing warm, cooked foods whenever possible. Warm foods are easier for the body to digest and help support the digestive fire.

Examples might include:
• soups
• stews
• sautéed vegetables
• warm grains
• herbal teas


This doesn't mean you can never have raw foods. It simply means balancing raw foods with cooked meals, especially if digestion feels sensitive. For many women in midlife, this shift alone can help reduce bloating and improve energy.

Cook with Digestive Spices
Ayurveda doesn't rely heavily on complicated supplements. Instead, it uses kitchen spices as gentle medicine.
Four of my favorite digestive spices are ones you may already have in your pantry: Ginger, Cumin, Fennel, and Coriander.

Ginger is warming and stimulating for digestion. It helps awaken the digestive fire and can reduce bloating and sluggish digestion.
You can add fresh ginger to:
• soups
• stir-fries
• warm tea
• sautéed vegetables

Even a small amount can help support digestion.

Cumin is deeply supportive for the digestive system.
It helps the body properly break down food and absorb nutrients while reducing gas and discomfort.
Cumin works beautifully in:
• rice dishes
• roasted vegetables
• soups
• lentils and beans


Fennel is a gentle, soothing spice that supports digestion without overheating the system.
It is particularly helpful for:
• bloating
• gas
• sluggish digestion after meals

Many people enjoy simply chewing a few fennel seeds after eating.

Coriander is cooling and calming for digestion, making it especially helpful when there is inflammation or excess heat in the body. It supports both digestion and detoxification.
Coriander pairs beautifully with:
• vegetables
• rice dishes
• soups
• spice blends


One Simple Ayurvedic Tea
One of the easiest ways to incorporate these spices is through a traditional Ayurvedic tea called CCF Tea.
CCF stands for: Cumin, Coriander and Fennel
This tea gently supports digestion throughout the day.
CCF Tea Recipe1 teaspoon cumin seeds
1 teaspoon coriander seeds
1 teaspoon fennel seeds
4 cups water

Bring to a gentle boil and simmer for about 10 minutes. Strain and sip warm throughout the day.
This tea can help reduce bloating, support digestion, and keep the digestive fire balanced.

Small Shifts Create Lasting Change
Ayurveda reminds us that healing rarely comes from extremes. Instead, it happens through small daily practices that support the body consistently over time.

A few spices added to a meal.
A warm cup of digestive tea.
Choosing cooked foods when the body needs nourishment.

These simple kitchen practices can help the body feel lighter, calmer, and more balanced.
And often, these small shifts ripple outward into better sleep, clearer skin, steadier energy, and improved mood.

A Gentle Invitation
If you're curious about bringing more Ayurvedic wisdom into your daily life, I invite you to listen to my podcast, Thrive Over 40, where we explore simple practices to support digestion, hormones, and nervous system balance.
And if you're ready to begin making small shifts today, you can download my free guide:
The Radiance Reset — a 5-day gentle wellness reset designed for midlife women.
Inside you'll learn simple practices to support:
✨ energy
✨ digestion
✨ sleep
✨ hormone balance

Because when we begin listening to the body, it often shows us the way back to balance.
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2/13/2026 0 Comments

The Nervous System Reset: Simple Grounding Practices for Daily Life

If you’ve been feeling overstimulated lately — busy mind, constant input, always “on edge” without knowing why — you are not alone. Modern life keeps us switched on. Notifications, responsibilities, over commitment, lack of sleep, too much screen time, not enough sunlight… it adds up. 
And in midlife especially, this can feel amplified. Midlife is about listening.

Understanding Your Nervous System
Your nervous system has two primary modes: Fight or Flight

Years ago, this response protected us from real physical danger — predators that required us to either fight or run.
Today’s “predators” look different:
  • Overcommitment
  • Relationship or work stress
  • Lack of sleep
  • Too much screen time
  • Dwelling on things we can’t control
Your body still reacts the same way — elevated heart rate, shallow breathing, tension, racing thoughts. But here’s the key:
Your nervous system needs a reboot just like your phone does.

Sometimes that reset is as simple as:
  • Sitting and humming for two minutes
  • Taking five slow belly breaths
  • Stepping outside for a short walk
Mini mental breaks throughout the day are powerful. They are not indulgent. They are necessary.

Rest and Digest
This is where we want to live most of the time.
*Heart rate steady.
*Breath deep.
*Digestion functioning.
*Mind grounded.
This is the state where healing happens.

Many women live in a low-level stress state without realizing it. We run households. We care for children, spouses, aging parents. We manage schedules. Some of us work full time. Some of us run businesses (sometimes more than one).
And often, we are last on our own list.

From an Ayurvedic perspective, this often shows up as a Vata imbalance — nervous system overstimulation. Sometimes Pitta shows up as needing to control everything. Sometimes Kapha withdraws and shuts down.
Regulation comes from rhythm, safety, and consistency.

Signs Your Nervous System Needs Support
Sometimes the signals are subtle. Sometimes they’re loud.
Physical signs:
  • Restless sleep
  • Tension or tightness
  • Digestive discomfort
Emotional signs:
  • Irritability
  • Anxiety
  • Overwhelm
Mental signs:
  • Racing thoughts
  • Difficulty focusing
Awareness is the first reset. You don’t have to judge it, just notice it.

Simple Grounding Practices You Can Actually Do
This is not about a perfect morning routine or a two-hour ritual. Small practices done daily matter more than perfection.

Morning Grounding in as little as 2-3 minutes
  • Begin with a warm beverage — cinnamon, ginger, or chai
  • Gentle stretching or seated breathing
  • Set one intention for the day, and pray
Nothing elaborate. Just intentional.

Midday Nervous System Support
  • Place your feet flat on the floor and take one long, slow exhale
  • Pause briefly before meals
  • Step outside for sunlight or a short walk
These micro-resets add up.

Evening Calming Rhythms
  • Oil massage for hands or feet
  • Lower lighting after sunset
  • Create a screen-free wind-down window
Consistency calms the body more than intensity ever will.

Grounding Through the Body
The body calms the mind — not the other way around. Sensory grounding is powerful.

Think:
  • Warmth
  • Touch
  • Scent

Ayurveda emphasizes:

Oil
  • Warm sesame oil for Vata (dry skin, feeling scattered)
  • Coconut oil for Pitta (heat, sensitivity)
  • Sunflower oil for Kapha (heavier, well-hydrated skin)

Warmth
Warm food. Warm drinks. A warm atmosphere. Warmth signals safety.

Routine
Eating at consistent times. Sleeping at consistent times.
Not rigid — balanced.

Ayurveda is always about balance. I invite you to choose one sensory anchor this week. Just one.

If you’re local to the Wautoma, Wisconsin area and feel called to deeper support, you’re welcome to reach out for Ayurvedic bodywork. Click on bodywork in the menu to see what I can offer you.

Creating Safety in Daily Life
Predictability equals safety for the nervous system.
Try simple rhythms like:
  • Consistent wake and sleep times (around 6am and 10pm)
  • Regular, warm, nourishing meals
  • Gentle transitions between tasks
Multitasking often increases stress. Starting and completing one task at a time creates a sense of stability and accomplishment.

Grounding is stabilizing.

Listen to the Full Episode on Spotify
If this resonated with you and you’d like to hear me guide you through this reset — including the grounding breath we began with — I invite you to listen to the full episode on Spotify.
Come sit with me in Thrive Over 40, let’s soften the edges of overwhelm together.
Your nervous system doesn’t need perfection.
It needs rhythm. Warmth. Consistency.
I’ll meet you there.
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2/13/2026 0 Comments

Midlife in Balance: Ayurvedic Support for Perimenopause

Your body is quietly communicating. And it’s asking you to listen.

If you’ve been experiencing heat surges, restless sleep, mood swings, irritability, anxious feelings, or mental fog lately — you are not alone. Midlife is not a problem to fix. It is a transition to understand.

Today I want to walk you through how Ayurveda views perimenopause and menopause — and how gentle, nourishing shifts can help you feel more balanced, steady, and supported.

Understanding This Transition Through Ayurveda
First, let’s clarify something important. 
*Perimenopause is the 6–15 year transition leading up to menopause.
*Menopause is the single moment your menstrual cycle has stopped for 12 consecutive months.
*Post-menopause is the phase that follows for the rest of your life.

It is a natural shift. From an Ayurvedic lens, midlife is often marked by changes in the doshas:
  • Pitta increases → heat, inflammation, irritability, hot flashes
  • Vata increases → dryness, anxiety, sleep disruption, restlessness
That’s why symptoms can feel unpredictable. One day you’re fine. The next day you’re overheating after garlic or waking at 3am wondering what happened. Food, stress, routines, even the seasons, they all influence how you feel.

Balancing midlife isn’t about rigid control. It’s about cooling, grounding, and nourishing.

Cooling Internal Heat & Inflammation
Inflammation isn’t always “bad.” In Ayurveda, we often think of it as excess internal heat.
Cooling does not mean ice-cold smoothies or drastic dietary changes. It means choosing foods and habits that calm the system rather than inflame it.

Some simple shifts:
  • Favor warm, moist meals over very spicy or fried foods
  • Add cooling foods like cucumber, leafy greens, coconut, and berries
  • Reduce alcohol, excess coffee, and acidic or spicy foods — especially at night
  • Use cooling herbs like fennel, coriander, and mint
Try having dinner by 6pm and keeping it lighter. Evening heat spikes often lessen when digestion isn’t overloaded at night.
Remember, what cools one woman may not cool another. Peppermint, for example, can feel cooling to one person and stimulating to another. This is why perimenopause looks different for everyone.

Supporting Sleep During Hormonal Changes
Sleep can feel fragile during this stage. If you struggle to fall asleep or stay asleep, Vata may be elevated. If you wake between 2–4am and can’t fall back asleep, Pitta may be active.

Instead of fighting your body, try supporting it.

For calming Vata:
  • Warm oil self-massage (abhyanga) with sesame oil before bed
  • Turning off electronics an hour before sleep
  • A calming routine starting around 9pm
  • Chamomile tea or warm milk
For calming Pitta:
  • Avoid spicy, acidic foods at dinner
  • Try lighter evening meals
  • A pinch of turmeric in warm milk
  • Temporarily reducing garlic, onions, or tomatoes

Aim for a consistent bedtime around 10pm. Better sleep often comes from consistency,  not force. Nighttime is sacred in this transition. Protect it gently.

Stabilizing Mood & Emotional Swings
Emotions are information. Some days you may feel weepy. Other days irritated. Sometimes frozen. Stability during midlife comes from rhythm.

Support your nervous system with:
  • Consistent wake and sleep times (around 10pm–6am if possible)
  • Morning sunlight exposure
  • Gentle movement like walking or stretching instead of intense workouts
  • Nourishing meals at regular times
  • Moments of stillness — even just 1–2 minutes without noise or notifications
We are not meant to be reachable 24/7. Your body needs pauses. Your hormones respond to steadiness.

Nourishing Hormones Instead of Fighting Them
This is a powerful mindset shift. You are not here to “fix” your hormones. You are here to support your body as it adapts. Change will happen. Resisting it creates more stress.

Instead, focus on nourishment:
  • Healthy fats like ghee, olive oil, and avocado
  • Protein at each meal
  • Warm, cooked foods over raw
  • Regular meals to stabilize blood sugar
  • Deep rest as a form of hormone medicine
Midlife can become a deeply empowering phase when you stop fighting your body and begin listening to it.
If you’re ready for personalized guidance, I invite you to schedule a consultation so we can create a plan tailored specifically to you.

Watch the Full Episode on YouTube
If this resonated with you and you’d like to hear me walk through these practices more deeply — including the grounding breath we began with — I invite you to watch the full episode on YouTube. Come sit with me. Take a breath. Let’s navigate this transition gently and intentionally together.
You don’t need extreme solutions. You need rhythm. Cooling. Nourishment.
And a little more listening.
I’ll see you there.
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2/12/2026 0 Comments

Understanding Ama: A Gentle Ayurvedic Approach to Detox

If you’ve ever felt off in your body — heavy after meals, foggy in your thinking, bloated even when you didn’t eat much, or just not quite yourself — Ayurveda has a word for that experience.

It’s called ama.

Ama isn’t something to fear. It’s simply information. A gentle signal from your body that digestion and elimination may need a little support.

What Is Ama?
In Ayurveda, ama refers to the buildup of undigested material, often described as toxins. Ama can accumulate when digestion is sluggish or overwhelmed. Common contributors include eating late at night, inconsistent meals, or not having a daily bowel movement.
Ama often shows up as:
  • Heaviness in the body
  • Mental fog or difficulty concentrating
  • Sluggish digestion
  • Low energy
When ama becomes deeper or more chronic, it can contribute to aches, pains, and long-term imbalances. Still, this isn’t a diagnosis or something to panic about. Ayurveda is rooted in balance, not blame. Ama is simply a sign that something is out of rhythm — and rhythms can be restored.

I’ll be diving deeper into the doshas and how understanding your constitution helps you clear ama in a way that actually works for your body.

Why Detox Doesn’t Need to Be Extreme
For many people, the word “detox” brings up images of starvation, juice cleanses, or pushing the body to extremes. That was certainly my experience when I first heard the term.

While fasting can have benefits in certain situations, starvation is never the goal in Ayurveda.
Ayurveda avoids harsh cleanses because they often stress the nervous system and disrupt hormones — especially for women in perimenopause or menopause. Instead, the focus is on gentle, daily habits that slowly and steadily clear ama without triggering detox reactions like loose stools, skin eruptions, or energy crashes.

Slow and steady isn’t just gentler. It’s more sustainable. And sustainability is what creates lasting wellness.

Gentle Ama-Clearing Shifts You Can Try
Rather than doing everything at once, Ayurveda encourages small, supportive changes. Here are a few gentle shifts that help clear ama while honoring your body’s needs:
~Drink warm water
Start your morning with warm lemon water (just a slice of lemon — less is more, especially if you run warm). Continue sipping warm or room-temperature water throughout the day.
~Eat your largest meal at lunch
Your digestive fire is strongest around midday. Aim for a nourishing lunch with protein and carbohydrates, and a lighter dinner to support rest and digestion overnight.
~Eat at consistent times
Try breakfast between 7–9am, lunch between 11am–1pm, and dinner before 6pm when possible. Limiting snacking gives digestion time to fully process meals.
~Prioritize restful sleep
Aim for a 10pm bedtime and a 5:30–6am wake time if that feels supportive. Reducing water intake after 6pm can help prevent nighttime disruptions.
~Use simple, supportive spices
Cumin, coriander, and fennel (often combined as CCF tea) are gentle and balancing for most people. Herbs have energetics, so if you’re unsure what’s right for you, a personalized consultation can help.
~Practice deep belly breathing
Stress and shallow breathing directly impact digestion. Slow, diaphragmatic breathing — expanding the belly on the inhale and softening on the exhale — can significantly support digestive fire.

What Ama Often Feels Like
Ama doesn’t always announce itself loudly. Often it feels subtle, like:
  • Feeling “off” without knowing why
  • Heaviness, especially after eating
  • Mental fog or zoning out
  • Sluggishness when starting your day or projects
  • Bloating after meals
These sensations are your body’s way of asking for gentler care, not more discipline.

This week, I invite you to choose just one gentle ama-clearing shift listed above. One habit done consistently is far more powerful than trying to do everything at once.  Remember, Ayurveda is not about overwhelm, but eased guidance to live your best life.


If this approach resonates with you and you’re ready to take the next gentle step, I invite you to download my
free Radiance Reset Guide.

Inside, you’ll find:
  • Daily Ayurvedic habits for hormone balance
  • Natural support for menopause symptoms like hot flashes, night sweats, and mood swings
  • Self-care practices to restore energy in perimenopause
  • Simple lifestyle shifts for better sleep and a calmer mind
It’s designed to be a supportive reference — something you can return to again and again as you build a more balanced relationship with your body.

If this article supported you, consider following The Sattva Circle so you never miss a weekly wellness reset. And feel free to share this with someone who could use a little extra gentleness right now.
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2/5/2026 0 Comments

Morning Rhythms to Support a Calm, Clear Day

Simple Ayurvedic routines to start your day with ease instead of overwhelm
Have you ever noticed how a rushed morning can set the tone for your entire day?
You hit snooze. Then you remember lunch needs to be made. You can’t find anything to wear. You spill your coffee. Suddenly, everything feels off—and the rest of the day follows suit like a row of falling dominoes.
Ayurveda understands this experience deeply. In fact, morning energy is considered foundational to how we feel physically, mentally, and emotionally throughout the day.
You don’t need a perfect or complicated routine to create change. Gentle morning rhythms can support calm digestion, mental clarity, and a more grounded nervous system—one small shift at a time.
Why Mornings Matter in Ayurveda
Ayurveda teaches that the body thrives on rhythm. When your mornings are predictable and nourishing, your body can relax instead of staying in stress mode.
Simple routines help:
*Calm the nervous system
*Support digestion and metabolism
*Improve mental clarity and focus
*Reduce the “always behind” feeling
Preparing your morning the night before—choosing clothes, prepping meals, or getting to bed earlier—can make a surprising difference.
Will it work every single time? Of course not. But 50% consistency is far better than 0%.

Sleep plays a huge role here as well.
Ayurveda encourages being in bed before 10pm when possible, as our circadian rhythms are deeply influenced by light. Staying up long after sunset and waking after sunrise can disrupt digestion, hormones, and energy levels. If you’re naturally a night owl, try moving bedtime earlier in five-minute increments every few days. Small shifts matter.
And if sleep has been a struggle, that’s something we can explore together through personalized support.

You Don’t Need a Long Checklist
One of the biggest misconceptions about wellness is that it requires an elaborate routine.
Ayurveda offers a different approach: small, sustainable changes that fit your real life.
If mornings feel chaotic, it may not be a morning problem at all—it could be an evening rhythm that needs gentle support. Start with what feels doable, especially if evenings are the only quiet time you get for yourself (I see you).
Remember: when your morning feels more peaceful for you, that energy eventually ripples out to the rest of the household.

A Simple Ayurvedic Morning Flow
Here are a few gentle practices you can choose from. You don’t need to do all of them—just one is enough to begin.
Wake Gently -If your alarm feels jarring, consider a sunrise alarm clock that uses gradual light to wake you naturally. This mimics the rising sun and feels much kinder to the nervous system.
Drink Warm Water First Thing -After waking and using the bathroom, drink a small glass of warm or room-temperature water. This helps wake up digestion and supports liver function before coffee or food.
Create a Moment of Stillness -This doesn’t have to mean silent meditation. Gentle humming or “bee breath” can clear the sinuses and calm the mind. It’s also a beautiful way to pray or set intentions for your family and your day. This practice allows you to begin the day peacefully while connecting spiritually.
Light Movement -A simple stretch—like reaching your arms overhead—can wake up the body and improve circulation. Always listen to your body and stop if something feels painful.
Get Morning Light -Stepping outside for a short walk, sitting near a window, or letting sunlight hit your eyes helps reset your circadian rhythm. Morning light exposure supports hormones, energy levels, and overall wellness.

Choose Just One Morning Shift
If everything feels like too much, start here:
Warm water → supports sluggish digestion
One minute of breathing or humming → reduces the morning cortisol spike
One minute outside → resets your internal clock That’s it. One minute counts.

My Personal Morning Shift
One of the most impactful changes I’ve made is waking around 6am or before sunrise when possible. Ayurveda considers this an ideal time to rise, and I’ve noticed fewer aches and pains and better overall energy. I pair this with drinking warm water throughout the day. Some mornings are easier than others, and sometimes I sleep in—and I don’t beat myself up about it. Ayurveda isn’t about perfection. It’s about rhythm, awareness, and compassion.

Begin Your Ayurvedic Journey With Gentle Support
If you’re ready to explore simple daily rhythms that support hormones, energy, digestion, and sleep, I invite you to download the
free Radiance Reset Guide.
Inside the guide, you’ll find:
Daily Ayurvedic rituals for hormone balance
Natural support for menopause symptoms like hot flashes, night sweats, and mood swings
Self-care practices for more energy during perimenopause
​Simple lifestyle tips for better sleep and a calmer mind It’s a beautiful reference to begin your Ayurvedic journey—without overwhelm.

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1/29/2026 0 Comments

Why Digestion Is Everything: The Ayurvedic Gut–Skin Connection Explained Simply

​If you’ve ever struggled with bloating, sluggish digestion, skin breakouts, or inflammation, Ayurveda would gently guide us back to one foundational place: digestion.

In Ayurveda, digestion isn’t just about what you eat—it’s about how well your body transforms food into nourishment. This digestive intelligence is known as agni, or digestive fire, and it is considered the root of all wellness.
When digestion is supported, the entire system thrives. When it struggles, symptoms often show up in places like the skin, energy levels, mood, and elimination.
Let’s explore why digestion matters so much—and how small, sustainable shifts can make a meaningful difference.

Digestive Fire: The Foundation of Whole-Body Health
Agni refers to your body’s ability to break down, absorb, and assimilate nutrients from food. You can think of it as your metabolism, but in Ayurveda, digestion goes far beyond the stomach.
According to Ayurvedic wisdom, the body is made up of seven tissue layers, called dhatus. Each layer has its own digestive fire, responsible for nourishing the next stage of the body:
  1. Rasa (lymph) – transports nutrients and waste
  2. Rakta (blood) – nourishes organs and tissues
  3. Mamsa (muscle) – provides structure and protection
  4. Meda (fat) – stores energy and insulates the body
  5. Asthi (bone) – supports movement and structure
  6. Majja (nerves) – governs communication and hormones
  7. Shukra (reproductive tissue) – supports vitality, emotional release, and ojas (your essence of life)
If digestion becomes weak at any stage, the entire system can feel off. This is why digestive health is so central in Ayurveda—when nourishment breaks down at the beginning, it affects everything downstream.

Signs Your Digestive Fire May Be Low
When agni is diminished, the body struggles to process food efficiently. You may notice symptoms such as:
  • Bloating after meals
  • Greasy or sticky stools
  • Difficulty with regular elimination
  • Feeling heavy or sluggish after eating
These are not random inconveniences—they’re messages from your body asking for support.

The Gut–Skin Connection in Ayurveda
Ayurveda teaches that impaired digestion leads to a buildup of toxins known as ama. When the body can’t eliminate toxins efficiently, it looks for other exit routes—often through the skin.
This is why skin issues are frequently linked to digestive imbalance.

Common digestive clues showing up on the skin include:
  • Acne or bumps
  • Redness or rosacea
  • Rashes or inflammation
  • Excess dryness
Different areas of the face can even reflect different internal imbalances. For example, redness in the cheeks often points to excess heat in the body, which may show up as rosacea or inflammatory skin conditions.
I’ve seen this connection firsthand with clients—one in particular noticed a shift in persistent forehead bumps simply by incorporating oil pulling into her daily routine. Gentle, consistent digestive support can create visible change.

Simple Ayurvedic Shifts to Support Digestion
Supporting digestion doesn’t require drastic changes. Ayurveda emphasizes simple, nourishing habits that keep the digestive fire strong without overwhelming the system.

Here are a few gentle ways to begin:
Eat Warm, Nourishing Foods
Warm foods are easier to digest. If possible, aim for:
  • Warm meals at every meal
  • Your largest meal at lunchtime, when digestion is strongest
Use Digestive Spices Mindfully
Spices like cumin and ginger can help stimulate digestion. However, if you tend toward excess heat, ginger may be too warming—cumin is often a gentler option. Always listen to your body and avoid anything you’re sensitive or allergic to.
Be Present While Eating
Digestion begins in the mouth. Sitting down, slowing down, and thoroughly chewing your food makes it easier for your body to absorb nutrients. Multitasking while eating can interfere with digestion and assimilation.
Choose Warm or Room-Temperature Water
Cold and iced drinks can dampen digestive fire and create congestion in the body’s channels. Warm or room-temperature water helps keep digestion moving smoothly. If you experience heartburn or excess heat, room temperature is a better choice than hot.
Add Light Movement After Meals
A gentle walk after eating supports digestion and circulation, helping the body process the meal more efficiently.

One Gentle Takeaway This Week
Rather than trying everything at once, I invite you to choose one small shift this week:
  • Drink warm or room-temperature water throughout the day
  • Or sit down for a warm, home-cooked lunch without distractions
Consistency—not perfection—is what creates change.

Support Your Digestion With Gentle Guidance
If you’re ready to deepen your understanding of digestion, hormones, energy, and daily rhythms, I invite you to download the free Radiance Reset Guide

Inside the guide, you’ll find:
  • Daily Ayurvedic rituals to support hormone balance
  • Natural approaches for menopause symptoms like hot flashes, night sweats, and mood swings
  • Self-care practices for more energy and digestive support
  • Simple lifestyle tips for better sleep and a calmer nervous system
It’s a supportive starting point for anyone ready to nourish their body from the inside out—without overwhelm.
And if this topic resonated with you, I’d love to hear what small shift you’re trying this week. Gentle steps truly add up.
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1/22/2026 0 Comments

Small Shifts, Big Results: How Tiny Ayurvedic Changes Can Transform Your Wellness

If you’ve ever felt like improving your health requires a complete lifestyle overhaul, you’re not alone. Many people believe that change has to be dramatic, difficult, or all-or-nothing to be effective.

Ayurveda teaches us something very different.

In this blog post, we explore how small, consistent shifts—not intensity or perfection—create the most sustainable results. These gentle practices are designed to fit into real life and support your body, mind, and nervous system over time.

Why Do We Think Change Has to Be Dramatic?

Many of us carry outdated beliefs about what change “should” look like. Let’s gently debunk a few common myths.
Myth #1: You’re Either All In or Not Trying Hard Enough
The truth? Change happens on different timelines. Some people shift quickly. Others take years to even decide they’re ready—and both are completely valid.
Ayurveda honors your unique pace.
Myth #2: Change Has to Be Hard to Work
Ayurveda teaches gentleness and kindness—not just toward others, but toward yourself.
Take a moment to notice the inner dialogue you have about your health. Is it critical? Rushed? Demanding? Healing often begins when we soften that script.
Myth #3: You Must Overhaul Your Entire Lifestyle
You don’t need a full reset to make progress.
Small examples of impactful shifts:
Choosing a nourishing meal once a day Skipping the drive-thru one less day per week Moving your body once a week instead of not at all Waking up 15 minutes earlier to reduce morning stress These changes compound—sometimes hour by hour, not just day by day.
Myth #4: One Slip Means Failure
Ayurveda reminds us that consistency matters more than perfection.
If you miss a day, you simply begin again. The more a habit becomes part of your rhythm, the easier it feels—and eventually, it becomes your lifestyle.
How Ayurveda Approaches Change:
Rhythm Over Intensity

In Ayurveda, sustainable wellness comes from rhythm, not force.
Instead of asking, “How much can I change?”
Try asking, “What is one small shift I can support this week?”
Once you:
Choose one habit Schedule it into your day Notice how you feel afterward You naturally build confidence. Over time, those small shifts stack—week by week, month by month.

Simple Ayurvedic Habits That Create Big Results

Let’s look at two powerful yet simple Ayurvedic practices you can begin today.
Tongue Scraping: A Daily Detox Habit
Your tongue reflects many organ systems in the body. When you look in the mirror, you might notice:
A white coating Discoloration Cracks or lines Teeth indentations Trembling when extended These signs can offer insight into internal imbalances (we’ll go deeper into this in a future episode).
Tongue scraping is a traditional Ayurvedic practice done first thing in the morning before brushing your teeth. It removes ama—toxins and bacteria—supporting:
Fresher breath Better digestion Improved taste Oral health Ayurveda traditionally recommends copper, but stainless steel works well too. Tongue scrapers are inexpensive and easy to find online or at many drugstores.
Drinking Warm Water Instead of Cold
Cold or iced water slows digestive fire—known in Ayurveda as agni. It can also clog the channels and slow metabolism.
A simple shift?
Choose: Warm, lukewarm or room-temperature water. This supports digestion, circulation, and overall metabolic function.

Real-Life Example: Gut Health and Skin Balance
I’ve worked with clients experiencing adult acne alongside gut health challenges. For some, a major turning point was simply incorporating:
Tongue scraping
Drinking warm water
Oil pulling (which we’ll cover in the next episode)
One client was told by her dermatologist that her acne likely wouldn’t resolve due to gut issues. As she committed to these gentle daily habits, her skin began to clear.
Will this work for everyone? I can’t promise that. But these examples show how small lifestyle shifts can create meaningful internal change—often reflected outward.

Start With One Gentle Shift

If you’re feeling inspired, I encourage you to start with just one habit:
Tongue scraping each morning
or 
Drinking warm water throughout the day
That’s it. No pressure. No perfection.

Remember: Consistency Beats Perfection

Perfection isn’t attainable—and it’s not the goal.
Ayurveda isn’t all or nothing. It’s about choosing one supportive step today that moves you closer to how you want to feel.
Small shifts create big results when practiced consistently.

Begin Your Ayurvedic Journey Today

If this resonates with you, I invite you to download your free Radiance Reset Guide, available here.
Inside, you’ll find:
Daily Ayurvedic habits for hormone balance
Natural support for menopause symptoms like hot flashes, night sweats, and mood swings
Self-care practices for more energy during perimenopause
Simple lifestyle tips for better sleep and a calmer mind

0 Comments
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    Amanda has been a massage therapist since 2010.  She loves helping people online and in person through wellness and bodywork.

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