Pausing Before the Next Chapter
As the year draws to a close, I always encourage my clients—and myself—to pause before rushing into the next chapter of the new year. Reflection is not indulgent; it is essential. In naturopathic and functional medicine, we recognise that the body is constantly responding to inputs such as nutrition, stress, sleep, movement, thoughts, and environment.¹ The end of the year offers a powerful checkpoint to take stock of what has truly nourished us, what has depleted us, and what needs to change as we move forward gently.
In my clinic, I often see that when we slow down long enough to listen to the body's messages—fatigue, tension, digestive changes, sleep disturbances—we can start to understand what our cells have been trying to tell us all year long. Taking a moment now to reflect can turn 2026 into a year of more aligned, intelligent choices rather than quick-fix resolutions.
Taking Stock of the Year Gone By
Before setting intentions for 2026, it is worth asking yourself a few honest questions. Please sit with these, perhaps with a journal or a quiet cup of tea, and answer without judgment.
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What habits supported my health this year?
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Where did I feel stronger, clearer, and more resilient?
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What patterns left me feeling inflamed, exhausted, or run down?
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Did my lifestyle choices align with my long-term health goals—or just short-term gratification or survival?
True reflection is not about guilt or perfection; it is about awareness. And awareness is often the first step toward meaningful, sustainable change and more abundant health.
What to Leave Behind as You Move Into 2026
For many people in my practice, progress in health comes not from endlessly adding more, but from gently letting go. When we release patterns that keep our nervous system on high alert, our gut inflamed, or our hormones dysregulated, the body can finally redirect energy back into repair and resilience.²
As we move into 2026, consider leaving behind:
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Reactive living, where stress dictates food choices, sleep patterns, movement, and even your boundaries. Chronic stress can dysregulate the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis and contribute to immune and mood imbalances over time.³
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Inflammatory habits such as excessive sugar, alcohol, ultra-processed foods, and constant late-night screen exposure. These can promote oxidative stress, disturb circadian rhythms, and impair metabolic and immune health.²
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Chronic over-restriction, especially of calories and healthy fats, which are essential for brain function, hormone production, immune function, and cellular repair.⁴ Gentle nourishment is far more sustainable than harsh restriction.
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The "busy equals productive" mindset, which quietly erodes hormonal balance, immunity, and mitochondrial health when it is not balanced with rest and recovery.³
Health is not built in extremes—it is built in consistency and balance. Extending grace and self‑compassion is also key as you embrace wellness as a journey rather than a destination.
Diet & Lifestyle Foundations for 2026
Below are practical, evidence-informed strategies that I recommend both clinically and personally. These are not about perfection; they are about building daily rhythms that support your muscles, immune system, nervous system, and cellular health over time.¹⁻⁴
1. Eat for Muscle, Not Just Weight
Muscle is not just about aesthetics; it behaves like a metabolic and endocrine organ, influencing insulin sensitivity, inflammation, and overall longevity.¹˒² Maintaining healthy muscle mass is one of the most powerful ways to support blood sugar balance, mobility, and healthy ageing.¹˒⁶˒⁷
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Prioritise high-quality protein at every meal (for many adults, around 25–40 g per meal is a useful target, depending on body size and activity).⁶˒⁷ I personally find it hard to reach my protein needs from food alone, so I often add a plant-based protein smoothie using our Peruvian chocolate rice protein, added-greens hemp protein, or natural pea-based protein as a simple daily support.
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Include resistance training at least 3–4 times per week, adapted to your level—this might be bodyweight exercises at home, Pilates, or weight training. Regular muscle contractions improve insulin sensitivity and support long-term metabolic health.¹
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Support recovery with adequate calories, micronutrients, and sleep so your muscles can repair, remodel, and grow stronger between sessions.¹˒⁶
Over time, healthy muscle helps stabilise blood sugar, supports detoxification pathways, and can reduce oxidative and inflammatory stress in the body.¹˒⁶
2. Build the Immune System Daily, Not Seasonally
Immune resilience is created quietly, long before cold or flu season arrives.² In psychoneuroimmunology, we recognise that immune function is closely intertwined with stress pathways, mood, sleep, and the gut–brain axis.³˒⁸
Key foundations I emphasise with my patients include:
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A nutrient-dense, whole-food eating pattern rich in colourful plants, antioxidants, and polyphenols to help modulate inflammation and support immune cells.²
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Adequate zinc, vitamin C–rich foods, selenium, B vitamins, and immune-supportive herbs, similar to those found in our gentle Immune Restore formula, which I reach for during periods of higher stress or exposure.
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Daily movement to stimulate lymphatic flow, which does not have its own pump and relies on muscular contraction and breathing.
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Consistent sleep and circadian rhythm support—aiming for regular sleep and wake times—to optimise immune signalling and tissue repair.²
The immune system thrives on rhythm and consistency, not last-minute interventions. Small daily practices truly add up to a more resilient you.
3. Actively Reduce Oxidative Stress
Oxidative stress sits at the centre of many age-related changes, including chronic inflammation, immune dysfunction, and metabolic disease.² When free radicals outpace the body's antioxidant defences, cellular structures and mitochondria can be affected.
To support redox balance at a practical, lifestyle level, I often recommend:
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Prioritising colourful plant foods—berries, greens, herbs, spices—or using a whole-food–based antioxidant blend like our Acai Antioxidant Complex when life gets hectic, and I need an extra safety net.
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Avoiding constant caloric excess and ultra-processed foods, which are linked with increased oxidative and inflammatory burden.²
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Supporting gut health, as the gut microbiome and gut barrier integrity significantly influence systemic inflammation and mood through the gut–brain axis.³˒⁸
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Managing psychological stress through practices such as breathwork, gentle movement, prayer, meditation, or time in nature, as chronic stress can increase inflammatory mediators and oxidative load.³˒⁹
Reducing oxidative stress is not about avoiding life; it is about increasing your cellular capacity to adapt to life's demands with more ease.
My Personal Health Focus for 2026
As the owner of Rejuv and a clinician deeply immersed in integrative and functional medicine, I believe in transparency about my own health journey. These are the top three health priorities I am carrying into 2026, grounded in both science and lived experience.
1. Getting Stronger and Gaining Lean Muscle
Strength is foundational for longevity, metabolic health, and resilience.¹˒⁶˒⁷ This year, my focus is progressive resistance training, consistent protein intake across the day, and respecting recovery as much as training itself—honouring rest, sleep, and nervous system regulation as non‑negotiable parts of "getting stronger," not signs of weakness.
2. Continuing to Support a Robust Immune System
My immune system is thankfully strong, but I am intentionally sowing into my gut–immune axis to support both mental and physical longevity.²˒³˒⁸ For me, this looks like fibre-rich, diverse plant foods, targeted probiotics when needed, micronutrient sufficiency, quality sleep, and nervous system practices to dial down chronic stress.
3. Reducing Oxidative Stress at a Cellular Level
My third focus is aligning nutrition, movement, stress management, and supplementation to support mitochondrial health, redox balance, and low-grade inflammation.² Because actual vitality starts at the cellular level, I am also refining our Antioxidant Complex, drawing on my PhD research in oxidative stress, and I am excited to share the upgraded formula with you in the New Year.
A Final Thought for the Year Ahead
2026 does not require a “new you.” It calls for a more aligned, compassionate, and balanced you.
Small, intentional shifts—repeated daily—reshape physiology and neurobiology over time.³ Choose habits that your future body, mind, and nervous system will thank you for. Reflect honestly, plan intelligently, and move forward with purpose, knowing that even tiny changes in your daily routine can translate into meaningful long-term transformation.
From all of us at Rejuv Wellness, we wish you a truly blessed Christmas and holiday season, and a strong, resilient, and deeply nourished year ahead.
References
- Hoffmann C, Weigert C. Skeletal muscle as an endocrine organ: The role of myokines in exercise adaptations. Cold Spring Harbour Perspectives in Medicine. 2017;7(11):a029793. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5666622/
- Severinsen MCK, Pedersen BK. Muscle–organ crosstalk: The emerging roles of myokines. Endocrine Reviews. 2020;41(4):594–609. https://academic.oup.com/edrv/article/41/4/594/5835999
- Doney E, Cadoret A, Dion-Albert L, et al. Inflammation-driven brain and gut barrier dysfunction in stress and mood disorders. European Journal of Neuroscience. 2022;55(10):2851–2892. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ejn.15239
- Baum JI, Kim IY, Wolfe RR. The link between dietary protein intake, skeletal muscle function and health in older adults. Nutrients. 2016;8(4):252. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4939566/
- Wahyuni AAS. Psychoneuroimmunology of depression and its relation to the gut–brain axis. International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences. 2021;9(6):1572–1577. https://media.neliti.com/media/publications/571855-psychoneuroimmunology-of-depression-and-a9749ab2.pdf
- Nowson C, O'Connell S. Protein requirements and recommendations for older people: A review. Nutrients. 2015;7(8):6874–6899. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4555150/
- Iizuka K, Machida T. Skeletal muscle is an endocrine organ. Journal of the Japan Diabetes Society. 2014;57(5):361–367. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1347861319301343
- Doney E, et al. Inflammation-driven brain and gut barrier dysfunction in stress and mood disorders. European Journal of Neuroscience. 2022;55(10):2851–2892. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ejn.15239
- Wahyuni AAS. Psychoneuroimmunology of depression and its relation to the gut–brain axis. International Journal of Research in Medical Sciences. 2021;9(6):1572–1577. https://media.neliti.com/media/publications/571855-psychoneuroimmunology-of-depression-and-a9749ab2.pdf

