
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Jill and Jenna are two sisters on a journey, advocating for gut health and sustainable lifestyles. After becoming a three-time All-American softball player, Jill started experiencing IBS symptoms. Countless tests and doctor’s visits later, she was diagnosed as “healthy.” Several years later, after seeing a Functional Nutritional Therapy Practitioner, her life completely transformed, and she uses her experience to help others on their journeys to optimal gut health.
Jenna’s friends would’ve described her as happy go lucky. She was active and seemed perfectly healthy. Behind-the-scenes, she was in and out of doctors offices, therapy sessions, and more. She had been active in sports despite struggling with scoliosis. In recent years, she has struggled to get her anxiety under control. Today, after embracing holistic medicine, she is pursuing her passion as a Nutritional Therapy Practitioner.
They tell the story of their grandmother’s journey with Alzheimer’s and how that drove their health mission. “I’m really passionate on the difference between being fit and being healthy,” they add. “We want to feel good.”
“We grew up with the media portraying skinny bodies as the ideal look.” With the media’s overwhelming push for fitness over health, many people fall into the trap of trying to look a certain way, even if it’s detrimental to their health. Diet, lifestyle, and supplements are an important combination.
There are things that can generally be done to minimize gut problems: stress management, exercise, therapy, sunlight, and prioritizing good sleep. Ways to get good sleep include reducing screen time and blue light, meal portion control before bed, regulating blood sugar, and journaling.
In their words: “The body always wants to heal. You have to give it what it wants. If you don’t feel good, make adjustments. You have to be your own advocate. No one is coming to save you,” says Jenna. “Be brutally honest with yourself and how you’re feeling. Don’t make every change in one day. Be really picky as to what’s trendy and what’s really going to help you,” Jill adds.
Jill and Jenna share their stories of health struggles and healing, and they talk about the many ways in which people can listen to their bodies to make better choices for their own health, including:
Resources Mentioned
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
5
2323 ratings
Jill and Jenna are two sisters on a journey, advocating for gut health and sustainable lifestyles. After becoming a three-time All-American softball player, Jill started experiencing IBS symptoms. Countless tests and doctor’s visits later, she was diagnosed as “healthy.” Several years later, after seeing a Functional Nutritional Therapy Practitioner, her life completely transformed, and she uses her experience to help others on their journeys to optimal gut health.
Jenna’s friends would’ve described her as happy go lucky. She was active and seemed perfectly healthy. Behind-the-scenes, she was in and out of doctors offices, therapy sessions, and more. She had been active in sports despite struggling with scoliosis. In recent years, she has struggled to get her anxiety under control. Today, after embracing holistic medicine, she is pursuing her passion as a Nutritional Therapy Practitioner.
They tell the story of their grandmother’s journey with Alzheimer’s and how that drove their health mission. “I’m really passionate on the difference between being fit and being healthy,” they add. “We want to feel good.”
“We grew up with the media portraying skinny bodies as the ideal look.” With the media’s overwhelming push for fitness over health, many people fall into the trap of trying to look a certain way, even if it’s detrimental to their health. Diet, lifestyle, and supplements are an important combination.
There are things that can generally be done to minimize gut problems: stress management, exercise, therapy, sunlight, and prioritizing good sleep. Ways to get good sleep include reducing screen time and blue light, meal portion control before bed, regulating blood sugar, and journaling.
In their words: “The body always wants to heal. You have to give it what it wants. If you don’t feel good, make adjustments. You have to be your own advocate. No one is coming to save you,” says Jenna. “Be brutally honest with yourself and how you’re feeling. Don’t make every change in one day. Be really picky as to what’s trendy and what’s really going to help you,” Jill adds.
Jill and Jenna share their stories of health struggles and healing, and they talk about the many ways in which people can listen to their bodies to make better choices for their own health, including:
Resources Mentioned
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
14,920 Listeners
33,020 Listeners
4,052 Listeners
39 Listeners
12,753 Listeners
999 Listeners
2,725 Listeners
48 Listeners
94 Listeners