Episode 03: Inflammation & The BODYBefore we dive into the show notes - remember to follow us on social media! Facebook Page Join our email list: Join HERE Why your immune system, stress, gut, and nervous system are all talking to your brain Inflammation is a word most of us associate with injury, swelling, or pain. But inflammation isn’t just something you see on the outside of the body — it’s a complex immune response that can quietly influence energy, mood, sleep, digestion, and mental health. In this episode, we peel back the layers of inflammation and explore how chronic, low-grade inflammation shows up in everyday life — often long before a diagnosis ever appears. We discuss how modern lifestyles, chronic stress, poor sleep, blood sugar swings, and ultra-processed foods keep the immune system activated, and why that matters for both physical and mental well-being. We also explore how inflammation affects the brain, including its role in anxiety, depression, brain fog, and emotional reactivity. Rather than framing these symptoms as personal failures or “mindset issues,” this episode reframes them as biological responses to ongoing stress signals. What we cover in this episode:What inflammation actually is (and what it’s not)The difference between acute inflammation and chronic, low-grade inflammationWhen and why “anti-inflammatory” became a focus in modern medicineHow food culture, stress, sleep deprivation, and sedentary lifestyles fuel inflammationThe connection between chronic stress, the nervous system, and immune activationHow fascia adapts to long-term stress and posture — and why movement can feel emotionalWhy practices like yoga and Pilates can trigger emotional release (without myths or misinformation)How inflammation impacts neurotransmitters, mood, and stress toleranceThe gut–brain–immune connection and why gut inflammation often shows up as mood symptoms firstPractical, realistic anti-inflammatory solutions that don’t require perfectionKey discussion highlights:Chronic stress is one of the strongest drivers of inflammation — even when life looks “fine”Fascia reflects long-term nervous system patterns, posture, and tension, not stored memoriesEmotional responses during movement often occur because the nervous system finally feels safe enough to processInflammation doesn’t just affect the body — it can change how the brain functionsMany mood symptoms are physiological signals, not personal shortcomingsAnti-inflammatory takeaways:Stabilize blood sugar with consistent meals, protein, and fiberProtect sleep like it’s a medical interventionMove daily with walking, Pilates, strength training, and mobilityBig takeaway:Inflammation is not just a physical issue — it’s a whole-body signal system that deeply affects the mind. Understanding inflammation helps shift the question from “What’s wrong with me?” to “What is my body responding to?”