A Sustainable Approach to Feeling More Supported
Nutrition is often where people feel pressured to do the most.
Cut something out.
Start over.
Follow the rules.
Be more disciplined.
But what if supporting your health did not begin with restriction?
What if it started with adding support instead of taking things away?
When stress is high, meals are often the first thing to become inconsistent.
Many people begin skipping meals, grabbing whatever is easiest, or going long periods without enough nourishment. Over time, this can affect:
When nutrition becomes inconsistent, the body often feels unstable.
You may notice:
On the other hand, when meals become more supportive and consistent, the body often feels more regulated and steady.
Energy tends to stabilize. Hunger cues become less chaotic. It can feel easier to move through the day without constantly feeling depleted.
Research consistently shows that long-term health is shaped more by sustainable habits than extreme dietary changes.
Studies continue to highlight the importance of:
According to research published in journals such as Frontiers in Nutrition, Nutrients, and Circulation, small improvements practiced consistently over time can positively influence:
The takeaway is simple:
Your body often benefits more from one supportive habit repeated consistently than from a short-lived attempt to eat perfectly.
This is not about forcing a complete reset.
It is about creating steadiness through one small addition.

That’s it.
No elimination.
No strict rules.
No starting over.
Just one supportive addition to a meal you already eat.
Keep this practical and low effort.
You might:
The goal is not to create an entirely new routine.
Instead, choose one meal that already exists in your life and make it slightly more supportive.
Meals that are missing protein or fiber can leave energy feeling less stable.
Hunger may return quickly. Cravings may become louder. Recovery can feel slower, especially during stressful seasons.
Adding protein or fiber helps create more steadiness by supporting:
Small additions can create meaningful change over time.
Sometimes health is not about doing more.
Sometimes it is simply about supporting your body more consistently.
Long-term wellness is often shaped by repeatable choices, not extreme ones.
Sometimes the smallest shift is not taking something away.
It is adding one thing that helps your body feel more supported.
Let that be enough.
Start by adding one supportive food source, such as protein or fiber, to a meal you already eat consistently.
Protein supports recovery and fullness, while fiber supports digestion, blood sugar regulation, and heart health.
No. Research shows that small, repeatable improvements are often more sustainable and beneficial than extreme dietary changes.
Yes. Stress commonly disrupts meal consistency, hunger cues, energy levels, and recovery.
Brittany Sloan is a health and wellness coach, yoga teacher, and run coach who brings two decades of clinical research experience into every conversation about well-being. Her background spans academic medical centers and sponsor-level roles, from clinical assistant and study coordinator to regulatory and compliance work, giving her a grounded, evidence-informed perspective on what truly keeps people well.
She is the founder of ThreeBreaks Wellness, a coaching and consulting practice rooted in restoration, self-trust, and sustainable healing. Her work is deeply shaped by a love for Black people—our health, our stories, our survival, and our joy.
Brittany supports clients in reconnecting with themselves, realigning their lives, and reclaiming the parts of their well-being that systems have historically ignored. She shows up with warmth, honesty, and a steady, nurturing presence, offering guidance that is both compassionate and direct. Her work is grounded in the belief that Black folks deserve care that honors the fullness of who we are.