The Autoimmune Wellness Podcast
Mickey Trescott of Autoimmune Wellness
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The Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, hosted by Mickey Trescott, explores the Autoimmune Protocol (AIP) for managing autoimmune conditions. Mickey, a functional nutritionist and author, shares evidence-based insights from natural and conventional medicine. The podcast aims to empower listeners to take charge of their health through diet and lifestyle changes. Originally co-hosted with Angie Alt, the show provides practical advice and personal stories for those with autoimmune diseases.
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The First AIP Pilot Trial in Rheumatoid Arthritis with Julianne Taylor (Ep 088) 01.06.2026 55分Episode 88: The First AIP Pilot Trial in Rheumatoid Arthritis with Julianne TaylorCan dietary change meaningfully improve rheumatoid arthritis symptoms?A recently published pilot study investigating the Autoimmune Protocol diet in adults with rheumatoid arthritis found improvements in patient-reported disease activity, pain, fatigue, sleep, and quality of life measures—with several participants reaching remission-level scores by the end of the intervention.In this episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott is joined by registered nutritionist, AIP Certified Coach, and PhD candidate Julianne Taylor to discuss the first clinical trial investigating the Autoimmune Protocol in rheumatoid arthritis.Julianne shares her personal journey into autoimmune nutrition research, explains how the study was designed, and walks through the results of the pilot trial—including improvements in fatigue, sleep, pain, and disease activity.Together, they also explore the nuances and limitations of dietary research, discuss why individual responses vary, and dive into Julianne’s broader scoping review of elimination and reintroduction diets in rheumatoid arthritis spanning decades of research.In this episode, you’ll learn:How Julianne’s personal health experience led her into autoimmune nutrition researchWhat a pilot feasibility study is and why it mattersHow the AIP rheumatoid arthritis study was designedWhy patient-reported outcomes like fatigue and sleep are important in RA researchWhat improvements participants experienced during the interventionWhy some participants experienced challenges or adverse effectsHow nutrient density and food eliminations may both influence outcomesWhat historical elimination diet research in RA reveals about common trigger foodsWhy nightshades continue to be an important area of interest in autoimmune nutritionWhat future research on AIP and rheumatoid arthritis may explore nextResources:Paleo Zone Nutrition (blog)Julianne Taylor Nutrition (website)Julianne Taylor on InstagramThe First AIP Pilot Trial in Rheumatoid ArthritisElimination, Reintroduction Diets, and Oral Food Challenge in Adults with Rheumatoid Arthritis: A Scoping ReviewEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Introduction to the first AIP rheumatoid arthritis pilot study01:56 – Introducing Julianne Taylor03:54 – Julianne’s personal health journey and early paleo research11:34 – What a pilot feasibility study is13:05 – The questionnaires used in the AIP RA pilot trial17:07 – The AIP intervention and elimination phase19:32 – Results of the rheumatoid arthritis pilot study24:56 – Discussing adverse effects and individual variability30:57 – Diet quality versus food eliminations33:54 – Reviewing decades of elimination diet research in RA38:48 – Common trigger foods identified in the literature42:31 – Nightshades and rheumatoid arthritis44:31 – Upcoming AIP and RA research51:20 – What Julianne hopes clinicians and patients take away from the research53:23 – Where to follow Julianne’s work online
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Celebrating NAIP Launch Week & Creating Through Chronic Illness with Alaina Moore of Tennis (Ep 087) 25.05.2026 53分Episode 87: Celebrating NAIP Launch Week & Creating Through Chronic Illness with Alaina Moore of TennisWhat does it take to keep creating when your body is struggling? How do you continue making meaningful work while navigating uncertainty, limitations, and chronic illness in real time?In this special episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott celebrates the launch of The New Autoimmune Protocol with a deeply personal conversation featuring her longtime friend Alaina Moore—vocalist and songwriter of the indie band Tennis.Instead of interviewing a guest, Mickey takes the guest seat herself as Alaina turns the tables to explore the creative process behind the new book, the realities of creating while chronically ill, and the surprising overlap between art, music, food, and healing.Together, they discuss what it means to pursue creative work while managing chronic illness, how illness can shape identity and perspective, and why adapting to changing capacity is often part of the process. Alaina also shares her experience navigating dysphonia while recording and touring, while Mickey reflects on photographing The New Autoimmune Protocol during a severe autoimmune eye flare.This conversation is honest, funny, emotional, and deeply relatable for anyone who has tried to keep showing up for meaningful work while living in a body that doesn’t always cooperate.In this episode, you’ll learn:How chronic illness can shape creativity, identity, and artistic workWhy adapting to limitations is often part of the creative processThe similarities between songwriting, recipe development, and visual storytellingHow Mickey approaches recipe development, writing, and cookbook photographyWhy creative work often requires both structure and chaosHow sensory imagination influences both music and cookingAlaina Moore’s experience recovering from dysphonia while touring with TennisMickey’s experience photographing a cookbook during an autoimmune eye flareWhy accepting chronic illness can feel freeing instead of limitingThe emotional impact of medical gaslighting and delayed diagnosisHow creativity, music, and art can help people move through illnessWhy managing chronic illness is different from “overcoming” itResources:Alaina Moore & TennisWebsite: https://tennis-music.comInstagram: @tennisincPlaylist mentioned in the episode: Available here!Mickey TrescottBook: The New Autoimmune ProtocolEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Introduction and NAIP launch week reflections01:31 – Introducing Alaina Moore of Tennis04:37 – Artists, chronic illness, and creative resilience07:08 – Mickey’s writing and recipe development process13:31 – Alaina’s songwriting process and creative structure18:11 – Music, taste, and sensory imagination25:07 – How Mickey perfects recipes30:17 – Why Mickey shares her work publicly32:56 – Creative breakthroughs and photographing the new book39:02 – Alaina’s experience with dysphonia and vocal rehabilitation44:11 – Accepting chronic illness and redefining healing51:14 – Wrap-up and closing reflections
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What Joy Can Survive: Chronic Illness and Healing with K.J. Ramsey (Ep 086) 18.05.2026 54分Episode 86: What Joy Can Survive? Chronic Illness and Healing with K.J. RamseyWhat if healing isn’t about getting rid of pain—but about learning how to remain fully alive within it?In this episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott is joined by K.J. Ramsey, trauma-informed therapist, author, and chronic illness advocate. Her new memoir, The Place Between Our Pains, explores life with chronic illness, medical trauma, and the complicated relationship many of us have with our bodies when healing doesn’t look the way we expected.Together, Mickey and K.J. explore what it means to live well even when symptoms persist. They discuss medical gaslighting, identity shifts, self-trust, redefining healing, and why joy and grief often coexist in the chronic illness experience.K.J. also shares how journaling and creative practices helped her process pain, reconnect with herself, and remain present through years of illness and uncertainty.In this episode, you’ll learn:How chronic illness can shape identity, especially in early adulthoodWhy medical gaslighting is so damaging—and how self-trust becomes essentialThe emotional impact of being sick without clear answers or validationHow dissociation and disconnection from the body can develop during chronic illnessWhy speaking to your body with compassion changes the healing processWhat it means to redefine healing beyond symptom eliminationHow chronic illness can deepen connection, creativity, and joyWhy grief and joy often coexist in the healing journeyThe role of journaling and creative practices in processing pain and stressHow creativity can help transform suffering into meaning and alivenessWhy “being fully alive” may matter more than becoming symptom-freeResources:K.J. RamseyWebsite: https://www.kjramsey.comInstagram: @kjramseywritesBook: The Place Between Our PainsEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Introduction and trigger warning01:04 – Introducing K.J. Ramsey and The Place Between Our Pains04:33 – Identity and illness in early adulthood09:20 – Medical gaslighting and self-trust16:01 – Dissociation, embodiment, and learning to listen to the body24:14 – Redefining healing and living fully with pain32:19 – How illness changes us40:15 – Journaling, creativity, and processing pain52:08 – Wrap-up and closing reflections
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Developing Your Personal Health Vision with Jaime Hartman (Ep 085) 11.05.2026 30分Episode 85: Developing Your Personal Health Vision with Jaime HartmanWhen starting the Autoimmune Protocol, it’s easy to focus on the details—what to eat, what to remove, and how to do everything “right.” But there’s a deeper question that often gets overlooked: what are you actually working toward?In this episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott is joined by Jaime Hartman, National Board Certified Health & Wellness Coach, educator, and co-teacher of the AIP Certified Coach Program, to explore the concept of a personal health vision.This conversation introduces a foundational mindset shift—moving beyond short-term goals and into a clear, personalized vision of what health means to you. Jaime explains how this approach helps guide decisions, build resilience, and create a more sustainable path through AIP and beyond.Together, they explore how defining your vision can help you stay grounded, communicate your needs, and navigate the complexities of chronic illness with more clarity and purpose.In this episode, you’ll learn:The difference between a health goal and a personal health visionWhy having a clear vision makes AIP more sustainable and meaningfulHow different models of health (medical, holistic, and wellness) shape your perspectiveWhy a personal health vision acts as a compass during challenging momentsHow to use your vision to make decisions about priorities, support, and careReal-life examples of how health vision influences daily choices and long-term strategyHow your vision can help guide reintroductions and lifestyle flexibilityWhy personal values, relationships, and purpose are essential parts of healingJournaling prompts and visualization techniques to help define your visionHow to approach this process if you feel discouraged, disconnected, or unsure what’s possibleResources:Jaime HartmanInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaimehartman22/Website: https://gutsybynature.comAIP Summit: https://aipsummit.comAIP Certified Coach Program & Practitioner Directory: https://aipcertified.comEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Why AIP needs a bigger “why” beyond food rules01:57 – Introducing Jaime Hartman 03:10 – What a personal health vision is (vs. goals)05:57 – Medical, holistic, and wellness models of health09:45 – Why vision matters in autoimmune healing12:09 – How to use your health vision in real life17:11 – Journaling prompts to define your vision22:59 – How to begin if you feel discouraged25:00 – Final reflections and encouragement
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Troubleshooting AIP: How to Identify What’s Going Wrong | Deep Dive (Ep 084) 04.05.2026 31分Episode 84: Troubleshooting AIP — How to Identify What’s Going Wrong | Deep DiveWhen you start the Autoimmune Protocol, it’s easy to expect a fairly straightforward path: remove certain foods, focus on nutrient density, support your lifestyle—and over time, feel better.And for some people, that’s exactly what happens.But for many others, the process feels more complicated. You might feel worse when you begin, struggle to stay consistent, stop seeing progress after a few months, or feel confused during reintroductions.If you’ve ever wondered, What am I doing wrong? or Why isn’t this working for me?—you’re not alone.In this episode of the AIP Deep Dive series, Mickey introduces troubleshooting as a normal and essential part of the process. Rather than seeing obstacles as failure, this episode reframes them as useful feedback—and gives you a clear way to identify what might be getting in the way and how to move forward.Mickey explains when it actually makes sense to troubleshoot (and when it doesn’t), outlines the three main layers where issues tend to arise, and walks through how to make thoughtful adjustments without creating more confusion. In this episode, you’ll learn:What troubleshooting really means—and why it doesn’t mean you’ve failedWhen to troubleshoot vs. when to give the process more timeThe three layers of troubleshooting: implementation, physiology, and medical factorsCommon challenges in each phase (transition, elimination, and reintroduction)Why lack of progress after 30–90 days may require a different approachHow to avoid overcomplicating the process with too many changes at onceWhy mindset and patience play a key role in long-term successResources:The New Autoimmune Protocol (Book) – A practical guide to implementing AIP with a focus on preparation, sustainability, and personalizationAIP Foundation Series – Free 5-day email course with food lists, meal plans, and beginner toolsEpisode 52: Tracking & Preparing for AIPEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Why AIP doesn’t always go as expected03:05 – What troubleshooting actually means06:32 – When to troubleshoot—and when not to09:51 – The three layers of troubleshooting10:15 – Implementation challenges11:58 – Physiological adjustments13:41 – Underlying medical factors14:57 – Troubleshooting across AIP phases15:07 – Transition phase challenges18:59 – Elimination phase troubleshooting22:41 – Reintroduction phase challenges25:19 – The mindset of troubleshooting27:41 – Key takeaways and closing
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The Menopause Gut with Cynthia Thurlow, NP (Ep 083) 27.04.2026 54分Episode 83: The Menopause Gut — A Gut-Centered Approach to Perimenopause with Cynthia Thurlow, NPWhat if the return of symptoms in midlife isn’t a setback—but a signal? What if shifting hormones during perimenopause and menopause are actively reshaping your gut, your immune system, and your resilience?In this episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, I’m joined by Cynthia Thurlow, nurse practitioner, bestselling author, and expert in perimenopause and metabolic health. Her new book, The Menopause Gut, explores how hormonal changes in midlife impact the microbiome, immune regulation, and inflammation—and what women can do to adapt.This conversation is especially relevant for the autoimmune community. Many women experience stable symptoms for years, only to find new flares, food sensitivities, sleep disruption, or anxiety emerging in their 40s. We explore why this happens, how estrogen and progesterone shifts influence gut and immune function, and how to support your body through this transition with clarity and intention.In this episode, you’ll learn:Why perimenopause can trigger new autoimmune symptoms—even after years of stabilityHow declining estrogen reshapes the gut microbiome and increases inflammationThe connection between hormone fluctuations, histamine, and new food sensitivitiesWhy perimenopause is a time of increased autoimmune risk (and what that means)How microbiome diversity influences immune tolerance and gut permeabilityThe role of stress, sleep, and the nervous system in midlife immune healthHow bone density is connected to gut health and inflammationWhy “gray area” foods can become more reactive during hormonal shiftsFoundational strategies for supporting gut and immune health in midlifeHow hormone replacement therapy (HRT) fits into an autoimmune-aware approachResources:Cynthia Thurlow, NPWebsite: https://www.cynthiathurlow.com Instagram: @cynthia_thurlow_ Facebook: The Midlife Pause Podcast: Everyday WellnessBook: The Menopause GutEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Why midlife symptoms aren’t a failure of your protocol02:25 – Introducing Cynthia Thurlow04:20 – What perimenopause and menopause actually are13:02 – How the microbiome changes in midlife17:01 – Microbiome diversity and immune tolerance22:47 – Estrogen, histamine, and new food sensitivities30:57 – Bone density, inflammation, and gut health37:37 – Practical strategies for gut and immune support44:57 – Hormone replacement therapy and autoimmunity50:31 – Wrap-up and closing
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Kitchen Confidence: The Lazy Person’s AIP Meal Template | Small Bite (Ep 082) 23.04.2026 17分Kitchen Confidence: The Lazy Person’s AIP Meal Template (Small Bite) | Episode 82If you’ve ever felt like AIP requires too much thinking in the kitchen, you’re not wrong.Between figuring out what to cook, how to combine ingredients, and whether you have what you need, relying on recipes for every meal can quickly become overwhelming.But AIP doesn’t have to feel that complicated.In this Small Bite episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott introduces a simpler approach: flexible meal templates that take the guesswork out of cooking.Instead of starting from scratch every time, these templates give you a repeatable structure you can use with whatever ingredients you have on hand—making meals easier, faster, and more sustainable.You’ll hear about:Why relying on recipes can increase decision fatigueHow meal templates simplify everyday AIP cookingThe foundational formula: protein + vegetables + fatHow to batch cook and mix-and-match meals throughout the weekThe skillet meal method for quick, one-pan cookingHow to layer ingredients for better texture and flavorThe “fridge dump” soup and stew approach for using leftoversHow to build a satisfying, balanced “big salad”Why flexible structure supports long-term consistencyYou don’t need more recipes to succeed on AIP—you need a system that works on your busiest days.ResourcesThe New Autoimmune Protocol – Pre-OrderEpisode Timeline00:00 – Why AIP can feel like too much thinking01:09 – Template 1: Protein + vegetables + fat04:41 – Template 2: Skillet meal08:16 – Template 3: Soup or stew11:40 – Template 4: The big salad14:00 – Recap & next steps
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AIP Community Q2 Update: Events, Advocacy & Research (Ep 081) 20.04.2026 33分Episode 81: AIP Community Update — Events, Advocacy & ResearchLiving with autoimmune disease is deeply personal—but the systems that shape diagnosis, treatment options, and long-term outcomes extend far beyond the individual. Research advancements, policy decisions, and community-led initiatives all play a role in what care looks like today—and what becomes possible in the future.In this second Quarterly Community Update episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott zooms out to explore what’s currently unfolding across the autoimmune landscape. These quarterly conversations are designed to keep you informed and grounded—without overwhelm—so you can better understand the bigger picture while navigating your own healing journey.This episode focuses on three key areas shaping autoimmune care in real time: research, advocacy, and community education. Mickey is joined by three returning contributors who bring both professional expertise and lived experience to these important conversations.First, Sybil Cooper, PhD, immunologist and AIP Certified Coach, breaks down emerging research on CAR-T therapy—an innovative and highly targeted treatment approach that may transform how autoimmune disease is treated in the future.Next, Jamie-Nicole Martin, chronic illness advocate and founder of the AIP BIPOC Network, shares insights from recent advocacy efforts in Washington, DC, along with updates on community-driven initiatives like the ROCK Summit and ROCK the Block, which aim to improve awareness, access, and equity in autoimmune care.Finally, Jaime Hartman, National Board Certified Health & Wellness Coach, AIP Summit organizer, and co-teacher of the AIP Certified Coach Program, discusses trends within the AIP community, including how coaching support is evolving and how more practitioners worldwide are integrating AIP into their work.Together, these conversations highlight how innovation in research, progress in advocacy, and growth in community education are all interconnected—and why they matter for anyone living with autoimmune disease.In this episode, you’ll learn:What CAR-T therapy is and why it represents a promising new direction in autoimmune treatmentHow CAR-T differs from traditional systemic treatments by targeting specific immune cellsWhy this research could shift the conversation from symptom management toward potential remission or cureHow advocacy efforts are pushing for increased autoimmune research funding and policy changeThe role of the Office of Autoimmune Disease Research and why coordinated data mattersCommon barriers patients face with insurance, including step therapy and copay policiesHow community-based events like ROCK the Block and ROCK Summit are improving awareness and accessWhy advocacy happens at both the individual and systems level—and how they connectWhere people commonly get stuck on AIP, especially during reintroductionsHow AIP Certified Coaches provide personalized support to help navigate those challengesHow the AIP community is expanding globally, with more practitioners and diverse specialtiesPractical ways to find AIP-trained support and connect with ongoing educationResources:AIP BIPOC Network – Advocacy initiatives, events, and community programsAIP BIPOC Network Donation Link – Support ongoing advocacy and programmingAutoimmune Association – Advocacy resources and policy initiativesOffice of Autoimmune Disease Research (NIH) – Federal research coordination effortsAIP Summit – Annual event, replays, and community accessAIP Certified Coach Program & Practitioner Directory – Professional training and global directoryEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Introduction to the Quarterly Community Update series01:10 – Meet the recurring contributors02:31 – Research update with Sybil Cooper, PhD03:07 – What is CAR-T therapy?07:08 – Future implications of CAR-T for autoimmune disease10:33 – Advocacy update with Jamie-Nicole Martin11:25 – Autoimmune Association fly-in and policy efforts16:25 – ROCK Summit & ROCK the Block recap20:07 – Upcoming initiatives from AIP BIPOC Network21:49 – Community trends with Jaime Hartman22:47 – How AIP Certified Coaches support clients25:59 – Trends in the current AIP coaching community28:50 – How to find the right AIP Certified Coach32:02 – Closing reflections and wrap-up
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Flare to Flow: Emmitt Henderson III on Lupus, Identity, and Advocacy (Ep 080) 16.04.2026 15分Episode 80: From Flare to Flow — Emmitt Henderson III on Lupus, Identity, and AdvocacyHealing stories are often told once there’s a clear path—but autoimmune life is often lived in uncertainty, advocacy, and difficult decisions.In this episode, Mickey talks with Emmitt Henderson III, lupus patient and founder of Male Lupus Warriors, about navigating life with a complex and often misunderstood condition. Emmitt shares his decades-long journey to diagnosis, his experience living with lupus as a man, and what it’s like to face stage four kidney failure while continuing to advocate for others. This conversation offers perspective for anyone navigating uncertainty, advocating for themselves in the medical system, or learning how to keep showing up—even when the path forward isn’t clear.In this episode, you’ll learn:What it’s like to live with lupus and face complications like kidney failureWhy lupus is often misunderstood—especially in menHow delays in diagnosis can shape the autoimmune experienceWhat it means to advocate for yourself within the medical systemHow Emmitt stays motivated while navigating serious health challengesThe role of community and representation in chronic illnessWhat to know about kidney donation and donor exchange programsWhy sharing your story can help others feel less aloneHow to stay grounded and keep going during uncertain seasonsResources:Male Lupus Warriors Website Emmitt's Email: malelupuswarriors@gmail.comAutoimmune Association – Advocacy and autoimmune disease supportKidney Donation ScreeningEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Introduction to Flare to Flow and living in uncertainty01:15 – Meet Emmitt Henderson III02:12 – Emmitt’s lupus diagnosis journey05:08 – Navigating kidney failure and transplant uncertainty06:29 – Advocacy and representation in autoimmune disease08:11 – Understanding kidney donation and donor exchange10:06 – Message for those struggling right now11:12 – Male Lupus Warriors and community support12:44 – Wrap-up and closing
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Ask Mickey Anything: Your Biggest AIP Questions, Answered (Ep 079) 13.04.2026 53分Episode 79: Ask Mickey Anything — Your Biggest AIP Questions, AnsweredIf you’ve ever wondered whether you’re “doing AIP right,” you’re not alone.From navigating the early days of elimination to troubleshooting plateaus, managing low energy, and figuring out how to make this work in real life—there are so many questions that come up along the way.In this special Q&A episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey answers listener-submitted questions from across the community, covering both the practical and emotional sides of the Autoimmune Protocol. She walks through common challenges like symptom flare-ups in the first few weeks, what to do if you’re not seeing results, how to handle reintroductions without fear, and how to make AIP sustainable long term. She also dives into bigger-picture topics like personalization, research, and the future of autoimmune care.This episode is a reminder that AIP isn’t about perfection—it’s about learning, adapting, and finding what works for your body over time.In this episode, you’ll learn:Why symptoms can temporarily worsen in the first weeks of AIPHow to troubleshoot when you’re not seeing improvement after 1–2 monthsCommon reasons AIP “isn’t working” (and what to look at first)How to navigate low energy, flares, or limited capacity for cookingPractical strategies for eating out or using meal shortcuts on AIPHow to think about supplements, fillers, and what’s actually necessaryWhy fear around reintroductions is common—and how to move forward safelyHow to approach reintroductions without triggering anxiety or over-restrictionWhat to do after a failed reintroduction (and how to continue progressing)How to make AIP sustainable long term without feeling deprivedThe relationship between structure and bio-individuality in AIPWhat the research says about common trigger foodsWhy AIP is not a replacement for medical care or medicationHow to advocate for more autoimmune research and better careResources:The New Autoimmune Protocol (Book + Preorder Community)Episode 58: The 3 Meal Safety NetUrban AIP Meal DeliveryAutoimmune AssociationAIP BIPOC NetworkEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Introduction to the Q&A episode01:22 – Is it normal for symptoms to worsen early on AIP?05:02 – Two months on AIP with no improvement11:04 – Real-life barriers: energy, cooking, and access 17:36 – Supplements and AIP compatibility22:43 – Fear of reintroductions27:43 – Reintroduction strategy and failed attempts32:53 – Getting back to AIP after life changes38:17 – Personalization vs protocol structure41:33 – Common trigger foods and medication expectations46:20 – Troubleshooting setbacks and research advocacy51:21 – Wrap-up and closing
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Kitchen Confidence: 5 AIP Flavor Boosters That Make Everything Taste Better | Small Bite (Ep 078) 09.04.2026 17分Kitchen Confidence: 5 AIP Flavor Boosters That Make Everything Taste Better (Small Bite) | Episode 78If you’ve ever started AIP and thought your meals taste a little flat or repetitive, you’re not alone.One of the biggest challenges—especially early on—is learning how to create satisfying, flavorful meals with a more limited ingredient list. And when food isn’t enjoyable, it becomes much harder to stay consistent.In this Small Bite episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott breaks down five simple, practical ways to build flavor in your AIP kitchen—without complicated recipes or extra effort.These foundational techniques can be layered into meals you’re already making, helping your food feel more balanced, interesting, and deeply satisfying.You’ll hear about:Why flavor matters for long-term AIP sustainabilityHow acid brightens and balances rich or heavy mealsWhy fresh herbs are one of the most powerful (and overlooked) toolsHow fermented foods add both tang and depthThe role of aromatics in building a strong flavor foundationWhat umami is and how to incorporate it on AIPSimple ways to upgrade everyday meals without extra complexityWhy small changes can dramatically improve how your food tastesFlavorful cooking on AIP doesn’t require more effort—it just requires the right building blocks.ResourcesThe New Autoimmune Protocol – Pre-OrderAIP Foundation Series (Free Email Course)The Nutrient-Dense KitchenEpisode Timeline00:00 – Why AIP meals can feel repetitive 01:54 – Flavor Booster #1: Acid 04:18 – Flavor Booster #2: Fresh herbs 07:36 – Flavor Booster #3: Fermented foods & brine 10:30 – Flavor Booster #4: Aromatics 12:39 – Flavor Booster #5: Umami 14:15 – Recap & practical next steps
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How to Build a Nutrient-Dense Plate | Deep Dive (Ep 077) 06.04.2026 34分Episode 77: How to Build a Nutrient-Dense Plate | Deep DiveIf you’ve spent any time learning about the Autoimmune Protocol, you’ve probably heard the phrase nutrient density come up again and again. But knowing that nutrient density matters—and actually putting it into practice—are two very different things.Because when you’re in your kitchen, planning meals or staring into your fridge, the real question isn’t what is nutrient density? It’s: What does a nutrient-dense plate actually look like?In this episode of the AIP Deep Dive series, Mickey breaks down how to build meals that consistently support healing, energy, and long-term health—without overcomplicating the process. She walks through both the science and the practical application, helping you move from theory into everyday implementation.Mickey explores how macronutrients and micronutrients work together, highlights the most nutrient-dense food categories, and shares her own simple framework for planning meals that are nourishing, varied, and sustainable.In this episode, you’ll learn:Why nutrient density is foundational to healing dietsHow macronutrients (protein, carbs, fat) support energy, metabolism, and immune functionWhy protein is the anchor of a nutrient-dense plateThe role of carbohydrates in thyroid health, energy, and recoveryWhy fat is essential for hormones, absorption, and satietyWhat micronutrients are and why they drive healing at the cellular levelHow phytonutrients and “eating the rainbow” support the microbiome and inflammation balanceWhy fiber is critical for gut health and immune regulationThe role of fermented foods in increasing microbial diversityHow omega-3 rich seafood supports an anti-inflammatory gut environmentThe truth about organ meats and other nutrient-dense traditional foodsHow to think about nutrient density across a week (instead of perfecting every meal)A simple 5-step framework for building nutrient-dense meals in real lifeWhy sustainability matters more than perfection when it comes to healingResources:Episode 65: Nutrient Density Research BreakdownThe New Autoimmune Protocol (Book) – A practical guide to building nutrient-dense, flexible AIP meals for real life. Includes recipes, meal templates, and strategies for sustainable healing.AIP Foundation Series – Free 5-day email course with beginner tools, food lists, and meal planning support.Episode Timeline:00:00 – Why nutrient density matters in practice02:17 – Macronutrients overview: protein, carbs, fat03:02 – Protein: needs, function, and why it anchors your plate05:55 – Carbohydrates: energy, thyroid, and common misconceptions07:48 – Fat: hormone support, absorption, and satiety09:23 – Micronutrients: where healing really happens11:20 – Phytonutrients and eating the rainbow13:05 – Fiber and microbiome support15:08 – Microbiome-supporting foods overview15:36 – Fermented foods and microbial diversity17:37 – Omega-3 seafood and inflammation balance19:43 – Organ meats and nutrient density myths22:00 – Bone broth and traditional foods24:30 – How to apply this in real life25:09 – Step 1: Start with protein26:02 – Step 2: Plan vegetables and fruits26:48 – Step 3: Add fermented foods27:43 – Step 4: High-polyphenol smoothies28:56 – Step 5: Simple meal templates30:49 – Optional nutrient boosters31:18 – Key takeaways and sustainability focus
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AIP in Real Life: Eating Differently Without Making it a Big Deal (Ep 076) 02.04.2026 20分Episode 76: AIP in Real Life — Eating Differently Without Making It a Big DealEating differently can feel like a much bigger deal than it actually is.Not because of the food itself—but because of the social dynamics around it. Dinner parties. Work lunches. Family holidays. First dates. Travel. The subtle pressure to explain. The awkwardness of declining. The internal negotiation about how much to share and how much to keep private.In Episode 76 of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott begins a new Small Bite series called AIP in Real Life—conversations about what it actually looks like to live this way long-term. Not just the food lists or the science, but the social navigation, mindset shifts, and emotional maturity that develop over time.Drawing on 15 years of personal experience living with AIP, Mickey shares practical strategies for eating differently without turning every gathering into a conversation about your health. This episode is about learning how to communicate clearly, hold boundaries calmly, and participate fully—without overexplaining, apologizing, or making your food choices the headline of the room. AIP in Real Life_ Eating Differ…In this episode, you’ll learn:Why eating differently feels relational—not just logisticalHow to reduce social stress by deciding before you arrivePractical strategies for restaurants, dinner parties, holidays, and travelWhy short explanations build more confidence than long onesThe difference between gratitude and apologyHow to participate socially without compromising your healthWhat to say when someone pressures you to “just have a little”Why consistency speaks louder than debateHow identity shifts over time when living with AIPHow to integrate dietary boundaries without making them your identityResourcesThe New Autoimmune Protocol – Pre-OrderEpisode Timeline00:00 – Why eating differently feels bigger than it is02:34 – Why this feels so hard (belonging & communication)04:01 – Decide before you arrive08:57 – Keep explanations short11:04 – Gratitude is not the same as apology12:36 – Participation over perfection15:25 – Accept that not everyone will understand17:19 – Identity shifts & long-term integration18:57 – Wrap-up & book mention
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Life After AIP: Building Your Long-Term Maintenance Plan | Deep Dive (Ep 075) 30.03.2026 28分Episode 75: Life After AIP — Building Your Long-Term Maintenance Plan | Deep DiveWhat does life actually look like after you complete the Autoimmune Protocol?Once you’ve moved through Transition, Elimination, and Reintroduction, it’s natural to ask: Now what? Are you supposed to eat this way forever? What happens if your health shifts? And how do you apply what you’ve learned to real-life situations like stress, travel, celebrations, or aging?In this Deep Dive episode, Mickey explains what it really means to “finish” AIP and how to build a long-term maintenance plan that is flexible, sustainable, and personalized. Rather than viewing AIP as something you complete and leave behind, this episode reframes it as a framework you carry forward—one that helps you move up and down the spectrum of structure and flexibility as your health evolves.Mickey shares how to think about post-AIP eating, what a return to AIP can look like during a flare, how to use AIP principles beyond food, and why combining medical care with dietary strategy is essential for long-term autoimmune management.In this episode, you’ll learn:What it really means to “finish” AIPHow to transition from rules to a personalized dietary philosophyWhy post-AIP eating is hyper-personalized—not a single universal dietHow to think about returning to AIP without all-or-nothing thinkingThe “batten down the hatches vs. unfurl the sails” frameworkHow to apply AIP principles beyond foodWhy medical care and AIP should always work togetherHow to build a long-term approach that fits your real lifeWhat life after AIP can look like 15 years into an autoimmune journeyResources:Referenced Episodes:Episode 51: The Autoimmune Protocol in 2026 (Full Overview)Episode 52: Transition Phase | Deep DiveEpisode 53: Elimination Phase | Deep DiveEpisode 54: Reintroduction Phase | Deep DiveEpisode 55: Nutrient Density & Lifestyle FoundationsEpisode 56: Healing UpdateAIP Foundation Series – Free 5-day email course with printable food lists, meal plans, reintroduction charts, and beginner tools.The New Autoimmune Protocol (Book) – The updated, flexible, and realistic guide to implementing AIP in real life.Episode Timeline:00:00 – What does life after AIP look like?03:18 – What does it mean to “finish” AIP?06:58 – A post-AIP dietary philosophy (personalized eating)10:33 – What a return to AIP can look like13:11 – Batten down the hatches vs. unfurl the sails17:41 – Using AIP principles beyond food20:11 – Combining medical care with AIP (both-and approach)22:36 – Building a sustainable long-term life24:23 – Life after AIP, 15 years in26:18 – Wrap-up & encouragement
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Beyond the Recipe: Magic Chili with Marie-Noelle of Urban AIP | Small Bite (Ep 074) 26.03.2026 19分Episode 74: Beyond the Recipe — Magic Chili with Marie-Noelle of Urban AIP (Small Bite)If you’ve ever thought starting AIP meant saying goodbye to your favorite comfort foods forever, this episode is for you.In this Beyond the Recipe Small Bite episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott continues the mini-series exploring how AIP recipes actually work in real life—not just on paper. These conversations go deeper than ingredients and instructions to unpack why certain recipes succeed, how to adapt them, and what makes them sustainable long-term.Mickey is joined by Marie-Noelle Marquis, Nutritional Therapy Practitioner, AIP Certified Coach, and founder of Urban AIP, to talk through one of the most surprising comfort food wins in the AIP world: Magic Chili.This isn’t just a tomato-free chili. It’s a deeply savory, rich, red, nightshade-free meal that delivers comfort without beans, paprika, chili powder, or tomatoes—and somehow no one misses them.Together, they explore how this recipe works from both a home kitchen perspective and at production scale through Urban AIP’s therapeutic meal delivery service, and why this chili has become a customer favorite.This episode is about abundance over restriction: how to recreate nostalgic flavors, build depth without nightshades, and turn a single recipe into a flexible template for real-life healing.In this episode, you’ll learn:Why comfort foods don’t have to disappear on AIPHow grated beet creates rich color and depth without tasting “beet-y”The flavor architecture behind a nightshade-free chiliHow caramelized onions, bone broth, oregano, and cinnamon build complexityWhy visual cues (like deep red color) matter in satisfactionWhat changes when scaling a recipe from 6 servings to 100How Urban AIP maintains quality and flavor at production levelWhy chili is such a powerful comfort food during eliminationEasy protein swaps (turkey, bison, venison, lamb)How to use the chili base as a template for other nightshade-free mealsWhat makes Urban AIP’s therapeutic meal delivery uniqueResources:Magic Chili Recipe – Full recipe from The Nutrient-Dense KitchenThe Nutrient-Dense Kitchen Cookbook by Mickey TrescottUrban AIP Meal Delivery by Marie-Noelle MarquisUrban AIP on InstagramEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Rethinking chili without tomatoes, beans, or nightshades01:19 – Introducing Marie-Noelle Marquis of Urban AIP02:13 – Why Magic Chili belongs on the Urban AIP menu05:02 – The beet base and building depth without tomatoes07:36 – Scaling from home kitchen to commercial production10:51 – Protein swaps and recipe versatility11:49 – Urban AIP’s therapeutic meal delivery approach17:42 – Final reflections on abundance and creativity in AIP cooking
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What I’d Do Differently if Starting AIP Today (Ep 073) 23.03.2026 27分Episode 73: What I’d Do Differently If Starting AIP Today If Mickey were starting the Autoimmune Protocol today—not in 2011 during the middle of a health crisis, but now with more than a decade of lived experience, research, and clinical insight—there are several things she would approach differently.Not because AIP doesn’t work, and not because she regrets the path she took. In fact, AIP was the turning point that helped her regain her health after being diagnosed with Hashimoto’s and celiac disease. But over the years, her understanding of healing has evolved. The science around AIP has matured, the community has grown, and the tools available to people starting today are far more structured and supportive than they were in the early days. In this reflective episode, Mickey shares the biggest shifts she would make if she were beginning AIP today—from how she would track symptoms and approach nutrient density to how she would think about fatigue, identity, community, and the long timeline of healing.Rather than focusing only on food elimination, this episode reframes AIP as a broader process of rebuilding health—one that includes nourishment, medical partnership, emotional adaptation, and long-term sustainability.Mickey also shares how these lessons informed her upcoming book, The New Autoimmune Protocol, and explains the new community experience she’s launching to guide people through the transition phase before beginning elimination together as a group.In this episode, you’ll learn:Why Mickey would start tracking symptoms from day oneWhy focusing on nutrient repletion can be more important than restrictionThe key nutrient-dense foods that made the biggest difference in her healingWhy continuing to advocate for proper medical care matters alongside dietHow medication and lifestyle changes can work together in autoimmune recoveryThe emotional identity shift that often comes with chronic illnessHow AIP can remain a tool without becoming your identityWhy community support can dramatically improve the healing processHow to set realistic expectations for recovery timelinesWhy progress is best measured in months and years—not weeksResources:Episode 52: How to Track Symptoms on AIPEpisode 56: Mickey’s Healing UpdateThe New Autoimmune Protocol (Book) – A modern guide to implementing AIP today, including transition strategies, personalization, and sustainable long-term healing. Available for pre-order wherever books are sold.Pre-Order Community – When you pre-order the book and submit your receipt at theautoimmuneprotocol.com/preorder, you’ll gain access to a private community, exclusive recipes, live Q&A sessions, and a guided Transition Phase in May leading up to a coordinated AIP start on June 1.Episode Timeline:00:00 – Why Mickey would approach AIP differently today01:08 – Introduction and context for this reflection03:22 – Why journaling from day one matters06:16 – Nutrient repletion before restriction08:31 – Advocating medically and personalizing care sooner10:36 – Grieving the identity shift of chronic illness12:41 – Respecting fatigue instead of pushing through14:05 – Why AIP shouldn’t become your identity16:06 – The importance of finding community support18:11 – Measuring progress in months and years20:07 – The bigger mindset shift around long-term healing22:00 – The New Autoimmune Protocol pre-order community announcement24:59 – Closing reflections and invitation to join the community
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Mind-Body Minute: Meditation with Michele Spring (Ep 72) 19.03.2026 16分Episode 73: Mind-Body Minute — Beginner Meditation with Michele SpringMeditation is one of those practices that almost everyone recommends—especially in the autoimmune world. We know nervous system regulation matters. We know stress impacts inflammation. We know slowing down is important.And yet, actually sitting down to meditate can feel surprisingly difficult. Instead of calm, you might feel restless. Instead of clarity, your thoughts get louder. Instead of relaxation, your body feels uncomfortable.For many women living with autoimmune disease, this makes perfect sense. When your nervous system has been on high alert for a long time—monitoring symptoms, managing flares, juggling responsibilities—stillness can feel unfamiliar, even unsafe.In this Mind-Body Minute, Mickey is joined by AIP Certified Coach, Qigong and yoga teacher Michele Spring to talk about why meditation feels hard, what’s actually happening in the nervous system when we try to slow down, and how to begin in a way that feels supportive instead of frustrating.This conversation reframes meditation as a practice of building safety and awareness—rather than clearing your mind or doing it “perfectly.”In This Episode, You’ll Learn:Why meditation can trigger anxiety instead of calmHow nervous system dysregulation makes stillness feel unsafeWhat meditation actually is (and what it isn’t)Why you don’t need to clear your mind to meditateHow moving meditation (like Qigong) can be more accessible than sitting stillA simple way to start with just 30 secondsHow to structure a meditation habit so it actually sticksResources:Free Guided Meditation – Michele’s calming nervous system meditationMichele on Instagram – @ThrivingAutoimmuneMichele on YouTube – Michele Spring (Thriving Autoimmune)Episode Timeline:00:00 – Why meditation feels so hard01:26 – Meet Michele Spring02:34 – Nervous system dysregulation and stillness06:27 – What meditation really is (and common misconceptions)10:13 – How to get started if meditation hasn’t stuck11:57 – Structuring a sustainable practice13:34 – Free guided meditation invitation14:39 – Where to connect with Michele
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The Root Cause of IBS with Izabella Wentz, PharmD (Ep 071) 16.03.2026 43分Episode 71: The Root Cause of IBS — Interview with Izabella Wentz, PharmDWhat if IBS isn’t a true diagnosis—but a placeholder? What if bloating, cramping, urgency, constipation, diarrhea, and food reactions aren’t signs that your body is “too sensitive,” but clues that something specific and treatable is being missed?In this episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, I’m joined by Dr. Izabella Wentz, integrative pharmacist, bestselling author, and longtime leader in the root-cause approach to chronic illness. Many of you know her work in the Hashimoto’s community—but her newest book turns that same investigative lens toward digestive health.Izabella’s latest book, Finding and Treating the Root Cause of Irritable Bowel Syndrome, challenges the idea that IBS is a final answer. Instead, she reframes it as the beginning of a deeper investigation—one that considers bacterial overgrowth, enzyme deficiencies, nutrient depletion, intestinal permeability, medication side effects, food intolerances, thyroid dysfunction, and more.This conversation is especially relevant for the autoimmune community. Many people who go on to develop autoimmune disease report years—sometimes even a decade—of digestive symptoms before receiving a diagnosis. We explore why that overlap exists, what IBS may be masking, and how improving gut health may shift the trajectory of long-term immune health.In this episode, you’ll learn:Why IBS is often a “label,” not a root causeThe research showing most IBS cases have identifiable, treatable drivers How IBS can precede autoimmune disease by 5–10+ years The role of intestinal permeability in autoimmunity When IBS may actually be SIBO, celiac disease, IBD, enzyme dysfunction, or something else The difference between IBS and IBD—and red flags you shouldn’t ignore How nutrient deficiencies like zinc, glutamine, thiamine, carnitine, and magnesium impact digestion Why fiber works for some people—and makes others worse How polyphenols, fermented foods, and microbiome balance fit into healing Medications that can contribute to constipation, diarrhea, or gut lining damage Foundational gut practices that support digestion for everyoneResources:Izabella Wentz, PharmD Website: https://thyroidpharmacist.com Instagram: @izabellawentzpharmd Facebook: Thyroid Lifestyle Podcast: Thyroid Pharmacist Healing ConversationsBook: Finding and Treating the Root Cause of Irritable Bowel SyndromeEpisode Timeline:00:00 – Is IBS a diagnosis—or a placeholder?01:34 – Introducing Izabella Wentz03:38 – Why IBS is often a label, not a root cause11:07 – When IBS is actually something else14:01 – Food reactions: IBS vs autoimmune sensitivities18:35 – Why IBS and autoimmunity overlap20:10 – IBS vs IBD: knowing the difference23:09 – Nutrient deficiencies and digestive dysfunction28:40 – Fiber, fermented foods & polyphenols32:56 – Medications that contribute to IBS35:08 – Gut health foundations for everyone38:12 – Wrap-up and closing
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Practitioner Perspectives: Autoimmune Flares & Gut Issues with Mariu Cabral | Small Bite (Ep 070) 12.03.2026 19分Practitioner Perspectives: Autoimmune Flares & Gut Issues with Mariu Cabral (Small Bite) | Episode 70When you’re navigating autoimmune disease and IBS at the same time, it can feel confusing fast.You clean up your diet. You follow AIP carefully. And yet you’re still bloated, constipated, dealing with urgency, or wondering whether what you’re experiencing is an autoimmune flare, a gut flare, or something else entirely.In this Small Bite episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott is joined by Nutritional Therapy Practitioner and AIP Certified Coach Mariu Cabral for a grounded conversation about what’s actually happening in real-life practice with clients who have both autoimmune disease and gut issues.This is the first in a Practitioner Perspectives series focused on IBS — highlighting what’s showing up right now in the autoimmune community, what’s working, and where nuance matters most.Together, they explore how autoimmune flares and gut flares often overlap, why mealtime habits can be just as important as food choices, and how to navigate AIP when common “healthy” foods don’t feel good in your body.You’ll hear about:Why autoimmune flares and gut flares often happen togetherHow eating in a stressed or distracted state can trigger symptomsWhy chewing thoroughly can dramatically improve digestionThe difference between autoimmune trigger foods and IBS trigger foodsWhy IBS triggers are often about quantity, preparation, and contextHow cooking methods (like steaming vs. roasting) affect digestibilityHow to personalize AIP when fibrous vegetables and ferments cause symptomsWhy the elimination phase can ultimately support gut healingHow to honor cultural foods while managing IBS and autoimmune diseaseWhy healing must include safety, identity, and joy around foodThis episode is a reminder that struggling with digestion on AIP doesn’t mean you’re failing. It means your body needs personalization, not perfection.ResourcesMariu Cabral Website: https://mariucabral.comFollow Mariu on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mariucabralFollow Mariu on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mariucabral.ntpMariu Cabral on Substack: https://mariucabral.substack.com/Episode Timeline00:00 – When autoimmune and gut symptoms collide01:22 – Introducing Mariu Cabral02:22 – What’s showing up in practice right now04:18 – Why mealtime stress triggers gut flares05:49 – IBS vs. autoimmune trigger foods07:51 – Why fibrous vegetables can be tricky on AIP09:43 – Cooking methods and digestibility10:22 – Why AIP can ultimately support digestion12:32 – Two simple digestion habits that change everything14:26 – When Modified AIP may help15:02 – Honoring cultural foods during healing17:01 – Final reflections and where to connect
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How to Choose: Core vs. Modified AIP Elimination Phase | Deep Dive (Ep 069) 09.03.2026 28分Episode 69: Core vs. Modified AIP Elimination Phase — How to Choose | Deep DiveIf you’re learning about the Autoimmune Protocol for the first time—or revisiting it after trying it years ago—one question almost always comes up during the Elimination Phase:Should I start with Core AIP or Modified AIP?It sounds like a simple choice, but for many people it feels loaded. Some wonder which version will “work better.” Others worry about sustainability, cost, cultural fit, or whether they can realistically maintain the structure long enough to see results.In this episode of the AIP Deep Dive series, Mickey breaks down the key differences between Core and Modified AIP, explains why both versions exist, and walks you through how to decide which one is the best fit for you right now. Rather than framing the choice as a matter of willpower or commitment, this episode reframes it as a question of context, sustainability, and nutrient density.Mickey also discusses who each version tends to work best for, what the research currently says (and doesn’t say), how Modified AIP evolved from real-world use, and how to transition between versions if needed.In this episode, you’ll learn:Why the Core vs. Modified question exists todayWhat is removed on Core AIP and how it differs from ModifiedWhich foods are included in Modified AIP and whyWho Core AIP tends to work best forWhy Modified AIP is now the recommended starting point for most peopleHow accessibility, affordability, and cultural relevance factor into your decisionThe research reality behind both versionsWhy nutrient density matters regardless of which version you chooseHow to transition from Modified to Core if neededWhy fit and sustainability matter more than perfectionResources:Referenced Episodes:Episode 53: The Elimination Phase Explained (Deep Dive)Episode 55: Nutrient Density & Lifestyle Changes – Essential to All Phases of AIPAIP Foundation Series – Free 5-day email course with printable food lists for both Core and Modified AIP, reintroduction charts, meal plans, and beginner tools.The New Autoimmune Protocol (Book) – The first AIP resource built to reflect the updated Modified AIP framework while prioritizing nutrient density and therapeutic principles. Available for pre-order wherever books are sold.Episode Timeline:00:00 – Core vs. Modified: why this question matters02:16 – Elimination Phase overview at a glance03:21 – What is removed on Core AIP04:07 – What’s included on Modified AIP05:09 – Timeline reminder & Foundation Series reference06:21 – Why Modified AIP was created08:30 – Who Core AIP tends to work best for10:36 – Why Modified AIP is recommended for most people11:38 – Accessibility & affordability considerations12:27 – Modified AIP for vegetarians, active individuals & weight restoration14:28 – The research reality: what we know and what’s next16:22 – The biggest tradeoff: nutrient density18:39 – What happens to existing Core AIP resources20:47 – A note on known sensitivities21:54 – Cultural relevance and making AIP your own23:40 – Transitioning from Modified to Core25:33 – Closing recap & book pre-order
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