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These conditions may worsen aireborn allergies: Food allergies. Especially wheat/gluten. Avoid those types of foods. • • Irritable bowl syndrome. Work with your doctor. Leaky gut • AllerSips® View Product Improves nasal microbiota I have partial relief AllerPops® Gum for temporary relief View Product Sign up for updates We will keep you posted as new products and studies arise Sign up for Updates Use AllerSips® before AllerPops® Please make sure no excessive oral hygiene and no antibiotics View Product View Product

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3-Step Guide to a Calmer Gut Microbiome

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đź§´Calmer Skin Guide is here.

👄Oral Microbiome Guide is here. 

Principles: we don’t “clean” the gut • keep feeding the community • food first, supplements second

General Principle: feed what stays

  • The gut has one-way flow and stomach acid reduces many incoming microbes. Your long-term residents thrive when you regularly feed them—you don’t sanitize the gut with cleansers.
  • Beneficial effects come from postbiotics (e.g., short-chain fatty acids) made after microbes ferment prebiotics.
    No prebiotics → fewer beneficial postbiotics, even if you take probiotics.

1) Daily prebiotics (diverse plant fiber)

  • Aim for 20–30 different plants/week (vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains, nuts, seeds, herbs, spices).
  • Include prebiotic-rich foods most days: onion/garlic/leek, asparagus, chicory root, Jerusalem artichoke, green banana/plantain flour, oats/barley (β-glucan), beans/lentils (GOS), cooled potatoes/rice (resistant starch).
  • Ramp gradually (add ~5–10 g fiber every few days) and hydrate to reduce gas/discomfort.

2) Fermented foods (live cultures, low sugar)

  • Add 1–2 servings/day: plain yogurt or kefir with live cultures, sauerkraut/kimchi, tempeh, miso, natto, kombucha (low sugar), traditionally fermented pickles.
  • Choose products labeled “live & active cultures,” minimal additives.
  • Rotate types for broader exposure.

3) Probiotics (use thoughtfully, feed them too)

  • If you use probiotics, think short courses or situational use (after travel, during diet change), and pair with prebiotics so they can produce beneficial postbiotics.
  • Be cautious with enteric-coated / delayed-release capsules designed to bypass stomach acid: in some people prone to bloating, heavy or prolonged use may contribute to discomfort or overgrowth-like symptoms. Food-based ferments + regular fiber are often better tolerated. If unsure, consult a clinician.
  • Focus on quality (known strains, clear CFU/date) rather than high dose alone.

Quick Start (7-day plan)

  • Days 1–3: add one prebiotic-rich food per day + one fermented food serving; drink water with meals.
  • Days 4–7: add second daily plant fiber source; keep 1–2 fermented servings/day. If using a probiotic, take with a fiber-rich meal.
  • Keep a simple log: plants/day, fermented servings, how you feel (energy, regularity, bloat).

Everyday habits that help

  • Meal rhythm (include intermittent fasting): Favor meals over constant grazing. Most adults do well with a 12–16-hour overnight fast (e.g., finish dinner by 7–8 pm, first meal 7–11 am). This eating rhythm may help the gut’s natural housekeeping waves and support a steadier microbiome environment.
  • Chew well: slower eating supports digestion.
  • Hydrate: fiber works best with water.
  • Move daily: even 20–30 minutes of walking helps regularity.
  • Sleep & stress: aim for consistent sleep and simple stress-reducing routines.

Caution: Intermittent fasting isn’t for everyone (e.g., pregnancy/breastfeeding, underweight, eating-disorder history, certain medical conditions, or specific medications). If unsure, check with your clinician and start with a gentle 12-hour overnight fast.

If you travel / after antibiotics

  • Prioritize fermented foods and prebiotic fibers as soon as tolerated.
  • If using a probiotic, keep it short-term and with fiber; return to food-first quickly.
  • Re-build variety: add back plants gradually if your stomach is sensitive.

Troubleshooting

  • Gas/bloating when adding fiber? Reduce portion, cook well (soups/stews), choose gentler fibers (oats, peeled squash), then step up.
  • Loose stools? Try soluble-fiber foods (oats, chia, psyllium in small amounts), reduce very spicy/very fatty foods temporarily.
  • Constipation? Increase water, add kiwi/prunes, consider resistant starch (cooled potato/rice) and light daily movement. Try also reversed potty training for adults. 

Safety & when to pause

  • Ongoing abdominal pain, persistent diarrhea/constipation, fever, blood in stool, or significant unintentional weight change → seek medical care.
  • If you suspect you’re sensitive to certain fibers or ferments, reintroduce slowly or discuss with a clinician.