
How Food Impacts Your Stress: What Women Over 35 Need to Know
What If Your Meals Could Be Fueling Stress or Fighting It?
What if I told you that your meals could either fuel stress or fight it? The food you eat sends powerful signals to your nervous system — and the difference can mean an afternoon meltdown or a calm, steady day.
I’m Dr. Anjali, founder of Back in Balance, and this month we’re exploring the functional side of your health — your gut, hormones, and nutrition. Today we’re diving into something that impacts every one of us, every single day: food.
Most people think about food in terms of calories, weight, or “eating clean.” But I want you to think of food in a new way — as information for your nervous system.
Every bite you take tells your brain one of two things:
👉 “You’re safe, steady, and nourished.”
or
👉 “You’re stressed, unstable, and on alert.”
If you’ve ever felt anxious after eating sugar or noticed that mid-afternoon crash after coffee or a pastry (or both), that’s not just coincidence. That’s your nervous system responding to the food signal.
A Real-Life Example: When Food Fueled Stress
Let me tell you about Rob, a dad I worked with. He was 42, working long hours, and his stress was out of control. Two coffees before 10 a.m., skipped lunches, and a 3 p.m. grab-and-go snack — he thought work was the problem.
But when we looked deeper, his blood sugar was spiking and crashing all day. His food choices were literally fueling his stress response. Once he started eating more balanced meals — protein at breakfast, better snacks — his nervous system calmed down.
His workload didn’t change, but his resilience did. That’s the power of stabilizing your blood sugar.
How Blood Sugar Affects Stress
When your blood sugar rises too quickly, cortisol and adrenaline jump in. You might feel it as:
Anxiety or jitters
Brain fog
Irritability or short temper
Sudden fatigue when blood sugar crashes
Your body interprets these ups and downs as danger. For women over 35, hormonal shifts (especially in estrogen and progesterone) can make you even more sensitive to blood sugar swings — meaning more intense PMS, perimenopausal symptoms, or stress reactivity.
The solution? Focus on foods that help regulate your blood sugar and support your nervous system.
Key Nutrients to Support Your Nervous System
1. Magnesium: Found in leafy greens, nuts, and seeds, magnesium helps calm your muscles and your nervous system. If you’re always tense, easily startled, or struggle to relax or sleep, you might be low in magnesium.
If you start to notice loose stools, that may mean you need a different form or lower dose. I’ve linked my favorite supplement below to make it easy.
2. B Vitamins: Stress burns through B vitamins — fast. These are found in eggs, legumes, and whole grains. Supplements can help, but food should always come first.
3. Omega-3 Fatty Acids: Found in fish, flax seeds, and walnuts, omega-3s reduce inflammation and support brain function. If most of your meals are processed or pre-packaged, increasing omega-3s (through food or supplements) can help your body handle stress better.
4. Protein: Adequate protein throughout the day is a game-changer. It repairs cells, stabilizes blood sugar, and regulates cortisol. Start your day with protein within 30–60 minutes of waking, add it to each meal, and include a small portion before bed with fiber for better overnight rest.
5. Complex Carbs: Beans, vegetables, quinoa, and oats release glucose slowly for sustained energy. Aim for two-thirds vegetables to one-third fruit to keep your blood sugar steady.
Simple Resets You Can Start Today
Breakfast Reset: Swap cereal for oatmeal with nut butter, fruit, and pumpkin seeds — or yogurt with nuts and berries.
Snack Swap: Try fruit with nut butter, hummus with veggies, or energy bites made from nut butter, oats, chia seeds, and a bit of honey.
Batch Prep: Make overnight oats, soup, or energy bites ahead of time to prevent stress-eating moments.
Even one small swap makes a difference. Start with breakfast or your afternoon snack and watch how your energy, focus, and mood shift — for you and your family.
The Big Picture: Food as Communication
After 35, nutrition becomes one of the most powerful tools to buffer stress. You can’t always control your workload, your kids’ sleep, or life’s curveballs — but you can control the signals you send your nervous system.
Every plate is an opportunity to tell your body, you are safe, supported, and resilient.
If you want help putting this into practice, grab this month’s Functional Resilience Guide — it includes a food-symptom tracker and meal ideas designed for women 35 + who are ready to balance stress, hormones, and family rhythms. You can download it below!