The Body on Fire How to Heal from Inflammation
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Time to read 5 min
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Time to read 5 min
"Inflammation isn't the enemy. It's a messenger. Acute inflammation heals us, but chronic inflammation harms us."
Inflammation gets blamed for everything; joint pain, fatigue, skin flare-ups, gut issues, brain fog, even mood disorders. But here's what's often missed: inflammation isn't always the enemy. It's also your body's ancient protector, a messenger saying "pay attention”.
The real problem begins when that message never switches off. In this episode, Anthia explores:
what inflammation really is
what drives it in modern life
and practical ways to cool chronic inflammation while honouring its protective purpose
Inflammation is your body's natural defense response. It’s how your immune system reacts to injury, infection, or perceived threats. When acute, inflammation is your friend.
Think of a cut on your finger becoming red, warm, and swollen - that's inflammation bringing immune cells and nutrients to fight infection and repair tissue. Once the job is done, your body switches it off.
Chronic inflammation is entirely different. It's like a smoldering fire that never quite goes out. It’s silent, lingering, often unnoticed, slowly damaging the tissues it touches. This low-grade fire can affect almost every part of you, manifesting as constant fatigue, anxiety, depression, bloating, food reactions, frequent colds, autoimmune activity, and that sense of never quite being well.
Sometimes inflammation whispers through brain fog, afternoon crashes, food sensitivities, and mood dips. Other times it shouts through joint pain, skin flare-ups, sinus congestion, and ongoing digestive upsets. The sooner we listen, the easier it is to intervene. Awareness is the first step to healing.
Inflammation is really about capacity and load. Your body has a certain capacity to digest, detoxify, repair, and regulate. Modern life piles on the load through food, stress, toxins, disrupted light exposure, and emotional pressure. Inflammation rises when the load exceeds capacity.
Certain foods stoke inflammatory flames, including sugar and refined carbohydrates that spike blood sugar, processed meats and fried foods that create oxidative stress, food additives that irritate the gut and disturb the microbiome, excess alcohol and caffeine that overload the liver, and industrial seed oils high in omega-6 that push the body toward pro-inflammatory signaling.
For some people, nightshades (tomatoes, potatoes, eggplant, peppers) and histamine-rich foods (aged cheeses, wine, fermented foods) can trigger inflammatory responses.
Anti-inflammatory foods work by modulating oxidative stress, supporting the gut microbiome, and regulating immune pathways.
Leafy Greens and Colorful Vegetables
Spinach, kale, beetroot, and carrots provide antioxidants that neutralise free radicals and feed beneficial gut bacteria, which produce metabolites that strengthen the gut lining.
Omega-3 Rich Foods
Wild fish and grass-fed animals provide EPA and DHA, which convert into compounds that actively switch off inflammatory pathways and regulate immune cell activity.
Activated Nuts and Seeds
Soaking reduces phytates that inhibit mineral absorption, making important anti-inflammatory minerals like magnesium, zinc, and selenium more bioavailable.
Soaked Legumes and Whole Grains Proper preparation helps create short-chain fatty acids like butyrate, which fuel the colon, reduce leaky gut, and calm inflammatory signaling.
Herbs and Spices
Turmeric's curcumin inhibits master inflammatory regulators, ginger reduces inflammatory synthesis, rosemary provides antioxidant protection, garlic enhances detox pathways, and cinnamon improves insulin sensitivity.
Prioritise Deep, Restorative Sleep - During slow-wave sleep, the body lowers pro-inflammatory cytokines while boosting anti-inflammatory signals and clearing inflammatory waste products from the brain.
Move Your Body Daily - Exercise reduces visceral fat (a major source of inflammation), improves insulin sensitivity, and stimulates anti-inflammatory compounds from muscle tissue.
Practice Breathwork or Meditation - Controlled breathing and meditation activate the vagus nerve, triggering anti-inflammatory pathways and lowering cortisol.
Spend Time in Nature - Green spaces reduce stress hormones while exposure to phytoncides (aromatic compounds from trees) enhances natural killer cell activity and lowers inflammatory markers.
Create Digital Downtime - Constant screen exposure keeps the nervous system in hypervigilance, raising stress hormones and inflammatory pathways. Tech-free time moves you from fight-or-flight into rest-and-digest mode.
Add one extra serving of vegetables daily, swap one processed snack for whole food, pause and chew slowly before eating, reduce screens before bed, or simply drink more water.
Every small shift helps turn the inflammatory flame down. It's not about perfection but consistent progress.
What signs in your body suggest inflammation? How do you care for yourself during flare-ups? What might it feel like to live in a body that is cool, calm, and no longer chronically inflamed?
Notice how your body feels after different foods - energised or sluggish?
Add one colourful, anti-inflammatory food to your daily meals
Practice one stress-reduction technique (breathwork, nature time, meditation)
Prioritize consistent, quality sleep
Start small with one simple change rather than overwhelming yourself
Keep a symptom journal to identify your personal inflammation triggers
Visit my naturopathic clinic at www.apothecabyanthia.com
Join the "Staying Healthy Together Club" for deeper exploration of these practices (https://akademeiabyanthia.thinkific.com/bundles/StayingHealthyTogether)
Inside the Club, you’ll find my full course library, live seasonal teachings, wellness tools, and guidance drawn from over 30 years of naturopathic clinical practice.
It’s a place to explore the deeper layers of your health, reconnect with your body, and be gently supported as you heal, grow, and thrive.