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🎥 Videos Mentioned:
Eat More Protein With Ease: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JYToGEyGcBs&t=1s
What I Eat in A Day: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkIKq1dhHec&t=28s
Self Love + Weight Loss: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oIWPJ2Tx2ZE
Six2Start Meal Prep: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ltaz1HVgktQ&t=43s
Healthy Meal BluePrint: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nzTYDAJ-D5c&t=10s
TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Opening
0:58 Tip #1: Quality Over Calories
3:13 Tip #2: Prioritze Protien
4:50 Tip #3: Increase Fiber Intake
6:20 Tip #4: Hydration
7:14 Tip #4b: LMNT is my favorite electrolyte!!
9:30 Tip #5: Healthy Fats
10:36 Tip #6: External Environment
13:03 Tip #7: Internal Dialogue
14:55 Tip #8: Meal-Prep
16:12 Tip #9: 2-Minute Meals
17:34 Tip #10: Mindfulness
19:41 Outro
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For a long time, protein felt like it belonged to a very specific world—shaker bottles, meal prep containers, and endless conversations about macros. But lately, it’s showing up somewhere else entirely: weeknight dinners, cozy casseroles, soups simmering on the stove, and familiar meals people actually want to eat.
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Protein is for everyone!
For years, the word protein made me think of the gym.
It was something people talked about in terms of numbers: grams per meal, grams per day, grams in a bar that claimed to taste like s’mores or peanut butter cups, but actually tasted like cardboard or chalk. (Ick.)
Meanwhile, the kind of food I love—soups, casseroles, skillet dinners, big salads—was living in an entirely different lane.
But over time, those worlds have started overlapping. Instead of turning everything into a protein version of itself, more home cooks are simply building protein into meals that already feel cozy and familiar.
Chicken in a pasta bake. Beans in a hearty chili. Greek yogurt stirred into a creamy sauce.
This is protein I can do. (The gym bros can keep the chalky protein bars!)
Protein Left the Gym
Not that long ago, protein had a reputation. It was associated with athletes, weightlifting, and people who pulled out their phones with every meal to track their macros to the exact decimal.
Then, the high protein trend hit and all of us were filling our days with all the protein. But now, that’s starting to wane and protein is showing up in a much more practical context: weeknight dinners.
Part of that shift comes from something simple. More people are cooking at home regularly. When you’re making dinner most nights of the week, you start noticing which meals leave you satisfied—and which ones leave you rummaging through the pantry an hour later.
It turns out that protein helps meals last. It makes a bowl of pasta a dinner that carries you through the evening. It transforms a simple soup into something that feels like a hearty main and not like half a meal.
And when protein built into meals you already enjoy, it makes it so much easier to get what you need.
What Protein Looks Like Now
Instead of turning every food into a high-protein concoction, we’re incorporating protein into meals that already make sense.
Chicken simmering into a creamy pasta casserole like this Chicken Alfredo Bake.
Beans tucked into a cozy pot of Vegan Chili.
Greek yogurt stirred into sauces like in Hamburger Stroganoff to create richness without heavy cream.
Lentils giving a boost to this comforting bowl of Lentil Soup. (Which is also a great source of fiber!)
The meal still looks like dinner, but protein just happens to be part of it, instead of the protein being something you choke down in an unpleasant bar or shake before moving on with your day.
Why Dinner Is Where Protein Fits Best
Breakfast and snacks tend to get most of the attention when people talk about protein. But dinner is where it actually feels the most natural for me.
Dinner already has structure, with a main component, some vegetables, maybe a grain or starch. Adding protein doesn’t require reinventing the meal since it’s already part of the blueprint.
Here are some examples:
Crockpot Mexican Chicken, where the chicken and optional addition of beans make the dish hearty enough to stand on its own.
A comforting bowl of White Bean Soup, where the beans provide both texture and staying power.
A cozy casserole like Chicken Bacon Ranch Casserole, where protein is simply baked into the dish alongside pasta and vegetables.
None of these meals feel like they were designed around protein. They just happen to be satisfying because protein is part of the picture.
Familiar Meals, Just Built a Little Better
One of the best parts of this shift is that it doesn’t require you to start cooking differently. It’s less about new foods and more about small adjustments to meals you already love.
A pasta sauce or soup that includes beans or lentils.
A grain bowl topped with salmon or grilled chicken.
A casserole that pairs protein with vegetables and whole grains.
Meals like Salmon Bowls, Burrito Bowls, or a hearty pot of Cowboy Stew all follow this same idea, naturally combining protein, vegetables, and carbohydrates in a way that feels complete.
Moving Away From High-Protein Everything
The language around protein is shifting too. A few years ago, it felt like every product on the grocery shelf was racing to claim the highest protein number possible.
Protein cereal. Protein cookies. Protein water.
But these days, as the protein fad fades out, people aren’t necessarily trying to maximize protein at every opportunity. They’re simply noticing that meals with a good source of protein tend to feel more satisfying. They want enough protein, rather than the maximum amount.
And when protein shows up in the form of real food—chicken, beans, fish, yogurt—it fits naturally into the kinds of meals people already cook.
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Cabbage Is Having a Moment—Here’s How to Cook It So It’s Craveable
Sharing the details on a free workshop I’m hosting all about using AI for health coaches. If you’re a fello health coach and stuck with the behind-the-scenes systems, content creation, and copy, you can use AI to streamline your systems and make a huge difference in your business.
Hi friends! I hope you’re having an amazing week! We took off for a little getaway to San Diego. It’s so fun to see our Kleiger fam and enjoy some beach time. I’ll share some pics and adventures in Friday Faves!
For today’s post, I wanted to share something I’m doing for my fellow health coaches: a free AI for health coaches workshop.
One of my missions for 2026 is to serve and support my health coach friends. I know SO many new health coaches who have the knowledge and passion, but aren’t quite sure how to run an online business or how to get started. It’s my goal to help as many as possible this year, by offering free resources like my health coach starter kit, and then paid coaching options, like Revenue Rx.
Here are some details about the AI for health coaches workshop:
AI for health coaches workshop
So many of us didn’t start our online businesses because we love building systems, writing endless social media captions, or figuring out what to say in emails every week.
If you’re a fellow health coach or Integrative Health Practitioner, you’re probably in this industry because you wanted to help people feel better.
Once you’re running an online business, you realize how much of it happens behind the scenes: intake forms, client notes, discovery calls, content creation, email newsletters, resources for clients, all the things that make a business run, but it’s a lot.
Over the past year, AI has quietly become one of the most helpful tools in my business. Not because it replaces creativity (it definitely doesn’t lol and I’m still here!), but because it makes a lot of those backend tasks faster and easier.
It doesn’t replace you, but it can help support you…especially for the little behind-the-scenes tasks that you don’t even like.
I know a lot of health coaches feel curious about AI but also a little unsure where to start. There’s a lot of noise around it right now, and it can feel overwhelming to figure out what’s actually helpful.
So I decided to host a free workshop and walk through how I actually use it.
AI for Health Coaches (Free Workshop)
Thursday, March 26
3pm EST / 12pm PST
In this workshop I’ll show you how to use AI to make running your coaching business simpler and more organized, without turning your content into something robotic or generic.
SAVE YOUR SPOT HERE.
We’ll talk about how to use it for things like:
• Streamlining backend systems
• Brainstorming a simple content strategy
• Building templates for client communication
• Generating ideas when you’re staring at a blank screen
• Repurposing content so one idea can turn into multiple posts
My goal is for you to leave with ideas you can implement right away, even if you’ve never used AI before.
Who This Is For
This workshop is especially for:
• health coaches
• integrative health practitioners
• wellness entrepreneurs
• anyone building a coaching business
A Lil Bonus
Everyone who attends live will also get a resource with my favorite AI prompts for health coaches, so you’ll have something practical you can start using right away.
Save your spot here!
And if you sign up, hit reply to the confirmation email and tell me one question you have about using AI in your business.
I’m planning to shape the workshop around the things people are actually struggling with, and I’ll leave time at the end for Q&A. I’d love to see you there!!
xo
Gina
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We’re Manish and Sakshi, your go-to damdaar couple, bringing you a fun mix of fitness, lifestyle, and laughter! From intense couple workouts to quirky gym comedy and healthy living tips, we’re here to inspire and entertain you while making fitness a part of every Indian household.
Expect a lot of masti, motivation, and madness as we break stereotypes, challenge each other, and prove that a couple who lifts together, stays together! Whether you’re looking to transform your body or just enjoy a good laugh after a long day, Damdaar Jodi has something for everyone.
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Article by Dr Raghuram Y.S. MD (Ay) & Dr Manasa S, B.A.M.S
AIAPGET Points
–Acharya Sushruta has described Ojonirodhaja Jwara in Chapter 39 of Uttara Tantra – Jwara Pratisedha
–It is a kind of Sannipataja Jwara with predominance of Vata and Pitta in the clinical picture. Ojas is destroyed by aggravated Vata and Pitta in this condition leading to Ojonirodhaja Jwara and subsequently its symptoms.
–Predominant symptoms – Gatra stambha, Shita, SHAYANEPSU (desire to always sleep), Achetana, API JAGRAT SWAPAN (gets into sleep and awakes often), Tandra, Pralapa, Romaharsha, Srastanga & MANDA SANTAPA VEDANA (mild increase of temperature and discomforts).
–Ojonirodhaja Jwara increases greatly on reaching the 7th, 10th or 12th day either subsides or kills the patient.
Ojo Nirodhaja Jwara is a special type of Jwara – fever explained by Acharya Sushruta. He has explained this in the context of Sannipata Jwara – fevers caused by simultaneous aggravation of all three doshas. From Sushruta’s description we also learn that Ojo Nirodhaja Jwara is a variant of Sannipataja i.e. it is also caused by simultaneous aggravation of all three doshas. In spite of that, the clinical picture is dominated by aggravated pitta and vata. These two doshas cause severe destruction and depletion of ojas – the essence of all the tissues and the fever and symptoms are consequently manifested.
Below mentioned are the symptoms of Ojonirodhaja Jwara as described by Acharya Sushruta. An intelligent physician should diagnose this condition based on the knowledge of these symptoms. The symptoms are –
–Ojo visramsate yasya pitta anila samuchchrayat – there is decrease of ojas due to aggravation of pitta and vata (this fever is caused due to aggravation of pitta and vata and consequent depletion of ojas)
–Gatra stambha – rigidity of the body,
–Shita – coldness,
–Shayanepsu – desire to sleep always,
–Achetana – loss of consciousness,
–Api Jagrat Swapan – gets into sleep and awakes often,
–Tandra – has stupor,
–Pralapavan – delirium,
–Samhrshta Roma – horripilation,
–Srastanga – weakness of the body parts,
–Manda Santapa Vedana – mild increase of temperature and discomforts
This fever increases greatly on reaching the seventh, tenth or twelfth day either subsides or kills the patient.
Treatment Principles
Though the treatment principles for Ojonirodhaja Jwara have not been specifically described by Acharya Sushruta, contextually, seeing the description of the jwara, we can infer the below mentioned principles and consider them in the treatment of the said condition –
–Balancing Agni
–Treating on the lines of Sannipataja Jwara
–Treating on the lines of Vata-Pittaja Jwara
–Brimhana & Santarpana – bulk-promoting and nutritious foods and similar such approaches
–Measures to increase Ojas and maintain its optimum levels
–Rasayana and Vajikarana medicines
–Daiva Vyapashraya Chikitsa – regularly chanting Vishnu Sahasra Nama
Let’s clear this up. If you have a regular bathroom scale, you might see your weight go up and panic. This is why I recommend tossing it and getting a body composition scale, which will give you more details. Creatine will not make you gain fat. The extra weight you might see may be from how creatine can help your muscles store more water, which is actually a good thing. This means better workouts, faster recovery, and more strength gains.
However, with creatine monohydrate, there is also the possibility of bloating. I share my dosage recommendations in the video if that’s what you’re using, but with creatine HCl (the superior form of creatine I use in my SHEatine formula) you don’t even have to worry about it. It’s a more powerful dose in a smaller amount, and you get all of the benefits without the bloat.
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Creamy Lemon Chicken with Asparagus is an easy one-skillet spring dinner with juicy chicken, tender asparagus, and a bright lemon cream sauce.
Creamy Lemon Chicken
I don’t know about you, but I’m always excited when spring produce starts showing up. This Creamy Lemon Chicken with Asparagus is an easy, high-protein dinner that feels elegant yet totally weeknight-friendly. Juicy chicken and tender asparagus simmer in a lemon cream sauce, all made in one skillet. Serve it as is, or pair it with orzo or roasted baby potatoes to soak up every bit of the sauce. If you love skillet chicken dinners, also try my Chicken Florentine, Marry Me Chicken, or my collection of healthy chicken breast recipes.
Why This Recipe Works
As the weather slowly warms, I begin craving lighter dishes that are still satisfying. My husband, Tommy, and I loved this creamy lemon chicken when I served it for dinner recently. Like many Skinnytaste recipes, this creamy chicken dish keeps things lighter while still delivering big flavor and plenty of protein.
Juicy Chicken: Chicken breasts cook quickly and stay juicy when simmered in the sauce.
One-pan convenience: Asparagus cooks right in the skillet for a true one-pan dinner.
Highlights spring produce with fresh asparagus and lemon
Quick: High protein and ready in about 30 minutes.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Keep reading for more on what you’ll need to make this easy creamy lemon chicken recipe. See the recipe card below for the exact measurements.
Asparagus: Rinse the asparagus under running water and snap off the tough ends of the spears.
Chicken Breasts: Cut the boneless, skinless chicken breasts in half lengthwise to make thin, wide pieces. Using sharp kitchen scissors is the easiest way to do this.
Dijon Mustard for tanginess
Seasoning: Garlic and onion powders, Italian seasoning, kosher salt, black pepper
Flour: Coating the chicken in flour gives it a nice golden-brown crust when you sear it. You can use all-purpose flour or a gluten-free mix, like Cup4Cup.
Butter: Cook the chicken in butter for added richness and flavor.
Chicken Bone Broth adds protein and flavor to the sauce. For best results, use a high-quality broth, such as Kettle & Fire, Butcher’s by Roli Roti, or Epic. You could also use homemade chicken broth.
Half-and-Half is a lighter option than heavy cream, yet it still makes the lemon sauce creamy.
Lemon: Zest and juice a lemon for maximum citrus flavor.
How to Make Lemon Chicken
Before adding the half-and-half, make sure the stove is set to medium-low. If the heat’s too high, the sauce may curdle. See the recipe card at the bottom for printable directions.
Prep the chicken: Place the halved chicken breasts between 2 sheets of plastic wrap or parchment paper, then pound them until about ¼ inch thick. Season with Dijon and all the spices on both sides, then coat in flour.
Steam the asparagus in water in a large, covered skillet. After a couple of minutes, when they’re crisp-tender, remove them from the pan.
Cook the chicken: Melt the butter in the same skillet, then cook the chicken for 4 to 5 minutes on each side. Transfer to a plate.
Make the creamy sauce: Add the bone broth, half-and-half, and remaining seasoning to the pan. Cook over medium-low heat, reducing the sauce (i.e., cooking it down until it thickens and only about half remains. To check that it’s done, dip a spoon into it. If the sauce coats the back of the spoon, it’s ready. If it’s too thin, keep simmering; if it’s too thick, add another tablespoon or two of broth.
Add the lemon: Zest the lemon before cutting it in half. Squeeze the juice into the sauce, then nestle the chicken into the sauce. Simmer for a few minutes, then add the zest. Serve the chicken with asparagus, and drizzle the sauce over it.
Variations
Asparagus alternatives: Try it with broccoli, broccolini, or green beans.
Chicken: Replace breasts with boneless, skinless thighs or pork chops.
No Italian seasoning? Use a mix of any dried herbs you have, such as parsley, thyme, and oregano.
Broth options: Use regular chicken broth or vegetable broth. Just make sure it’s a good one, since it’s the main ingredient in the sauce.
Storage
I don’t recommend freezing this dish because the cream sauce could separate after thawing.
Refrigerate leftovers for up to 4 days.
Reheat: You can microwave the chicken and asparagus or reheat them on the stove over medium heat. If the sauce is too thick, add a splash of broth or water to thin it.
More Chicken Breast Recipes You’ll Love
For more healthy dinner ideas, check out these five delicious chicken breast recipes to inspire your next meal!
Prep: 15 minutesmins
Cook: 20 minutesmins
Total: 35 minutesmins
Serving Size: 1piece chicken with ¼ cup sauce + veg
Between two pieces of plastic wrap, pound the halved chicken breasts to an even thickness (about ¼ inch). Season all over with Dijon mustard, ½ teaspoon Italian seasoning, ½ teaspoon garlic powder, ½ teaspoon onion powder, ½ teaspoon salt, and black pepper, to taste. Make sure the chicken is fully coated on both sides.
Dredge each piece of chicken in flour and shake off any excess.
In a large skillet, add the asparagus with ¼ water, cover and cook over medium heat to steam 2 to 3 minutes, until crisp tender. Remove and set aside.
In the same skillet, heat the butter over medium-high heat. Add the chicken and cook for about 4 to 5 minutes per side, or until each piece is cooked through and has a golden-brown crust. Remove and set aside.
Add chicken bone broth, half-and-half, remaining Italian seasoning, ¼ teaspoon salt, garlic powder and onion powder to the pan. Reduce by half over medium-low heat, until it thickens, thick enough that it coats the back of a spoon.
Add the lemon juice and nestle the cooked chicken into the sauce and simmer for a few minutes, until heated through. Finish with lemon zest.
Serve with asparagus, drizzling the sauce over the chicken.
Last Step:
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*Half of the flour gets tossed after, subtracted from the full analysis. Since the sauce is the main component of the dish, flavorful homemade broth or good quality chicken broth is suggested. Brands that sell chicken bone broth, like Kettle & Fire, Butchers by Roli or Epic are suggested. Serving Suggestion: over pasta or rice, with cauliflower rice or cauliflower gnocchi, or roasted baby potatoes. Variations: Instead of asparagus, serve with charred broccoli or green beans.
Inflammatory markers can double within six hours of eating a pro-inflammatory meal. Which foods are the worst?
Excessive inflammation may play a role in a number of leading causes of death and disability, including type 2 diabetes, obesity, and heart disease. “But what are the stimuli that jumpstart the destructive inflammatory cascade?” You typically hear about the pro-inflammatory nature of a chronic high-fat diet, but the inflammatory effect “may not be limited to chronic intake but may be evident after the consumption of a single meal.”
Within hours after eating an unhealthy meal, inflammatory markers like interleukin-6 (IL-6) can skyrocket, doubling within six hours. The majority of studies show an increase in IL-6 after consuming a high-fat meal. But the meals they tested weren’t just filled with meat, eggs, dairy, and oil, but also junky refined carbohydrates like white flour and added sugar.
When people are given essentially straight butter fat and no carbs, they can still get a spike in inflammation within hours, proving the added fat itself is pro-inflammatory. But when people are given straight sugar water without any fat, the result is the same, proving the added sugar is pro-inflammatory, too, as you can see below and at 1:26 in my video Foods That Cause Inflammation.
Why should we be concerned with the inflammatory responses after unhealthy meal ingestion? Because extensive research points to the idea that “persistent low-grade inflammation is an underlying factor in several high-mortality chronic diseases and that diet can contribute to, or attenuate, that inflammation.”
You’ll note in the graph below that IL-6 levels jumped up to about 3 pg/mL after the meal. (You can also check it out at 1:55 in my video.)
When levels start regularly getting up to about 3 pg/mL, that’s associated with twice the risk of death. That increased risk was found across the board, compiling eight other similar studies, likely because it’s linked with increased risk of heart disease, the number one killer of men and women, even as strongly as some other major well-known risk factors like high cholesterol.
Now, not all high-fat foods cause inflammation. More than a dozen studies combined show that whole plant foods such as nuts do not increase inflammatory markers, even when eating up to handfuls of nuts a day. In fact, spread half an avocado on a beef burger, and you may be able to blunt some of the inflammation caused by the meat—even lean meat—as you can see below and at 2:35 in my video.
There are reviews purporting to show a drop in inflammatory markers after eating wild game, which is about as lean a meat as you can get, but that’s only compared to store-bought meat. Give people some really fatty meat and their IL-6 shoots up, as do their tumor-necrosis factor and C-reactive protein. Inflammatory, inflammatory, inflammatory—within hours of consumption. But what if you instead eat a kangaroo steak, which is extremely low in fat, similar to elk or moose? You’ll get the same strong inflammatory response within hours of eating it, as you can see below and at 3:15 in my video.
Now, certainly less inflammatory than conventional meat you might get at the store, but pro-inflammatory nonetheless, increasing markers of inflammation within mere hours.
Doctor’s Note
Stay tuned for Which Foods Are Anti-Inflammatory?, up next.
For more on diet and inflammation, see related posts below.