Living Well with IBS: Pillar 1: Nourishing your Body with Gentle Nutrition

You’re standing in the kitchen, staring into the fridge. You’re hungry, but also unsure. Will this meal sit well? Will it cause symptoms later? Is it the “right” choice? You realise that your focus has shifted from living with ease to avoiding symptoms at all costs.

At first, it seemed helpful to cut out a few foods and be more careful. You were really just trying to stay a step ahead of your gut. But gradually, without you realising it, your food choices became more limited, eating got harder, you were eating out less and your world got smaller.

Ultimately, managing IBS should help you build a bigger, more enjoyable life, not a smaller one.

A Different Approach: Nourishing your Body with Gentle Nutrition

This series is about building a bigger, more enjoyable life, one small step at a time. Each week, we’re focusing on one of the four pillars of health, using simple, practical ways to “add in” support rather than take more things away:

  1. Pillar 1: Nourishing your body with gentle nutrition
  2. Pillar 2: Moving your body in an enjoyable way
  3. Pillar 3: Rest and recovery
  4. Pillar 4: Adding joy and connection to each day

If this is something that you’d like to explore, follow along here on the blog and on Facebook or Instagram. We’d love to hear from you how you’re going, what you’ve added and how its working for you.

Pillar 1: Nourishing your body with gentle nutrition

Eating well with IBS isn’t about getting everything right or following a perfect set of rules. Some of the best parts of life come from its imperfections, and food is no different. Gentle nutrition allows room for both satisfaction and your physical needs, because ultimately, nutrition isn’t just about what’s on your plate, it’s about how food fits into your life. For more on healthy eating check out my article What is Healthy Eating Anyway?

1. Establish rhythm & routine and make sure you are eating enough:

Many people with IBS focus on what they’re eating, but some of the biggest drivers of symptoms come down to how they eat:

  • Skipping meals or eating inconsistently → makes it difficult for the gut to establish a steady rhythm, increasing sensitivity and irregular bowel habits
  • Undereating →can place the body under stress, reduce digestive efficiency, and heighten gut sensations
  • Eating too quickly → limits proper chewing and early digestion, placing more demand on the gut and contributing to bloating and discomfort

2. Build a balanced plate:

A simple way to take the pressure out of eating is to follow a loose meal structure. Instead of overthinking every choice, aim to build meals using a few key components:

  • Start with a base (e.g. sourdough, rice, pulse pasta, potato) for steady energy
  • Add a protein (e.g. eggs, tofu, fish, chicken) to support fullness
  • Include a fat (e.g. avocado, olive oil, olives, cheese) for flavour and satisfaction
  • Add colour (e.g. tomato, leafy greens, carrot, cucumber) for freshness and variety
  • Finish with flavour (e.g. lemon, herbs, soy, Greek yoghurt) to bring it alltogether

This isn’t about getting meals “perfect,” but having a flexible structure you can return to, helping reduce overwhelm, build consistency and support your gut over time. For more ideas and real-life combinations using this structure, head to my Mediterranean diet meal planner here

3. Prioritise pleasure over perfection using The Art of Intuitive Eating:

How you eat is just as vital as what you eat. To truly nourish yourself, shift the focus from external rules to internal cues:

  • Honour Your Hunger: Hunger isn’t a willpower test; it’s a biological request for energy. Feeding yourself when signals are subtle prevents the "primal hunger" that leads to overeating later.
  • Respect Your Fullness: Fullness isn't a "stop sign" you hit because you're "done", instead it’s the point of physical comfort. The goal is to finish a meal feeling energized and settled, not sluggish or stuffed.
  • Prioritise Pleasure: Satisfaction is a clinical necessity. If a meal is nutritionally "perfect" but tastes like cardboard, your brain will stay on the hunt for more. Pleasure is the "off switch" for food thoughts.

Click here to download a Hunger Scale for reference

The Bottom Line:

Eat with the goal of feelingbetterafterthe meal than you did before it. When you trust your body's signals, food stopsbeing a source of stress and starts being the fuel that lets you show up foryour life.

Final Thoughts:

Nutrition is just one piece of the puzzle. In the coming weeks, we’ll explore how movement, rest, and social connection can further support you to live well with IBS. Because it’s not just about food, it’s about your whole life. You can read the other parts of this series here:

 

Ready for Support?

If you’re feeling stuck in the cycle of food fear, symptom flare-ups or second-guessing what to do next, you don’t have to navigate it alone. I work with people to take a structured, evidence-based approach to IBS so you can understand your symptoms, feel more confident with food, and start building a way of eating and living that actually works for you. Book an appointment here

Come back next week for Pillar 2: Movement for a calmer gut  

Get to the root cause of your gut health & solve your digestive issues.

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