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Cake Carts and Nutrition

The Day They Wheeled in the Cake Cart: When Workplace Wellness Sends Mixed Messages

March 02, 20264 min read

It is National Nutrition Month, and I was reminiscing on some past events. I’ll never forget the day I was invited to deliver a corporate webinar on nutrition and stress to a local organization.

The topic was about reducing inflammation, stabilizing blood sugar, and fueling the brain for better focus and resilience. We were talking about how chronic stress already elevates inflammation in the body, increasing the risk for heart disease, fatigue, mood swings, and burnout.

I was mid-sentence explaining why refined sugars spike insulin and can further increase inflammatory markers…and that’s when the doors opened.

In rolled a giant cart. Not a modest tray. A cart. Stacked high with cakes, pies, frosted brownies, and cookies. The timing could not have been more cinematic.

There I stood, almost in shock, laser pointer in hand, saying, “One of the best things you can do for stress management is reduce refined sugar…”

While behind me, cakes and pies were being laid out on a table in the back of the room.

You truly cannot make this stuff up.

Now, to be clear, I am not anti-dessert or the wellness police. I love a good Boston cream pie and balance. I believe food should be savored and enjoyed. All things in moderation, right?

But there was something about that moment that perfectly captured what happens in corporate wellness far too often. We say we care about the health and well-being of our employees. So, we schedule the webinar and check the box.

But the environment tells a different story and employees notice.

Because when we’re teaching about stress resilience, blood sugar regulation, and lowering inflammation, and the menu is white flour and frosting, the message becomes mixed. It subtly communicates, “We’re doing the program,” rather than, “We’re committed to your well-being.”

And that difference matters.

It’s Not About “Bunny Food” Either

Sometimes the solution swings too far the other way. I’ve seen the “healthy option” table that consists of iceberg lettuce, shredded carrots, and a bottle of ranch dressing. Iceberg lettuce and ranch does not a wellness lunch make.

If we’re serious about reducing inflammation and improving energy, we’re talking about nutrient-dense foods that actually fuel performance:

  • Grilled chicken or salmon.

  • Leafy greens are rich in antioxidants.

  • Olive oil-based dressings.

  • Quinoa or farro.

  • Roasted vegetables.

  • Nuts, seeds, and fresh fruit.

  • Even dark chocolate instead of sheet cake.

Imagine walking into a Lunch & Learn and seeing a build-your-own trail mix bar with almonds, walnuts, pumpkin seeds, unsweetened dried fruit, and 70% dark chocolate chips. Simple. Thoughtful. Aligned.

That’s not restrictive. That’s supportive. Yes, it might cost a little more than ordering pizza. But what does it cost to have a workforce that is inflamed, exhausted, and running on blood sugar spikes?

The Food Is Symbolic

The real issue isn’t the cake cart. It’s what the cake cart represents. When a company invests in food that aligns with the wellness message, it sends a powerful signal:

“We’re not just checking a box. We’re paying attention. We care about how you feel, not just how you perform.”

And in today’s workplace, that authenticity matters more than ever. Employees want to feel genuinely cared for. Not managed. Not pacified with cookies. Cared for.

During National Nutrition Month, this is my gentle challenge to organizations:

If you’re going to host a wellness event, align the environment with the message.

If we’re talking about heart health, serve heart-supportive foods.
If we’re discussing stress management, offer blood sugar–stabilizing options.
If we’re focusing on productivity, fuel the brain.

Wellness is not just a pretty PowerPoint and an entertaining speaker. It’s the details, and when employees see that you’ve thought about those details, even the food, they trust you more. Because pizza and sheet cake might fill stomachs… But thoughtful, nutrient-dense fuel builds resilience. And resilience is what sustains performance long after the webinar ends.

I Get It - You Are Trying

I really do.

Most “wellness initiatives” in a company fall to HR professionals, just like holiday parties, picnics, open enrollment, and virtually anything that involves the people of the organization.

With so many competing priorities, I understand how ordering a speaker and a few pizzas can feel like the only realistic option. That is why I am here.

I want to help alleviate that burden for you.

I’ve already mapped out the entire 2026 year with wellness themes, webinars, challenges, and implementation support to help you truly demonstrate that you care — not just check a box.

If you’d like to see the full corporate wellness roadmap, you can download it here:
https://www.lifeforcewellness.com/wellness-plan

Or book a free consult call to design a custom solution for your team:
https://calendly.com/lfwellness/30min

Let’s build a culture where the message and the environment match.

Stress + inflammation connectionWorkplace cultureHR leadersEmployee well-beingCorporate wellnessNational Nutrition Month
After experiencing burnout working long, stressful hours in the tumultuous oil and gas field, Megan decided to break out on her own and focus on health and wellness. Megan found a passion for teaching and coaching physical well-being but recognized the need to build mental resiliency in her clients, leading her to study positive psychology. Megan brings her passion for wellness back into the corporate environment by working with leaders to transform company cultures to focus on employee health and wellbeing.

Megan has studied various topics, from creating exercise and diet plans to building mental resiliency, understanding behavior change and creating engaging corporate programs. This led her to create Life Force Wellness LLC, a corporate wellness organization focusing on work-life balance and seven distinct areas of well-being. Megan has a B.S. in Business Administration with a concentration in Marketing and a minor in psychology. She holds certifications as a personal trainer, health coach, nutrition coach, corporate wellness specialist, positive psychology practitioner, stress management, sleep and recovery coach.

Megan Wollerton

After experiencing burnout working long, stressful hours in the tumultuous oil and gas field, Megan decided to break out on her own and focus on health and wellness. Megan found a passion for teaching and coaching physical well-being but recognized the need to build mental resiliency in her clients, leading her to study positive psychology. Megan brings her passion for wellness back into the corporate environment by working with leaders to transform company cultures to focus on employee health and wellbeing. Megan has studied various topics, from creating exercise and diet plans to building mental resiliency, understanding behavior change and creating engaging corporate programs. This led her to create Life Force Wellness LLC, a corporate wellness organization focusing on work-life balance and seven distinct areas of well-being. Megan has a B.S. in Business Administration with a concentration in Marketing and a minor in psychology. She holds certifications as a personal trainer, health coach, nutrition coach, corporate wellness specialist, positive psychology practitioner, stress management, sleep and recovery coach.

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