Read Our Latest Blog Posts:

Protect Your Heart

Protect the Heart. Fuel the System.

February 23, 20263 min read

February has been dedicated to heart month, and we talked about emotional well-being, stress, sleep, movement and now let's talk about nutrition, not as a diet plan, but as a protective strategy.

In my recent Stop Stressing Your Heart Out webinar, we explored the four pillars of heart health: nutrition, exercise, stress management, and sleep. But as the session unfolded, something became clear.

Heart health is a systemic, not an isolated, issue. As we turn the calendar to March, which is National Nutrition Month, it’s the perfect time to shift from protection to fuel. Because what we eat affects everything, not just our heart.

The Heart Is Responsive

One of the most important themes in February’s conversations was this: the heart responds to how we live.

It responds to chronic stress.
It responds to poor sleep.
It responds to inflammation.
It responds to recovery or the lack of it.

Heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States. We can’t control every risk factor. But we can influence inflammation, insulin response, energy levels, and stress resilience. Our diet plays a vital role in everything.

When we reduce refined sugars and ultra-processed foods, we reduce inflammatory load.
When we choose healthy fats like extra virgin olive oil over highly processed vegetable oils, we improve the balance of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids. When we incorporate foods like berries, leafy greens, nuts, fatty fish, turmeric, ginger, and even beetroot, we give the body compounds that actively support cardiovascular health.

Your diet doesn’t have to be perfect. I like to focus on progress, not perfection.

Movement and Stress Still Matter

Of course, nutrition doesn’t stand alone. Exercise improves circulation, supports mood through endorphin release, and strengthens the cardiovascular system. And it doesn’t have to begin with some crazy CrossFit-style exercise program. Sometimes it starts with a five-minute walk.

Stress management matters because the nervous system influences the heart just as much as your plate does. In the webinar, we discussed the “3Ms” movement, mindfulness, and management as daily practices that calm the system and reduce wear and tear on the body.

Sleep, too, is non-negotiable. The 3-2-1 sleep routine, three hours before bed, no heavy meals, two hours before bed, no work, one hour before bed, no screens, is simple but powerful. Recovery is where repair happens.

But if we zoom out, one truth becomes hard to ignore. Nutrition touches every pillar.

Why March Matters

National Nutrition Month is an invitation to go deeper.

Not into diet culture.
Not into extremes.
But into sustainability.

Because food affects more than weight or cholesterol. It influences:

  • mood stability

  • stress tolerance

  • hormonal balance

  • inflammation

  • sleep quality

  • Long-term disease risk

When people struggle with consistency in exercise or stress management, the root issue is often energy. And energy is directly tied to what we’re eating.

If February was about awareness, March is about application.

If You Missed the Webinar

If you weren’t able to attend Stop Stressing Your Heart Out, the replay is now available on our YouTube channel here - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFPq_VXSirA&t=7s

We walk through practical swaps, realistic starting points, and strategies that support heart health without guilt or overwhelm. Because knowledge isn’t the barrier. Implementation is.

What’s Coming on March 10th

On March 10th, we’ll continue the conversation with a new webinar focused on nutrition — cutting through confusion and addressing some of the most persistent myths about food and health. You can register for the event for free here - https://www.eventbrite.com/e/1983389649834?aff=oddtdtcreator

National Nutrition Month is the perfect time to reset your relationship with food, not by restricting, but by understanding.

A Sustainable Shift

Your heart doesn’t operate in isolation. It is part of a dynamic system influenced daily by stress, sleep, movement, and nourishment.

February was about protecting the heart.

March is about fueling the system that supports it.

And both are essential.

fueling the body for healthholistic heart healthnutrition for heart healthNational Nutrition Monthheart health and nutrition
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.

Back to Blog

© Copyright 2023. Life Force Wellness. LLC.. All rights reserved.