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Ziracle Journal

Honest reads on living well and living sustainably.

Anti-Pollution Skincare, Without the Marketing Noise

Anti-Pollution Skincare, Without the Marketing Noise

Anti-pollution skincare that actually works: the three steps that matter, the ingredients with the evidence, and the claims to skip.

By Lydia Oyeniran

Daily Habits for Mental Health: Small Changes, Real Results

Daily Habits for Mental Health: Small Changes, Real Results

Small consistent habits beat big overhauls for mental health. Here is what the research actually shows, and where to start tomorrow.

By Hamish Lawson

Self-Care Guide: The Maintenance that Keeps Everything Else Running

Self-Care Guide: The Maintenance that Keeps Everything Else Running

A self-care guide built on what the research supports: journalling, movement, sleep, and when to stop managing alone.

By Annabel Lindsay

The Best Organic Facial Oils for Skin that’s Starting to Show its Age

The Best Organic Facial Oils for Skin that’s Starting to Show its Age

The best organic facial oils for fine lines: rosehip, argan, squalane and the rest, ranked by the clinical evidence behind them.

By Lydia Oyeniran

Best Foods for Bloating: What Actually Works and Why

Best Foods for Bloating: What Actually Works and Why

The best foods for bloating, the science on why they work, and the order to add them to your diet for real gut relief.

By Lydia Oyeniran

Natural Ways to Boost Serotonin and Dopamine

Natural Ways to Boost Serotonin and Dopamine

Eight evidence-based daily practices to boost serotonin and dopamine naturally, from morning light and movement to scent, sleep and protein.

By Janet Home

How To Sleep Better

How To Sleep Better

Most sleep advice skips the mechanism. Here is what works, in the right order, based on how sleep biology actually functions.

By Hamish Lawson

Creative Ways to Add Meditation into your Day

Creative Ways to Add Meditation into your Day

Seven ways to add meditation to your day without a cushion or twenty quiet minutes, from kettle moments to walking and breath boxes.

By Lydia Oyeniran

Beyond Diet Culture: Why the Restriction Model keeps Failing, and what works instead

Beyond Diet Culture: Why the Restriction Model keeps Failing, and what works instead

Why restriction-based diet culture keeps failing, the biology behind it, and how a neutral relationship with food actually looks.

By Lydia Oyeniran

How Food Affects your Mood

How Food Affects your Mood

How food affects your mood, from gut-made serotonin to the amino acids that build motivation, and what to actually eat.

By Amelia Marshall

Anti-Pollution Skincare

Anti-pollution skincare is one of the few wellness categories where the underlying problem is genuinely serious and the marketing around it is genuinely excessive. The air in most UK cities is measurably damaging your skin, the evidence for that has been strong for well over a decade, and the industry has responded with hundreds of products, some of which do meaningful work and most of which just slap “anti-pollution” on a standard serum and raise the price. This is the version that separates them.

What pollution actually does to skin

The World Health Organization considers air pollution the single largest environmental health risk globally. The UK-specific picture is not quite as bleak as it used to be (nitrogen dioxide has fallen in most English cities since 2010) but it is still a problem. UK Government 2024 data shows London Marylebone Road exceeded the 10 µg/m³ PM2.5 target last year, and the WHO’s own guideline is half that, at 5 µg/m³. Most of the country, on that stricter measure, breathes air that is over the limit.

Skin, as the body’s largest organ and the one most directly exposed, takes the hit. The landmark 2010 Vierkötter study in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology was the first large epidemiological work linking airborne particulate matter exposure to measurable skin ageing in women. A follow-up Hüls study in 2016 found that women in high-PM areas had around 20% more pigment spots on the forehead and cheeks than those in cleaner air.

The mechanism is now well-characterised. PM2.5 particles are small enough to penetrate the skin barrier, where they generate free radicals, degrade collagen and elastin via matrix metalloproteinases, disrupt the skin’s microbiome, and erode tight-junction proteins like filaggrin. The end result, according to a 2025 review in the Annals of Dermatology, is accelerated wrinkles, pigmentation, inflammation, and a higher incidence of acne, eczema, and rosacea flares.

Two sentences worth holding onto. Pollution does not produce one new skin problem. It makes most of them worse.

Start here. The three things that actually matter

These come first, before any marketed “anti-pollution” product.

Superfood Cabbage & Cranberry & Hemp Anti-Pollution Deep Cleansing Oil & Makeup Remover | 100ml

01. Cleanse properly at night. The single most important thing you can do. Pollutant particles, PM2.5, soot, VOCs, deposit on the skin across the day and sit there oxidising until they come off. A thorough double cleanse (oil first to dissolve lipid-bound particulates and sunscreen, then a gentle second cleanse) removes most of what has accumulated. Skipping this step makes everything else you do less useful. Format recommendation: a plant-oil cleanser (jojoba, sunflower, hemp seed) for step one, followed by a pH-balanced syndet cleanser or gentle milk. Browse Face & Skincare for cleansing formats.

02. Use a vitamin C serum in the morning. The best-evidenced antioxidant for daytime skin protection. Vitamin C (ascorbic acid, usually at 10–20%) neutralises the free radicals that pollution generates, and a 2012 paper in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology confirmed it boosts the effectiveness of SPF against oxidative stress. Apply on clean skin, under moisturiser and sunscreen. Format recommendation: a stabilised L-ascorbic acid serum in airtight, opaque packaging (vitamin C oxidises on contact with light and air, which is why a clear-bottle serum that has gone orange in your bathroom is no longer working).

03. Sunscreen, every day, even in British winter. Pollution and UV are synergistic: a 2020 review in Current Environmental Health Reports found that PM’s damage is amplified by UV exposure and vice versa. SPF 30 minimum, broad spectrum, applied generously. This one non-negotiable finishes more of the job than most standalone “anti-pollution” products ever will. Browse Face & Skincare for SPF.

The supporting cast

04. Niacinamide. Strengthens the skin barrier and reduces transepidermal water loss, which is how pollution weakens skin in the first place. A 5% niacinamide serum or moisturiser alongside (not in the same step as) vitamin C is the quiet workhorse of anti-pollution routines.

05. A ferment or prebiotic to support the skin microbiome. The 2025 Annals of Dermatology review flagged that PM2.5 disrupts the skin microbiome, promoting inflammatory bacteria over the beneficial strains that keep skin calm. Fermented lysates, prebiotics, and probiotic extracts help rebuild that balance. The category is young, the evidence is still building, but the mechanism is sound.

06. A weekly clay or charcoal mask. For the deep-clean element. Activated charcoal and bentonite clay physically pull oxidised particulate matter and sebum from pores in a way daily cleansers cannot. Once a week is enough. More is drying.

07. An antioxidant-rich facial oil at night. Rosehip, sea buckthorn, marula, prickly pear. They deliver fat-soluble antioxidants (vitamin E, carotenoids, tocotrienols) that water-based serums cannot, and they seal in the rest of your routine. If you want to go deeper on this, the organic facial oils guide has more.

Ingredients with the strongest evidence

Vitamin C, niacinamide, vitamin E, ferulic acid, resveratrol, green tea polyphenols (EGCG), and astaxanthin all have reasonable clinical data behind their anti-pollution claims. The marketing term you will see often is “ectoin” — an extremophile-derived osmolyte used in some barrier-repair serums. The evidence is mostly industry-sponsored and the dermatology literature has not yet caught up, so treat it as promising rather than proven.

Ingredients marketed as anti-pollution that are just ingredients

Most “detox” claims are not mechanism, they are vibes. Kelp, algae, and cabbage extracts are perfectly fine skincare ingredients for other reasons (hydration, mild antioxidant effect), but the idea that they pull toxins from your skin in any meaningful way is not supported. Same with anything marketed as drawing “deep impurities” unless there is clay or charcoal doing the actual physical work.

Packaging matters for anti-pollution skincare specifically

This is a pollution article, so it is worth pointing out: most anti-pollution skincare is sold in hard-to-recycle mixed plastic, which contributes to the same problem the product claims to fight. Glass and aluminium, ideally refillable, solve this. Browse Beauty Refills for what this looks like in practice. If you want the wider context on microplastic shedding in cosmetics, the microplastics in cosmetics piece covers the detail.

The ones that aren’t ready yet

Pollution-protective SPFs with “anti-PM barrier” claims. The science here is thin. A good broad-spectrum SPF already does more than most of these pretend to, and paying a premium for the claim is not supported by independent data.

Ingestible anti-pollution supplements. The mechanism (systemic antioxidants reducing oxidative skin damage) is plausible; the evidence in humans is weak. Eating a plant-rich diet does most of what these promise, at a fraction of the price.

If you care about skin and you live in a UK city, the simple, boring version of this works: cleanse well at night, vitamin C in the morning, SPF every day, and a weekly deep clean. Everything else is refinement. The industry is selling you complexity; the dermatology is selling you consistency.

Ready to rebuild the routine? Explore Healthy Skin for the full edit.

FAQs

Does air pollution really damage your skin?

Yes, and the evidence is well-established. The landmark Vierkötter 2010 study in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology was the first to show airborne particulate matter was linked to measurable skin ageing in women. A 2016 follow-up found roughly 20% more facial pigment spots in women living in high-PM areas. A 2025 review in the Annals of Dermatology confirms pollution accelerates wrinkles, pigmentation, and inflammation, and worsens acne, eczema, and rosacea.

What is the single most important anti-pollution step?

A thorough cleanse at the end of the day. Pollutant particles accumulate on skin across the day and oxidise there until they come off. A double cleanse (oil first, then a gentle second cleanser) removes most of what has settled on the skin. Skipping this step makes every other anti-pollution product less effective.

Is vitamin C actually evidence-based for this?

Yes. It is the best-evidenced topical antioxidant for daytime use. A 2012 paper in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology showed vitamin C neutralises pollution-generated free radicals and boosts the effectiveness of sunscreen against oxidative stress. Look for 10–20% L-ascorbic acid in opaque, airtight packaging. If your serum has gone orange, it has oxidised and stopped working.

Do I need a dedicated anti-pollution product?

Probably not. A well-formulated vitamin C serum, a good cleanser, SPF, and a niacinamide moisturiser cover almost everything an “anti-pollution” line claims to do, usually with better-established ingredients and without the premium. The exception is a weekly clay or charcoal mask, which physically removes deposited particulate in a way other products cannot.

How bad is UK air pollution for skin?

Worse than most people assume. The UK Government’s 2024 compliance data showed one London monitoring site still exceeded the national PM2.5 target of 10 µg/m³ last year, and the WHO’s stricter guideline is 5 µg/m³, which most urban areas of the UK exceed. Chronic exposure at these levels is enough to accelerate extrinsic skin ageing, on the evidence available.

Daily Habits for Mental Health

Daily habits for mental health: small changes, real results

The research on mental health habits is clearer than most people realise. Here is what actually works, how much you need, and where to start.

Most advice about improving your mental health operates at the wrong scale. It either asks too much (overhaul your lifestyle, start meditating every morning, exercise five times a week) or it offers reassurances that feel good but change nothing. The middle ground, where the evidence actually lives, is mostly ignored.

Small consistent habits work. The reason is how the brain responds to repeated behaviour, not how impressive the behaviour looks. Here is what the research says.

Why do small habits work better than big ones?

The idea that habits need to be dramatic to be effective is wrong, and actively counterproductive. Large targets trigger resistance. Small ones get started.

A 2010 habit formation study led by Dr Phillippa Lally at University College London, published in the European Journal of Social Psychology, tracked 96 volunteers building new behaviours over 12 weeks. The average time to automaticity was 66 days, not the widely repeated 21. More importantly, missing a single day did not derail the process. What mattered was the return to the behaviour the day after.

Dr BJ Fogg at Stanford’s Behaviour Design Lab has spent two decades on this. His finding: motivation is an unreliable mechanism for habit formation. Environment, timing and behaviour design are not. When you attach a new behaviour to an existing anchor, what Fogg calls habit stacking, you reduce the friction of starting.

Applied neuroscience, not self-help. Repeated behaviour changes the brain through neuroplasticity: the physical strengthening of neural pathways. The more often a behaviour is repeated in the same context, the more automatic it becomes.

Which habits have the strongest evidence behind them?

Not all habits carry equal evidence. These do.

Exercise: A 2023 umbrella review led by Dr Ben Singh and colleagues, published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, covered 97 reviews and 1,039 trials with more than 128,000 participants. It found physical activity was around 1.5 times more effective than medication or cognitive behavioural therapy for reducing mild-to-moderate symptoms of depression, anxiety and distress across many populations.

Intensity mattered. 150 minutes of moderate activity a week is the NHS recommendation for adults aged 19 to 64, endorsed by the UK Chief Medical Officers and incorporated into 98 NICE clinical guidelines. It does not need to be the gym.

Sleep: Sleep and mental health have a bidirectional relationship: poor sleep raises cortisol, worsens emotional regulation, and increases vulnerability to anxiety and depression. The NHS recommends 7 to 9 hours for most adults, yet according to the Sleep Charity’s 2024 Sleep Manifesto, 9 in 10 people in the UK experience problems with their sleep, and a 2024 survey of 15,000 adults found 60% are sleeping six hours or fewer per night. Fixing your wake time, consistent across every day of the week, is typically the highest-leverage change. For a full breakdown, read our how to sleep better guide.

Time outside: A 2015 study led by Dr Gregory Bratman at Stanford University, published in PNAS, found that people who walked 90 minutes in a natural setting showed measurably reduced activity in the subgenual prefrontal cortex, the brain region associated with the repetitive negative thinking that characterises both anxiety and depression. You do not need wilderness. A park works.

Social connection: The Harvard Study of Adult Development, now directed by Dr Robert Waldinger, is one of the longest-running studies of adult life ever conducted. Across more than 85 years of data, the quality of a person’s relationships has proved the single strongest predictor of physical and mental health in later life. Stronger than wealth. Stronger than exercise. Stronger than status. In the UK, 1 in 5 people report experiencing a common mental health problem such as anxiety or depression in any given week, according to Mind, and the 2024 Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey commissioned by NHS England found that 23% of 16- to 64-year-olds now meet criteria for anxiety or depression, up from 15% in 1993.

What actually gets in the way of sticking with habits?

Knowing what works is not the problem. Implementation is.

The most common failure mode is starting too large. Someone decides to meditate for 20 minutes a day, runs it for a week, misses a day, decides the habit is broken, and stops. At that scale the habit was never going to stick. Two minutes would have worked better and compounded into something real.

Implementation intentions are worth knowing about. A 2006 meta-analysis by Dr Peter Gollwitzer and Dr Paschal Sheeran, published in Advances in Experimental Social Psychology, reviewed 94 independent studies and found that stating specifically when and where you will do a behaviour (“I will go for a walk on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday at 8am, starting from my front door”) produced a medium-to-large effect on follow-through compared to a general intention. The specificity is what does the lifting.

Tracking helps, but only when it removes friction rather than adding it. A simple tally in a notebook beats a complicated app most of the time. Our Mindfulness edit covers the physical tools that support daily practice.

How does your environment shape your habits?

Willpower is not a reliable mechanism for behaviour change. Environmental design is.

If your running shoes are by the door, you are more likely to run. If your phone charges in another room, you are more likely to sleep. If the only food in the fridge is what you actually want to eat, you will eat it. The principle behind most of the evidence-based behaviour change literature comes down to one thing: reduce friction for the behaviour you want, increase it for the one you do not.

Applied to mental health habits specifically: keep a water bottle visible, put your yoga mat out the night before, set your alarm for the same time every day and leave it across the room. These are not hacks. They are the mechanism.

The question isn’t what to do. It’s which one you’re starting with tomorrow.

Which products support these habits?

The habits above are free. Some products make them easier to build and maintain, not by replacing the behaviour, but by removing friction or covering a gap that the behaviour alone does not fill.

Supplements: A handful of nutrients have real evidence behind them for mood and stress. Ashwagandha was shown in a 2019 randomised controlled trial led by Dr Adrian Lopresti, published in Medicine, to reduce serum cortisol and perceived stress scores significantly more than placebo in 60 chronically stressed adults over 60 days. This has since been supported by a 2025 systematic review and meta-analysis of 15 RCTs (873 patients), published in BJPsych Open, which found ashwagandha supplementation significantly reduced anxiety on the Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale compared with placebo. Creatine has an emerging evidence base for mood: a 2012 randomised controlled trial led by Dr In Kyoon Lyoo, published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, found that creatine augmentation accelerated response to SSRI treatment in women with major depression.

A more recent 2025 pilot RCT published in European Neuropsychopharmacology, conducted with Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust involvement, found that creatine added to CBT produced greater reductions in depression scores than CBT plus placebo. A 2025 meta-analysis in the British Journal of Nutrition covering 11 trials and 1,093 participants found a modest but statistically significant effect on depressive symptoms, while noting the evidence base remains early-stage and requires larger trials. Vitamin D, B12 and folate all affect neurotransmitter production; deficiencies in any of them are associated with low mood. Browse our Supplements edit for the products that cleared the standard.

Stress support: Adaptogens, magnesium and sleep aids pull double duty for mental health. What lowers cortisol and improves sleep quality tends to improve mood across the board. Our Mood Support range covers the products that work on the stress and mood side of the equation.

You already know what to do. The gap has never been information. Pick one habit, make it small enough that you cannot fail at it, and start tomorrow. The compound effect will do the rest.

FAQ

How long does it actually take to build a new habit?

Research from University College London puts the average at 66 days, with wide individual variation of 18 to 254 days in the original study. Missing a single day does not reset the process.

Is exercise really as effective as antidepressants?

A 2023 umbrella review in the British Journal of Sports Medicine found physical activity was around 1.5 times more effective than medication or therapy for reducing mild-to-moderate symptoms of depression and anxiety. NICE guidance NG222 on depression in adults recommends exercise as a core component of treatment alongside talking therapies. It is not a replacement for clinical care where clinical care is needed, but it is a legitimate first-line intervention for many people.

What is the single highest-leverage habit to start with?

For most people, a consistent wake time across all seven days of the week. Sleep quality affects mood, cognition, stress tolerance and every other habit on the list.

How long in nature is enough to help mental health?

The Bratman et al. PNAS study measured 90 minutes. Shorter walks still help; the 90-minute figure reflects what the study tested, not a minimum threshold.

Do supplements replace habits?

No. Supplements close specific nutritional gaps (vitamin D, B12, folate) or provide targeted support (ashwagandha, creatine) alongside habits. They do not substitute for sleep, movement, time outside or connection.

Self-care guide

Stress doesn’t stay in your head. It settles in your body, disrupts your sleep, and weakens your immune system over time. Self-care isn’t a luxury or a reward. It’s the maintenance that keeps everything else running.

Why self-care matters more than you think

You’ve probably heard the empty cup metaphor before. It’s overused because it’s true. When you’re running on fumes, everything costs more: your energy, your patience, your ability to make good decisions. The NHS Five Steps to Mental Wellbeing — connect with others, be physically active, learn new skills, give to others, and pay attention to the present moment — consistently shows that small, regular practices outperform reactive fixes. You don’t need a crisis to start taking care of yourself. You need a Tuesday.

Chronic stress suppresses your immune function, raises cortisol, and disrupts sleep architecture. A 2017 meta-analysis in Brain, Behavior, and Immunity synthesising data across decades of research found that psychological stress measurably increases inflammatory markers in the body, including C-reactive protein and interleukin-6. The connection between mental load and physical health isn’t theoretical. It’s measurable, and it’s the reason self-care belongs in the same category as brushing your teeth: non-negotiable maintenance.

Self-care as prevention, not recovery

The best time to sleep well is before you’re exhausted. The best time to move your body is before anxiety locks up your chest. Self-care gets positioned as something you earn after a hard week. That framing is backwards. It’s preventative.

The research on journaling supports this clearly. A 2018 randomised controlled trial in JMIR Mental Health found that participants who completed structured positive affect journaling for 15 minutes three days a week reported significantly lower mental distress and higher wellbeing after one month compared with a control group, with benefits persisting at follow-up. Separately, a UCL-led randomised trial in JMIR Mental Health comparing expressive writing with an internet support group found both produced measurable improvements in depression, anxiety, social support and life satisfaction across 863 participants over six months.

This means choosing small, regular practices over grand gestures. A ten-minute journalling session most mornings moves the needle more than a one-off spa day. A walk outside three times a week does more for your stress levels than any single intervention. The consistency is what builds resilience. Think of it like compound interest for your nervous system.

If stress management is something you’re actively working on, our guide to self-care for stress goes deeper on the specific practices that help most.

What self-care looks like when it’s working

Self-care is specific to what your body is actually asking for. If you’re wired and anxious, a high-intensity workout won’t help. If you’re flat and unmotivated, rest isn’t what you need. Movement is. This is where paying attention to yourself becomes the practice.

Journalling works because it externalises the noise. You’re not trying to solve anything. You’re emptying your mind onto a page. Within a few weeks, patterns emerge. You notice what actually drains you and what restores you. Then you build your routine around those truths rather than around what you’ve been told you should want.

Your body doesn’t distinguish between types of stress. A work deadline triggers the same cortisol response as a near-miss in traffic. Harvard Health explains this well: the fight-or-flight response was designed for physical danger, but modern life triggers it constantly. The antidote is movement. A 2023 umbrella review in the British Journal of Sports Medicine synthesising 97 meta-analyses found that regular physical activity produced reductions in symptoms of depression and anxiety comparable in magnitude to psychotherapy for many populations. Twenty minutes of anything that raises your heart rate signals to your nervous system that the threat has passed. That’s the reset.

You’re not trying to solve anything. You’re just emptying your mind onto a page.

Sleep is the foundation of everything else

When you’re stressed, sleep becomes fragile. The advice about wind-down routines and screens off by 10pm is real, but the deeper piece is consistency. Your body runs on circadian rhythms. Going to bed at the same time most nights, even when you don’t feel tired, builds sleep resilience over weeks. The Sleep Foundation recommends keeping your schedule within 30 minutes of the same time, including weekends.

Caffeine has a half-life of around five hours, according to a 2023 review in the journal Sleep. A coffee at 4pm is still half-active at 9pm. Alcohol disrupts REM sleep even when it feels sedating. These aren’t opinions. They’re pharmacology. If you’re working on your sleep, these two interventions make the biggest difference before you change anything else. For the full walkthrough, see our how to sleep better guide.

For products and routines that support your nervous system, browse the Stress and Sleep edit.

The tools that make the practice stick

A notebook and pen are enough. Having something you actually want to write in makes it more likely you’ll use it. A journal with paper you enjoy touching feels different from a scrap of paper. Similarly, if movement is your anchor, a mat you like unrolling matters more than the perfect yoga sequence. These aren’t fancy needs. They’re practical: the tools work better when you’re more likely to reach for them.

The same principle applies to the rest of your routine. A candle you light most evenings, a robe you actually want to wear when you get out of the shower, a supplement you take with your morning coffee because the ritual of it has become automatic. Products that support your self-care routine, from skincare to home environment, are worth choosing with care. Browse the Beauty and Self-Care and Wellness and Vitality categories for options that have already passed the quality and ethics bar.

When self-care isn’t enough

This matters most. Self-care practices help you manage stress and improve your baseline. They don’t replace professional support. If you’re experiencing depression, anxiety, burnout, or any mental health condition, a journal and a yoga mat won’t fix it. They might help you feel slightly better while you get actual help.

NHS Talking Therapies (formerly IAPT) is free, self-referral, and available across England — you do not need a GP referral to access it. The Samaritans are available on 116 123, free, 24/7, if you need to talk to someone tonight. Your GP is the starting point for ongoing support.

Self-care isn’t selfish. It’s the only way to show up for anything else. Start with one practice: a morning journal, a consistent bedtime, a walk three times a week. Build it for two weeks before adding another. That’s the whole method. Your body will tell you what matters next.

For more on specific practices, read our guides to daily habits for mental health and how to practise self-love.

Ready to build your routine? Browse the Reduce Stress edit and start with one product you’ll actually use.

FAQs

Does self-care actually work, or is it just marketing?

The face-mask-and-candle version does modest work at best. The practice-based version (consistent journalling, regular movement, sleep hygiene, structured time off screens) has a substantial evidence base. A 2018 UCL study in JMIR Mental Health found measurable reductions in anxiety and depressive symptoms from a few minutes of daily expressive writing. A 2023 umbrella review in the British Journal of Sports Medicine found regular physical activity produced effects on depression and anxiety comparable in magnitude to psychotherapy for many populations. The ritual itself matters less than the routine it supports.

How long before self-care practices start to feel like they’re working?

Two to four weeks of consistency is the window most research measures, which is why starting with one practice and giving it a fortnight before judging it is the realistic approach. Gratitude journalling, breathwork and movement all show up in trials with measurable effects at four weeks. Sleep routines can take longer because circadian rhythms adjust slowly. Supplements like ashwagandha typically need eight to twelve weeks before their effects are clear. Consistency matters more than intensity.

What’s the difference between self-care and self-indulgence?

Self-care is the maintenance of your capacity to function and feel well over time, usually involving small repeated actions that aren’t particularly exciting: sleep, movement, boundaries, connection, time outdoors. Self-indulgence is the occasional treat (a takeaway, a late night, a bottle of wine) which has its place but doesn’t do the underlying work. Both are fine. The confusion is treating self-indulgence as a self-care strategy. A bubble bath every Sunday is self-care if it’s part of a broader routine; it’s not self-care if your sleep is shot and your relationships are strained and the bath is the only thing you’re doing.

What should I do first if I’ve never really done this?

Pick one thing and do it for two weeks. Write three lines in a journal every morning before you open your phone. Walk for 20 minutes three times a week, outside if possible. Go to bed within 30 minutes of the same time most nights. Any one of these, held for a fortnight, will tell you more about what your body needs than reading about self-care will. Add another practice when the first one has started to feel automatic, which usually takes longer than you’d expect.

When should I see a GP instead of trying to manage this myself?

If symptoms are affecting your sleep most nights for more than a few weeks, if you’re having panic attacks, if your mood is persistently low, if you’re having thoughts of harming yourself, or if work and relationships are being materially affected. Self-care is useful for everyday maintenance of mental health. It isn’t a substitute for clinical support. NHS Talking Therapies is free, self-referral, and available across England; no GP referral is needed. The Samaritans are free and available 24/7 on 116 123.

Best Organic Facial Oils

Here is something worth getting straight from the top: the article you are probably looking for is called “essential oils for wrinkles,” and it is the wrong article. Essential oils are the volatile, aromatic compounds, frankincense, ylang ylang, rose otto. They smell beautiful and they do some things, but they are not what actually works on fine lines. What works is facial oils, also known as carrier oils, the heavier plant-pressed lipids like rosehip, argan, and jojoba. The distinction matters because it changes what you buy. Get the right one and you have a genuinely useful addition to your skincare. Get the aromatherapy blend and you have something that smells lovely and does very little for your skin.

What actually causes the signs that bother people

Free radicals, UV exposure, and a slowdown in natural oil production. A 2020 review in Current Environmental Health Reports confirmed that traffic-related pollution and UV are the two biggest accelerants of extrinsic ageing, working synergistically. Intrinsic ageing adds its own layer: after roughly age 30, collagen production drops by around 1% a year, sebum output falls, and the lipid barrier thins. The result is drier, thinner, more reactive skin that shows damage more easily than it used to.

Facial oils address two of those three things directly. They replace lost lipids, and the better ones bring antioxidants that neutralise free radicals. They will not undo UV damage, and they are not a substitute for sunscreen or retinol. What they are is the quietly effective, evening-based workhorse that most anti-ageing routines benefit from.

The ones with the strongest evidence

Work top to bottom. These are ordered by the strength of the clinical data behind them, not by price or novelty.

01. Rosehip seed oil (Rosa canina). The most interesting plant oil in skincare. It contains naturally occurring trans-retinoic acid (the active form of vitamin A, the same molecule as prescription tretinoin) at concentrations between 0.01% and 0.1%, per a 2015 analysis in Skin Pharmacology and Physiology. A 2015 randomised trial in Clinical Interventions in Aging gave 34 adults aged 35–65 a standardised rosehip preparation for eight weeks and measured significant reductions in crow’s-feet wrinkles and improvements in skin moisture and elasticity. A smaller 2025 pilot study in MDPI Cosmetics found measurable wrinkle and UV-spot reduction after five weeks of topical use. Format recommendation: cold-pressed, unrefined, stored in dark glass. Oxidises quickly, so buy small bottles and keep them out of sunlight.

02. Argan oil. Rich in vitamin E, squalene, and linoleic acid. A 2015 study in Clinical Interventions in Aging found that daily application to the face increased skin elasticity measurably over 60 days in postmenopausal women. Best for people whose main issue is dryness and a thinning barrier rather than hyperpigmentation.

03. Squalane (plant-derived, usually olive). Not strictly an oil, but the closest mimic of the skin’s own sebum, which makes it exceptionally well-tolerated. Sits under or over other oils without interfering. No strong anti-ageing data of its own, but it solves the delivery-vehicle problem for everything else in the routine.

04. Jojoba oil. Also a wax ester rather than a true oil, also very close to sebum in structure. Good for oily or combination skin that cannot tolerate heavier oils. Mild evidence for barrier support; not a standalone anti-ageing agent.

05. Sea buckthorn oil. Very high in vitamin C, carotenoids, and omega-7. Antioxidant-rich. Will stain cotton a faint orange if you use too much, which is a good reminder that you almost certainly are. A few drops, no more.

06. Marula oil. High in monounsaturated fats and tocopherols. Lighter texture than rosehip, less prone to oxidation. Limited direct clinical data, but the lipid profile is genuinely good.

The role essential oils actually play

Essential oils (frankincense, ylang ylang, sweet orange, lavender) appear in most “anti-ageing facial oil” blends at 0.5–2% for fragrance, mood, and mild antioxidant contribution. That is a legitimate role, but it is supporting, not leading. Frankincense in particular is often marketed as a cell-regenerative active; the evidence is limited to in vitro work on boswellic acids and has not been replicated on human facial skin. Enjoy the scent, do not pay a premium for the claim.

One note of caution: citrus essential oils (bergamot, sweet orange, lemon) can be mildly phototoxic, so a blend that contains them is best used at night only, not in the morning.

How to use a facial oil without wasting it

Clean, slightly damp skin. Four to six drops warmed between clean palms, then pressed into the face rather than rubbed. If the skin is already treated with a water-based serum, the oil goes last, sealing everything in. If oil is the only leave-on step, a heavier moisturiser is not required; the oil does the barrier work.

One thing that sabotages oil use more than anything else: applying it under SPF in the morning. Most mineral and hybrid sunscreens do not play well with a heavy oil underneath, and the finish tends to pill. Oils work best as a nighttime step. If you want a morning option, squalane or jojoba are the ones that layer well under most sunscreens; leave the heavier oils for evening.

The ones that aren’t ready yet

“Anti-ageing” essential-oil blends without a substantial carrier-oil base. If the ingredient list starts with rose or frankincense before any carrier is named, you are paying for fragrance at skincare prices.

CBD facial oils marketed for wrinkles. The skincare evidence is genuinely thin. CBD may help with inflammation and reactive skin, which is useful, but it is not an anti-ageing ingredient on any rigorous reading of the data.

Anything promising to “boost collagen” topically without retinoids, vitamin C, or peptides. These are the three ingredient classes with credible topical collagen evidence. A facial oil alone does not belong in that category.

If you live in a UK city, the useful version of all this is short: a rosehip or rosehip-argan blend at night, a vitamin C serum in the morning, daily SPF, and sleep. Everything else is refinement.

Browse Oils & Balms for the edit, or explore Healthy Skin for the full routine.

FAQs

What’s the best facial oil for fine lines?

Rosehip seed oil has the strongest clinical evidence for reducing the appearance of fine lines. A 2015 randomised trial in Clinical Interventions in Aging, using a standardised rosehip preparation on 34 adults aged 35–65, found measurable reductions in crow’s-feet wrinkles and improvements in elasticity after eight weeks. The active ingredient is trans-retinoic acid, the same molecule as prescription retinoids, present naturally at low concentrations in cold-pressed rosehip oil.

Are essential oils actually good for wrinkles?

Not really, and this is worth getting right. “Essential oils” (frankincense, ylang ylang, lavender) are the fragrance fraction of most facial-oil blends. They contribute a mild antioxidant effect and a pleasant scent, but the clinical evidence for wrinkle reduction sits with the carrier oils (rosehip, argan, jojoba), not the essentials. Be cautious of products that lead with essential-oil marketing.

How long does it take to see results?

Five to eight weeks of daily consistent use is the honest answer, based on the clinical trial data. The 2015 rosehip trial measured results at 8 weeks. The 2025 MDPI Cosmetics pilot saw changes by 5 weeks. If a product promises visible results overnight, it is selling you hydration, not structural change.

Can I use facial oil instead of moisturiser?

For some skin types, yes. A good plant oil provides lipid barrier support, locks in water, and delivers antioxidants in a single step, so a separate moisturiser is often unnecessary, especially at night. If your skin is very dry or very dehydrated, layering a water-based serum or hydrator under the oil works better than oil alone. Combination and oily skins usually prefer jojoba or squalane, which are the closest mimics of natural sebum.

Why do facial oils go rancid?

Oils oxidise when exposed to light, heat, and air, and oxidised oils on skin cause free-radical damage rather than preventing it. This is why the packaging matters: dark glass, small sizes, a pump or dropper rather than an open-mouth bottle, and ideally a vitamin E component to slow oxidation. If an oil smells sour, waxy, or markedly different from when you bought it, it has gone off. Replace it.

Best foods for bloating

Bloating is one of those symptoms that’s easy to dismiss. It’s not serious. You just ate too much. But when it’s chronic, bloating becomes a daily barrier. Brain fog from the bloating itself, then fatigue from the stress of managing it, then the anxiety of never quite knowing when you’ll feel okay. Your gut is connected to your whole system, and a struggling gut affects everything. This isn’t just digestion.

Your gut produces many of the neurotransmitters that regulate mood and stress response. Chronic bloating is often a sign that gut bacteria need support. Here’s what’s actually going on, what triggers the problem, and which foods have the strongest evidence for rebuilding the system.

Understanding the gut-brain connection

Your gut doesn’t only break down food. It communicates with your brain. A 2015 review in Annals of Gastroenterology summarised the evidence that gut microbiota produce neurotransmitters including serotonin, GABA and dopamine, which are delivered to the brain through the vagus nerve. When your gut is inflamed or imbalanced, you feel it everywhere. Some people get brain fog. Others get anxiety that doesn’t have a logical trigger. Some people feel flat and unmotivated. The physical bloating is the obvious symptom. The mental impact runs deeper.

The research on this connection has grown significantly over the last decade. A 2019 study in Nature Microbiology led by researchers at KU Leuven identified specific bacterial species in the gut whose relative abundance correlated with self-reported quality of life, including markers of depression. Gut health directly influences mental clarity, emotional stability and energy levels. When gut bacteria are imbalanced, your body can’t produce enough of the neurotransmitters that keep you calm and focused. These aren’t personality flaws. They’re physical symptoms of a depleted gut environment. For a fuller treatment of this connection, see our guide to how food affects mood.

What triggers bloating in the first place

Bloating usually signals one of three things: food intolerance, insufficient fibre, or bacterial imbalance. You’re either reacting to something specific in your diet, your gut bacteria are struggling to process what you’re eating, or you don’t have enough beneficial bacteria to regulate things properly.

Most people try the standard advice to just ‘eat more fibre’ and wonder why it makes things worse. If your gut bacteria are depleted, adding more fibre without first rebuilding the bacteria that process it can increase gas production and worsen bloating in the short term. The NHS’s guidance on bloating reflects this: it recommends an incremental approach to fibre, identifying trigger foods and considering professional advice if symptoms persist. NICE clinical guidelines on irritable bowel syndrome (CG61) — the most authoritative UK clinical standard for gut symptoms including bloating — specifically recommend that insoluble fibre (such as bran) should be reduced or avoided if it worsens symptoms, and that any increase in dietary fibre should use soluble fibre such as oats or ispaghula. Healthcare professionals are advised to review fibre intake carefully while monitoring its effect on symptoms rather than simply recommending more of it. You need to rebuild the bacterial team before asking it to do more work. That’s where fermented foods come in.

Fermented foods and bacterial rebalancing

Fermented foods contain live bacteria that can help rebalance the gut microbiome. A 2021 randomised trial from Stanford University School of Medicine, published in Cell, found that a ten-week high-fermented-foods diet significantly increased microbial diversity and reduced markers of inflammation compared with a high-fibre control diet.

Credit: Loving Foods

Kimchi, made from fermented cabbage, introduces beneficial strains and contains compounds that reduce inflammation. The fermentation process also breaks down certain sugars that might otherwise cause bloating, making the food easier to digest. Kombucha, fermented from tea, serves a similar function. Miso, tempeh, sauerkraut and kefir all follow the same principle: fermentation creates an environment where beneficial bacteria flourish. These aren’t trendy foods. They’re functional tools for rebuilding bacterial ecosystems. Browse the Fermented Foods edit for options.

Dark chocolate and flavonoid metabolism

Dark chocolate contains flavonoids, which are antioxidant compounds. These flavonoids are broken down by your gut bacteria into smaller molecules that have anti-inflammatory effects throughout the body. A 2019 study in the Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry found that regular consumption of cocoa flavanols was associated with changes in gut microbial composition and reduced inflammatory markers.

Credit: Freedom Chocolate via @the.allergytable on Instagram

The mechanism is chemistry, not magic. Your gut bacteria eat the flavonoids and convert them into anti-inflammatory compounds called phenolic metabolites. The quality of your bacteria determines how well this works. If your gut bacteria are healthy, dark chocolate becomes a functional food. If they’re depleted, you won’t get the benefit, which is why starting with fermented foods before layering in dark chocolate often makes sense. Choose dark chocolate with at least 70% cocoa content for meaningful flavonoid levels. Browse the Chocolate edit for higher-cocoa options.

Your gut bacteria produce many of the neurotransmitters that affect your mood.

Peppermint for muscle relaxation

Peppermint tea works through a different mechanism than fermented foods. The menthol in peppermint relaxes the smooth muscles in the digestive tract, reducing spasms that trap gas and cause bloating. A 2019 meta-analysis in BMC Complementary Medicine and Therapies reviewed 12 randomised controlled trials on peppermint oil and found significant reductions in abdominal pain and IBS symptoms compared with placebo.

Credit: NEMI Teas

For many people, a cup of peppermint tea after meals becomes part of the routine that keeps bloating at bay. It’s not addressing the root cause if the issue is bacterial imbalance, but if the bloating is coming from muscle tension and trapped gas, it’s functional relief. Peppermint also stimulates bile production, which supports fat digestion. Browse the Tea edit for peppermint and other gut-supporting blends.

Building your bloating-free routine

None of this works in isolation. You’re looking for a combination approach. Introduce fermented foods regularly to rebuild your bacteria, and give your gut time to adjust. Start with small portions: a spoonful of sauerkraut or kimchi with one meal per day. Gradually increase over weeks as your system adapts. Peppermint tea can become part of your daily routine, especially after larger meals. Dark chocolate becomes a snack that’s also functional.

You’re not forcing any one food to be a cure. You’re building a food environment where your gut can stabilise. This takes consistency and patience, and the results compound over weeks and months rather than days.

What you eat affects how you feel, right down to mood and energy. That’s not about calories. It’s about whether your gut has the resources to function properly. The bacteria need fibre to eat. They need fermented foods to establish and flourish. They need anti-inflammatory support from dark chocolate and peppermint. They need variety from different food sources. Start by adding one fermented food to your week. Pay attention to what changes in digestion, energy and mood. After a few weeks, add another layer. This is how you move from chronic bloating to occasional comfort.

If bloating is persistent, worsening, or accompanied by weight loss, blood in stools, or severe pain, see your GP. The advice above is for everyday digestive discomfort, not for conditions that need clinical investigation.

For more on building a gut-supporting routine, read our guides to how food affects mood and benefits of buying organic.

Every brand in the Food and Drink category on Ziracle has passed the same standard: honest ingredients, transparent sourcing, and production that takes ethics seriously. For gut-supporting products specifically, filter by Organic.

Ready to start? Browse the Gut Health edit and pick one fermented food to add to your week.

FAQs

Do fermented foods actually reduce bloating, or is it hype?

The evidence is stronger than most gut-health claims. A 2021 randomised trial from Stanford University School of Medicine, published in Cell, found that a ten-week high-fermented-foods diet increased microbial diversity and reduced inflammatory markers compared with a high-fibre control. The effect was specifically tied to consuming multiple fermented foods daily (yoghurt, kefir, kombucha, kimchi, sauerkraut), not a single product. Build up slowly. Two to four weeks of consistency is usually enough to notice a difference.

How long does it take to see results from fermented foods?

Two to four weeks for most people. The Stanford trial measured changes over ten weeks, but participants reported noticing digestive differences much earlier. If you’re starting from a low-diversity baseline (lots of processed food, recent antibiotic courses, chronic bloating), the first few days can actually feel worse as your gut adjusts. Start with a spoonful of one fermented food daily and build from there rather than dumping multiple new foods into your diet at once.

Is peppermint tea safe to drink every day?

For most adults, yes. Peppermint tea is generally well tolerated and has a long history of safe traditional use for digestion. The main exception is gastro-oesophageal reflux: peppermint can relax the lower oesophageal sphincter, which may worsen reflux symptoms in some people. If you have persistent reflux, check with your GP before making peppermint a daily habit. For most people without reflux, a cup after meals is a reasonable addition.

Can dark chocolate really help with bloating?

Indirectly, through its effects on gut bacteria rather than directly on bloating. A 2019 study in the Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry found that cocoa flavanols influence gut microbial composition and reduce inflammatory markers. This is a long-game benefit, not an acute one. A square of dark chocolate won’t stop bloating in the moment, but regular consumption of 70%+ dark chocolate as part of a broader gut-supporting diet contributes to a healthier bacterial ecosystem. Don’t rely on it alone.

When should I see a GP rather than trying food-based approaches?

If bloating is persistent (lasting more than two to three weeks), worsening over time, or accompanied by unexplained weight loss, blood in stools, changes in bowel habit, severe pain, or difficulty swallowing. These can be symptoms of conditions (including IBS, IBD, coeliac disease, or more serious causes) that need clinical investigation rather than dietary self-management. The food-based approaches above are for everyday digestive discomfort and general gut health maintenance, not for ongoing or worsening symptoms.

Natural Ways to Boost Serotonin and Dopamine

Flat Tuesday mornings. Coffee in, emails open, nothing lifts. Not depression, exactly. Just off. The fix is probably not another wellness trend. It is two specific brain chemicals, serotonin and dopamine, and a handful of small things that shift them.

The NHS England Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey 2023–24 found that one in five adults in England now has a common mental health condition, predominantly anxiety or depression — up from one in six recorded in 2014 — with mixed anxiety and depression accounting for approximately one-fifth of all working days lost in the UK. Medication is the right answer for many, and Mind UK has the clearest evidence-based information on it. This article is not a replacement for that. It is what the research says about daily choices that move the same dials.

What the two chemicals actually do

Serotonin is the one that makes you feel settled. It regulates mood, sleep, appetite, and digestion. When it runs low the body notices before the mind does: restless nights, a flatter emotional baseline, a gut that feels off.

Dopamine is the one that makes you want to get out of bed. It drives motivation and the brain’s reward system. Low dopamine shows up as listlessness and the strange feeling that things you normally enjoy have lost their colour.

The distinction matters because the fixes differ. You need both working, and it helps to know which one is missing.

01. Feed the gut, not the brain

Around 90% of the body’s serotonin is produced in the gut, not the brain. A 2015 Caltech study, published in Cell, identified specific gut bacteria that drive this production. The gut speaks to the head through the vagus nerve, which means that feeding your microbiome is the most direct route to a steadier mood.

Tryptophan is the raw material. The body cannot make it, so it has to come from food: butternut squash seeds, walnuts, oats, tofu, eggs, bananas. Research in Nutrients found tryptophan pairs best with a carbohydrate, which helps it cross the blood-brain barrier. Almonds with oatcakes works better than almonds on their own.

Full guide: how food affects mood. Shop: Gut Health.

02. Move for 20 minutes, most days

Credit: Andrew Tanglao

The single most reliable lever. A 2017 review in Brain Plasticity, led by neuroscientist Wendy Suzuki at New York University, found that a single bout of aerobic exercise raises both dopamine and serotonin, and that regular movement strengthens the neural pathways that produce them.

Twenty minutes is enough. Mode matters less than consistency: a brisk walk, a yoga flow, a cycle to work. Most people notice the shift within days, not weeks. It is measurable biology, not placebo.

03. Use scent deliberately

Bergamot, lavender, and lemon essential oils reach the limbic system directly through the olfactory nerve, which is why they act faster than most interventions. A 2019 review in Frontiers in Pharmacology found measurable anxiolytic and mood-elevating effects across multiple clinical studies of lavender in particular.

The trick is to use the same scent in the same way, repeatedly. Lavender on your pillow. Bergamot in the diffuser at 4pm. The nervous system learns to associate the scent with settling, so the effect compounds. Shop: Aromatherapy.

04. Meditate, briefly, daily

Credit: Daniel Mingook Kim

Even short meditation sessions activate dopamine release in the brain’s reward centre. A 2002 study in Cognitive Brain Research, using PET imaging at the John F. Kennedy Institute in Copenhagen, found a 65% increase in endogenous dopamine release during yoga nidra meditation compared to rest. Longitudinal studies since have found measurable increases in grey matter density in regions linked to attention and emotional regulation.

Five minutes counts. The method that matters is the one you will actually do. Full guide: how to add meditation.

05. Sunlight, early

Morning light exposure is the clearest non-pharmacological regulator of serotonin in the literature. A study in The Lancet led by neurologist Gavin Lambert at the Baker Heart Research Institute found brain serotonin turnover rises in direct proportion to the hours of bright sunlight on any given day, regardless of season.

Ten minutes outside before 10am, without sunglasses. It also anchors your circadian rhythm, which sorts out sleep, which sorts out most of the rest. Shop: Reduce Stress.

06. Cold exposure, with caveats

Cold water immersion has become the dopamine trend of the last few years, largely on the back of research from Czech physiologist Petr Šrámek, whose 2000 study in the European Journal of Applied Physiology found a 250% increase in dopamine following one hour of cold-water immersion at 14°C. That is a striking number, but the dose used in the study is far from a 30-second cold shower.

A cold shower still has value: it sharpens alertness and delivers a short noradrenaline kick. Just do not expect the dopamine curve from the study. And if you have a heart condition, ask your GP first.

07. Protein at breakfast

Credit: Better Nature | Wellness

Dopamine is built from the amino acid tyrosine. Eating protein at breakfast, rather than leaving it until lunch, gives the brain the building blocks earlier in the day, when motivation is most needed. Eggs, Greek yoghurt, lentils on toast, tofu scramble. Nothing elaborate. Shop: Nutrition & Superfoods.

08. Sleep before optimisation

This one sits last because it is the easiest to skip and the hardest to fake. A 2007 study in Neuropsychopharmacology found that even one night of poor sleep reduces dopamine receptor availability the following day. Every other item on this list works better when sleep is handled. Build sleep first. The rest is leverage.

Medication and natural strategies are not either-or

If you are on SSRIs or another mood medication, these practices run alongside it, not instead of it. Medication resets the baseline; daily practices optimise from there. Do not change a prescription without your GP. Many people find the natural strategies only start to land once medication has done the heavier lifting first.

The ones that sound important but aren’t

Adaptogenic mushrooms and nootropic stacks. The clinical evidence is thin and the marketing is loud. Not a waste of money necessarily, but nowhere near the return of the items above.

Dopamine detoxes. Not a neurochemically coherent concept. Reducing compulsive phone use is a good idea for attention and sleep. Framing it as a detox misunderstands how dopamine works.

Serotonin supplements. You cannot supplement serotonin directly; it does not cross the blood-brain barrier. 5-HTP and tryptophan supplements exist but interact with SSRIs and other medications. Food first, supplement only with medical advice.

If the day ahead looks flat, the chemistry is addressable. Start with movement and morning light. Add protein at breakfast. You will notice the shift within the week.

Ready to build the routine? Browse the Reduce Stress edit and pick one place to start.

FAQs

What actually raises serotonin naturally?

Sunlight, movement, and tryptophan-rich food, in that order of reliability. Morning light has the clearest evidence base for serotonin specifically. A 2002 study in The Lancet found brain serotonin turnover rises in direct proportion to hours of bright light exposure each day. Pair that with twenty minutes of movement and tryptophan at meals, and you have the three highest-return levers.

What raises dopamine without supplements?

Protein at breakfast (for the tyrosine), short daily meditation, and sunlight. A 2002 study at the John F. Kennedy Institute found meditation produced a 65% increase in dopamine release compared to rest. Morning light and protein front-load the system for the day. Brief cold exposure adds something, but less than the headlines suggest at domestic doses.

Can I do this if I’m already on antidepressants?

Yes, alongside your medication, not instead of it. SSRIs change the baseline availability of serotonin in the brain, and daily practices optimise from that baseline. Some supplements (notably 5-HTP and St John’s Wort) interact dangerously with SSRIs, so food-first is the safer route. Speak to your GP before adding any supplement.

How long before I notice a difference?

Movement and sunlight produce shifts within days. Dietary changes take a week or two to register, because the gut microbiome takes time to adjust. Meditation compounds over weeks, which is why it is the easiest to quit before it starts working. Give any single change two weeks before judging.

What about gut health and mood?

Around 90% of serotonin is produced in the gut, not the brain. A 2015 Caltech study identified specific gut bacteria that drive production. Feeding the microbiome (fibre, fermented foods, tryptophan-rich foods) is one of the most direct mood interventions available, and one of the slowest to be felt, which is why people give up on it. Consistency matters more than intensity.

How To Sleep Better

How to sleep better: what the research actually says

Most sleep advice is either obvious or wrong. The gap between generic tips and what actually changes your sleep is wider than most people realise. Here is what the research says, stripped of the noise.

Go to bed at the same time. Cut the caffeine. Put your phone down. You already know all of it, and you are still lying awake at 2am. The problem with generic sleep advice is that it skips the mechanism. It tells you what to do without telling you why, which makes it easy to give up when it does not work in three days. The fix for most people’s sleep is not a new pill or a smarter tracker. It is a handful of specific changes, in the right order, based on how the biology actually works. We checked the research. Here is what stands up.

Why sleep feels harder than it used to, and why that is not just you

According to The Sleep Charity’s 2024 Sleep Manifesto, 37% of UK adults experience insomnia, and 9 in 10 people report problems with their sleep, with two-thirds of those having experienced difficulties for more than six years. A 2024 survey of 15,000 UK adults by Dreams found that 60% are sleeping six hours or fewer per night, significantly below the healthy minimum. The rates have been climbing for years. This is not a discipline problem. Modern life disrupts the biology of sleep in ways that willpower alone cannot fix.

Your body regulates sleep through two overlapping systems. The circadian rhythm is your internal 24-hour clock, anchored almost entirely by light. Sleep pressure is the build-up of adenosine in the brain the longer you are awake. When both systems sync, sleep happens without thinking about it. When either is knocked off by irregular schedules, artificial light, stress or alcohol, the whole thing gets noisy. 

Matthew Walker, Professor of Neuroscience and Bioengineering at UT Dallas and director of the Sleep Innovation Laboratories, puts the priority plainly: “Regularity is king”. Anchor your sleep and wake times to the same slot every day, and you improve both how much sleep you get and how useful it is.

Chronic poor sleep affects mood, concentration, immune function, metabolism, and heart health. The NHS recommends most adults need between 7 and 9 hours a night, yet according to YouGov surveys cited in the 2024–25 Annual Public Health Report, while 80% of adults aim for at least eight hours, only 19% actually achieve it. Not as a target to chase, but as a baseline, the body needs to do its work. If you are running consistently under that, everything else you do for your health is working uphill.

How does stress actually damage sleep?

Stress and sleep sit inside a feedback loop. Poor sleep raises cortisol the next day. Raised cortisol makes it harder to fall asleep the next night. Breaking the loop usually means working both ends at once, which is why the Reduce Stress approach matters as much as anything you do at bedtime.

In practice, this means your evening routine is doing double duty. It is not only winding you down for sleep. It is lowering the cortisol curve that would otherwise fragment your sleep at 3am. A 2018 study in JMIR Mental Health found that even moderate alcohol consumption reduced sleep quality by around 24%, largely by suppressing REM sleep in the second half of the night. A 2024 systematic review and meta-analysis in Sleep Medicine Reviews, covering 27 studies, confirmed that even a low dose of alcohol, equivalent to roughly two standard drinks, delays the onset of REM sleep and reduces its duration, with disruption worsening progressively with higher doses. A separate 2024 study published in SLEEP found that alcohol before bed increased slow-wave sleep early in the night while consistently decreasing REM sleep accumulation with the effect persisting across consecutive nights. The glass of wine that helps you fall asleep faster is the same glass waking you up at 3am four hours later. If you regularly wake in the small hours, alcohol and stress are the two most likely culprits, and they often travel together.

What the research says matters more than what does not

Not everything that gets blamed for bad sleep is guilty. A clearer picture.

Light is the biggest lever. The circadian clock is set almost entirely by light, not by willpower or habit. Morning light within an hour of waking, ideally outside, anchors your rhythm and signals to every cell in your body that it is daytime. A 2017 study in Current Biology led by Kenneth Wright at the University of Colorado Boulder found that one week of natural light exposure shifted participants’ circadian clocks earlier and improved their sleep timing. Evening light does the opposite. The blue spectrum from screens suppresses melatonin and delays sleep onset, which is why a lit bedroom at 11pm is working against you even if you feel tired.

Temperature is a real one. Core body temperature naturally drops as you approach sleep, and a bedroom that is too warm interrupts the process. The Sleep Foundation recommends keeping your bedroom between 15 and 19°C. Cool enough to want a duvet. That is a physiological lever, not a comfort preference. Look at your Bedding before you look at a supplement.

Caffeine hangs around longer than you think. It has a half-life of around five to six hours, which means a morning coffee can still be circulating in the afternoon. If you are sensitive, even a 10am cup can shorten deep sleep that night. Walker’s rule of thumb is to cut caffeine 12 to 14 hours before bed. For a 10pm bedtime, that means nothing after 8am.

Alcohol is not a sleep aid. It sedates, which is not the same as sleeping. Sedation fragments REM and leaves you less rested after eight hours in bed than you would be after six without the drink.

The sleep routine that holds up to scrutiny

A sleep routine is not a wellness ritual. It is a set of signals you give your nervous system so it knows what is coming. Consistency is doing most of the work, which is why sporadic “good sleep weeks” feel less restorative than they should. You need the body to expect it.

Fix your wake time first. It is the single most useful change you can make. Your wake time anchors the circadian rhythm, and everything else follows from it. Sleeping in at weekends feels restorative but creates what researchers call social jetlag: the circadian equivalent of flying between time zones twice a week. If you get one thing right this month, pick a wake time and hold it.

Wind down properly. Give yourself 30 to 60 minutes before bed without anything cognitively demanding. Passive screen time is not enough, and content matters as much as light. Scrolling work email in warm reading mode is still scrolling work email. A warm bath is worth trying for a specific reason. Immersion in warm water raises skin temperature, which triggers the compensatory drop in core body temperature that initiates sleep. Reading a book in dim light does more than it looks like it should. The Stress & Sleep range is built around this principle.

Keep the bed for sleep. Working from bed, eating in bed or lying awake scrolling trains your brain to associate the bed with wakefulness. Not a glamorous piece of advice. The reason it works is that the brain learns context quickly, and once it has decided the bed is where you answer emails, it will keep you alert there. Rebuilding the association takes a few weeks of discipline. Your Bedroom & Sleep environment should cue one thing only.

Your wake time anchors everything else. Get that right, and most of the other pieces follow.

Does magnesium actually help you sleep?

The sleep supplement market is enormous and largely underregulated. Most products do not have the evidence behind them that their packaging implies. A few do.

Magnesium is the one worth knowing about. It plays a direct role in regulating the nervous system and GABA receptors, which calm neural activity before sleep. A 2012 study in the Journal of Research in Medical Sciences found that magnesium supplementation improved sleep time, sleep efficiency and early morning waking in older adults. This has since been reinforced by a landmark 2025 randomised controlled trial of 155 adults, published in Nature and Science of Sleep, which found magnesium bisglycinate (250mg elemental magnesium daily) produced a statistically significant reduction in insomnia severity scores versus placebo over four weeks, the largest placebo-controlled trial on magnesium and sleep conducted to date.

Form matters. Magnesium glycinate absorbs better than cheaper oxide forms and is less likely to cause digestive issues. Browse our Supplements for magnesium glycinate and other options that passed the Ziracle standard.

L-theanine, an amino acid found in green tea, has decent evidence for reducing sleep-onset anxiety without causing grogginess the next morning. A 2019 study in Nutrients found improvements in sleep quality and next-day cognitive performance in adults with stress-related symptoms. Worth trying if anxiety is what is keeping you awake rather than a circadian issue.

Melatonin works for shifting circadian timing, particularly for jet lag or shift work, but it is not a traditional sleep aid. It signals darkness to the brain rather than inducing sedation, which means taking it to “sleep better” on a regular schedule misses the point.

Ashwagandha and valerian have both been studied with mixed results. The honest position: the evidence is thinner than the marketing suggests. If they work for you, fine. The research does not yet justify building a routine around them.

What the evening toolkit looks like

The evidence points to a few consistent categories. None of these are loosely adjacent to sleep. Each is directly implicated in it.

The wind-down is where most people go wrong, because they treat it as optional. Products that support it, whether bath soaks, body oils, a simple skincare ritual or a low-stim candle, are not extras. They are cues to the nervous system that sleep is coming. The Aromatherapy range is built around the evening transition, with formulations that use lavender, chamomile and vetiver for their genuine sedative properties rather than because they smell expensive.

Stress support pulls double duty. Adaptogens, magnesium and breathwork tools lower the cortisol load that keeps the nervous system activated when you want to be winding down. If you have been reading sleep advice for years and nothing has stuck, the missing piece is usually this one. For a longer look at the evening side, our guide to stress routines covers what works beyond the obvious.

Sleep support at the supplement level is worth trying in order: magnesium glycinate first, L-theanine if anxiety is the block, glycine or tart cherry as secondary options. Stacking five things at once rarely tells you what is working. Prefer products certified Organic where the formulation allows, and look for B Corp brands where supply chain matters to you.

If you want to add something to your day rather than your night, meditation has some of the strongest evidence in the category. Even ten minutes before bed, or at a fixed point earlier in the day, reduces the sympathetic activity that keeps people awake. Our piece on daily meditation walks through the least annoying way to start, and our round-up of mindfulness picks covers the tools worth owning.

Where to start if you are still awake at 2am

If you are still lying awake at 2am, the answer is rarely a new supplement or a stricter bedtime. Wake-time consistency, morning light and a bedroom that works with your temperature rather than against it will do more than anything else. Get those right first, for three weeks, before you change anything else. Most people who do this find they do not need the supplements they were about to order.

Sleep is one of those things you only notice when it stops working. The fix is not a product. It is a sequence.

Start with the wake time.

Browse Sleep Better for products that passed the Ziracle standard on efficacy and ethics: Sleep Better.

FAQs

Why do I wake up at 3am every night?

Middle-of-the-night waking is usually a sign of disrupted sleep architecture rather than trouble falling asleep. Alcohol in the evening is one of the most common causes, because it fragments the second half of the night. Raised cortisol from stress is another. If a 2am or 3am wake is consistent, it is worth paying attention to rather than waiting out.

Is magnesium actually worth taking for sleep?

Yes, within limits. The evidence is strongest for the glycinate and bisglycinate forms, which absorb better than cheaper oxide forms and are much less likely to cause digestive issues. A 2012 study in the Journal of Research in Medical Sciences first established the link, and a 2025 randomised controlled trial of 155 adults in Nature and Science of Sleep confirmed that magnesium bisglycinate significantly reduced insomnia severity scores versus placebo, with most improvement in the first two weeks. Not a silver bullet, but one of the few sleep supplements with genuine evidence behind it.

How long does it take for a new sleep routine to work?

Expect two to three weeks before a new routine feels natural, and four to six weeks before the effects on sleep quality are clear. The temptation is to abandon it after three bad nights. Do not. The circadian system takes time to reset, and the first week is always the worst.

Does cutting caffeine help if I only drink it in the morning?

For most people, yes. Caffeine has a half-life of around five to six hours, which means a morning coffee can still be active in the body by mid-afternoon. If you are sensitive, even a 10am cup can shorten deep sleep that night. Try pushing your last cup to before 8am and see whether anything shifts.

Is screen time before bed really that bad?

It is less about the screen and more about what is on it. Blue light does suppress melatonin, but the bigger effect is cognitive. Scrolling work email, news or social media keeps the nervous system activated when it needs to wind down. A warm-toned reading mode helps. Reading a book helps more.

Creative Ways to Add Meditation into your Day

Most advice on meditation assumes you have twenty quiet minutes and a cushion. Most people have neither. The research does not actually require that. A 2014 study in Psychoneuroendocrinology from Carnegie Mellon University found that 25 minutes of mindfulness meditation for three consecutive days was enough to measurably reduce participants’ psychological response to stress. A 2021 review in PLOS One found daily 10-minute sessions for four weeks significantly improved trait mindfulness in over 500 adults.

Which means the barrier to entry is low. Lower than the industry selling you apps would suggest. The useful forms of meditation fit inside the routines you already have: waiting for the kettle, walking to the station, washing up after dinner. This is a list of those. Ordered by how easily they slot into a normal day.

What actually works, and what doesn’t

A landmark 2014 JAMA Internal Medicine meta-analysis of 47 randomised controlled trials (roughly 3,500 participants) concluded mindfulness meditation produced moderate reductions in anxiety, depression, and pain. The evidence for sleep, weight, and cognition is weaker. The point is not that meditation fixes everything. The point is that for stress, anxiety, and rumination, it has the strongest evidence base of any non-clinical intervention available.

Around 16% of UK adults had practised mindfulness by 2021, up from 15% in 2018, per a 2024 PLOS One paper. The proportion is growing, mostly among young and middle-aged adults in London and the South East. If you are sceptical because it sounds vaguely hippyish, you are increasingly in the minority.

Start here. The easiest three

These three require nothing you do not already own and nothing you are not already doing.

01. Kettle meditation. Two minutes. Stand at the counter while the kettle boils, feet planted, shoulders down. Notice the sound of the water heating. The way the steam rises. The warmth when your hand closes around the mug. This is it. You do not need to empty your mind or achieve anything. You are just paying attention for as long as the water takes. Drink the tea the same way. Chamomile, green, rooibos — whatever you already drink works. The point is presence, not the plant.

Credit: NEMI Teas | Stress & Sleep

02. Shower meditation. Four minutes. Also called waterfall meditation, though the name is more dramatic than the practice. Focus on the physical sensation: water temperature, pressure, the feel of it on your scalp and shoulders. When your mind drifts to the day ahead (and it will), notice the drift and come back to the water. That noticing-and-returning is the entire mechanism. The rest is just warm water.

Credit: Sop | Body & Bath

03. Walking meditation. Five to fifteen minutes. Pick a familiar route and do it without your phone, earphones, or podcast. Attention on the feet meeting the ground, the rhythm of your breath, the air on your face. If you live somewhere green, even briefly, better. A 2019 study in Frontiers in Psychology found 20 minutes of contact with nature measurably reduced cortisol. Walking meditation overlaps that benefit with the attention practice.

Once the easy ones are routine

04. Movement meditation. The thing yoga and running and swimming have in common when done without a podcast: the repetitive, rhythmic attention on breath and body creates the same state as formal sitting meditation. For people who find stillness difficult, this is usually the way in. Controlled breath, one muscle group at a time, no distraction stacked on top.

Credit: Iron Roots | Activewear

05. Cleaning meditation. The one that sounds strangest and works surprisingly well. Washing up, wiping surfaces, folding laundry. Simple, repetitive tasks with a defined start and end. The mind naturally settles into a state psychologists call flow, and flow has a similar neurochemical signature to formal meditation. The only requirement is that you do it without a podcast playing. Headphones defeat the purpose.

Credit: Delphis Eco | Cleaning

06. Breath boxes, on demand. Four seconds in, four seconds hold, four seconds out, four seconds hold. Repeat for one to two minutes. Usable at your desk, in a meeting, on the Tube. A 2017 study in Frontiers in Psychology found diaphragmatic breathing over eight weeks significantly reduced cortisol in healthy adults. This is the same principle, compressed into moments.

07. Loving-kindness meditation, at night. Slightly different animal. Instead of observing, you silently repeat warm phrases towards yourself, then people you love, then someone neutral, then someone you find difficult. A 2015 Emory University review in Mindfulness found the practice measurably increased positive emotion and social connection over time. Good for the night before a hard day, or for anyone whose mind runs anxious at bedtime.

The ones that aren’t ready yet

Expensive meditation apps. Calm and Headspace work for the people they work for, but there is no evidence they outperform free guided meditations on YouTube or the free Insight Timer app. If paying helps you stick with it, that is its own reason. Do not mistake cost for efficacy.

Biofeedback headbands and stress-tracking wearables. The evidence is genuinely thin. Most of what they measure is heart-rate variability, which is a reasonable proxy for stress but a poor teacher of meditation skill. The money is better spent on a 10-minute daily practice.

The idea that you have to clear your mind. You cannot, and nobody can. Thoughts will keep arriving. The practice is the noticing and returning, not the absence of thought. This is the single most common reason people quit after a week, and it is based on a misunderstanding.

You now have seven versions to choose from. Pick one. Use it tomorrow. Two weeks is usually enough to feel whether it is landing.

Ready to go deeper? Explore Mindfulness & Meditation for related reads and tools, or browse Reduce Stress for the full edit.

FAQs

How long do I need to meditate for it to work?

Less than most people assume. A 2014 study in Psychoneuroendocrinology at Carnegie Mellon University found 25 minutes for three consecutive days was enough to measurably reduce psychological stress response. A 2021 PLOS One trial found 10 minutes daily for four weeks improved trait mindfulness in over 500 adults. Consistency matters more than duration. A daily 5-minute practice outperforms a weekly 30-minute one for most people.

Is it normal for my mind to wander during meditation?

Yes. Noticing that your mind has wandered and gently returning to the breath is not a failure of meditation. It is meditation. This is the single most common reason people quit after a week, and it is based on a misunderstanding of how the practice works.

What’s the difference between mindfulness and meditation?

Mindfulness is the state: non-judgmental attention to the present moment. Meditation is the practice: a structured way of cultivating that state. You can be mindful without meditating (while washing up, walking, listening to someone speak), and you can meditate without being particularly mindful if your technique is off. The everyday forms in this article are closer to applied mindfulness than formal meditation.

Does meditation actually reduce stress?

The best available evidence says yes, for anxiety, depression, and pain, with moderate effect sizes. A 2014 JAMA Internal Medicine meta-analysis of 47 randomised controlled trials found mindfulness meditation produced moderate reductions in these outcomes. The evidence is weaker for sleep, weight, and cognition. For stress specifically, multiple cortisol-measurement trials have shown measurable biological reductions, particularly from consistent practice over 8 weeks or more.

Can meditation be harmful?

Rarely, but occasionally. A 2024 PLOS One study found around a quarter of UK mindfulness users reported negative effects during the pandemic, and a 2024 Cambridge trial found meditation can induce altered states of consciousness in a substantial minority of practitioners. If you have a history of psychosis, severe anxiety, or unprocessed trauma, it is worth starting with short sessions and ideally under professional guidance. For most people, in small daily doses, the practice is safe.

Beyond diet culture

Body image in the UK isn’t in a good place. A 2020 inquiry by the UK Parliament’s Women and Equalities Committee heard extensive evidence that negative body image affects a majority of British adults, with measurable effects on mental health, self-esteem, and quality of life. The inquiry’s findings prompted a 2021 government response acknowledging the issue but stopping short of the statutory regulation of social media advertising that the committee had recommended. Eating disorder support charity Beat estimates that at least 1.25 million people in the UK have an eating disorder at any time — more than 1 in 50 people — with youth prevalence rising sharply: an NHS England Adult Psychiatric Morbidity Survey 2023–24 found that 12.5% of 17 to 19-year-olds now show signs consistent with an eating disorder, four times the rate recorded in 2017. Hospital admissions for eating disorders in England have increased by approximately 50% between 2013/14 and 2023/24, according to NHS England Digital data.

Despite all of this, the diet industry continues to market restriction as the path to health. Diet culture tells you your body is the problem. The real problem is the narrative.

Here’s what diet culture actually costs, why the restriction model keeps failing, and what a healthier relationship with food can look like instead.

The body image crisis underneath diet culture

The negative feelings people have about their bodies don’t arrive from nowhere. They’re cultivated. Marketing, social media, the medical establishment, family conversations, wellness apps. All of it converges to tell you your body is wrong and needs fixing. You’ve internalised these messages so completely that you might believe they’re your own thoughts.

A 2019 review in Body Image summarised a large body of evidence that exposure to idealised, filtered images on social media is associated with reduced body satisfaction, increased anxiety and disordered eating behaviours across a wide range of populations.

The cost is real. People develop eating disorders. They develop orthorexia, an unhealthy preoccupation with ‘clean’ eating that becomes psychologically harmful. A 2001 review in the International Journal of Obesity summarising long-term weight loss studies found that the majority of dieters regain lost weight within five years, often with significant additional gain. Chronic stress from constant self-monitoring becomes normal. Your nervous system stays activated. Your mental health suffers. The cycle of shame and restriction benefits no one except the diet industry.

Diet culture tells you your body is the problem. The real problem is the narrative.

Why restriction-based dieting doesn’t work long-term

Your body isn’t a simple maths problem. The calories-in-calories-out framing oversimplifies how metabolism, hormones and digestion actually work. Different foods have different effects on satiety, hormonal response and energy use, even at the same calorie count.

Your body also resists restriction actively. A 2011 study in the New England Journal of Medicine led by researchers at the University of Melbourne tracked hormonal changes after weight loss and found that levels of ghrelin (the hormone that increases appetite) and leptin (which signals fullness) shifted significantly and persistently, in ways that drove hunger up and fullness signals down for at least a year after dieting ended. Your body is biologically built to push back against sustained restriction. Restriction-based dieting works short-term because of willpower. Long-term, you’re fighting biology, and biology usually wins.

This isn’t about willpower or personal failure. It’s about a model that doesn’t match how human physiology works.

Set point theory and why bodies resist change

Y our body has a set point, a genetically and environmentally shaped weight range it tends to maintain. The hypothalamus monitors signals related to this range and adjusts appetite and energy expenditure to return the body toward it. A 2018 review in F1000Research summarised the evidence for weight set-point theory and the hormonal mechanisms involved.

Credit: Stephanie Buttermore

This isn’t failure. It’s your body doing what evolved to do over hundreds of thousands of years: protect you from starvation. Fad diets try to override this system through willpower. The body wins eventually. Once people stop restricting (and most do, because sustained restriction is unsustainable), the body returns toward its set point. The cycle begins again. The individual blames themselves. The industry blames their willpower. No one blames the flawed model.

Orthorexia and the perfectionist trap

Orthorexia, a term coined by Dr Steven Bratman in 1996, describes an unhealthy preoccupation with eating ‘pure’ or ‘perfect’ food. It often starts as health-consciousness and evolves into rigidity, anxiety and psychological harm. Beat describes orthorexic patterns as including inability to be flexible with food, eating alone to avoid judgment, distress when certain foods are present, and the preoccupation with food quality consuming mental energy that could go elsewhere.

Credit: Better Nature

Orthorexia isn’t currently recognised as a distinct clinical diagnosis in the DSM-5 or ICD-11, but researchers and clinicians increasingly take it seriously as a real pattern of disordered eating. It often develops when perfectionism is applied to ‘clean eating’. Someone can think they’re being healthy while actually becoming disordered. The line between health-consciousness and disorder is thinner than most people realise.

A neutral relationship with food

The alternative to diet culture isn’t another diet. It’s a fundamental shift in how food is framed.

Food isn’t morally good or bad. You aren’t ‘being good’ by eating a salad or ‘being bad’ by eating cake. You’re simply eating. Neutrality replaces morality. The approach broadly described as intuitive eating, developed by Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch and summarised on the Intuitive Eating website, rests on this neutrality and on learning to recognise internal hunger and fullness signals rather than external rules.

This doesn’t mean eating only what tastes good in the moment. It means eating cake without the anxiety and shame, then eating vegetables because they nourish you, not to ‘compensate’ for earlier choices. It means a relationship with food that’s neutral rather than fraught.

Moving beyond restriction

If you’re coming out of diet culture, letting go of restriction can feel radical. It’s worth doing gradually and, ideally, with support. A 2021 systematic review in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics summarising intuitive eating intervention studies found the approach was associated with improvements in psychological wellbeing, reductions in disordered eating behaviours, and more stable long-term eating patterns compared with restriction-based approaches.

Some people find a flexitarian approach (reducing but not eliminating animal products) works, alongside a focus on whole foods and how food makes you feel rather than calorie arithmetic. Adding nourishing foods and, where needed, supplements to fill specific nutritional gaps is about nutrition, not restriction. Browse Wellness and Vitality for evidence-based supplements and The Pantry range for whole-food staples.

The shift is subtle but complete: eating becomes something the body asks for rather than something the brain polices.

When to seek professional support

If your relationship with food, eating or your body is affecting your daily life, mental health, relationships or physical health, please speak to a GP or contact Beat. Eating disorders, orthorexia and disordered eating patterns are treatable, and early support usually leads to better outcomes. This article is intended as a starting point for rethinking food’s place in your life, not as a replacement for professional care.

Beat’s helpline is free and confidential: 0808 801 0677 (adults) or 0808 801 0711 (under 18), seven days a week. The Samaritans are available on 116 123, free, 24/7. Your GP can refer you to specialist eating disorder services on the NHS.

For more on the broader picture, read our guides to how food affects mood and our self-care guide.

Every brand in the Food and Drink category on Ziracle has passed the same standard: honest ingredients, transparent sourcing, and production that takes ethics seriously. Filter by Organic for whole-food options made without synthetic additives.

Ready to step away from the cycle? Browse the Eat Well edit and start with one meal at a time.

FAQs

What is diet culture, exactly?

Diet culture is the combination of social, commercial and cultural pressures that frame certain bodies as better than others, certain foods as morally good or bad, and restriction as the path to health and self-worth. It shows up in marketing, social media, health apps, family conversations and medical advice. The 2020 UK Parliament body image inquiry documented its effects on British adults’ mental health and wellbeing. Diet culture isn’t one message from one source. It’s a diffuse pattern that most people absorb without noticing.

Why do most diets fail long-term?

Because they rely on sustained restriction, which the body is biologically built to resist. A 2001 International Journal of Obesity review summarising long-term weight loss studies found that the majority of dieters regain lost weight within five years. A 2011 New England Journal of Medicine study found hormonal changes after dieting that drive hunger up and fullness signals down for at least a year after the diet ends. These aren’t willpower failures. They’re predictable biological responses.

What’s the difference between healthy eating and orthorexia?

Healthy eating is flexible and occupies a reasonable share of your mental energy. You can eat dinner at a friend’s house without anxiety, have a cake at a birthday, and feel neutral about it. Orthorexia, as described by clinicians and organisations like Beat, involves rigidity, anxiety around ‘imperfect’ food, distress when ‘forbidden’ foods are present, social withdrawal around eating, and the preoccupation with food quality consuming significant mental energy. If your relationship with food sounds closer to the second description than the first, it’s worth talking to a GP or to Beat.

Is intuitive eating the same as eating whatever you want?

No. Intuitive eating is a framework developed by Evelyn Tribole and Elyse Resch that rests on rejecting dieting rules, learning to recognise internal hunger and fullness cues, and treating food without moral judgment. It doesn’t mean eating only what tastes good in the moment. It means eating in response to the body’s signals rather than external rules, which usually leads to a varied diet that includes both vegetables and cake without anxiety attached to either. A 2021 systematic review in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics found intuitive eating was associated with improvements in psychological wellbeing and reductions in disordered eating behaviours.

Where can I get professional help for an eating disorder?

Beat is the UK’s eating disorder charity. Their helpline is free and confidential: 0808 801 0677 (adults), 0808 801 0711 (under 18), seven days a week. Beat’s website has extensive resources and a webchat service too. Your GP can refer you to specialist NHS eating disorder services. If you’re in immediate distress, the Samaritans are available 24/7 on 116 123.

How Food Affects your Mood

The 3pm crash after a sugary lunch. The low mood that follows a weekend of takeaways. The subtle shift in how manageable everything feels after two weeks of proper meals. None of this is personality. It is biochemistry, and it is one of the more useful things to understand about your own brain.

Food does not just fuel the body. It builds the chemicals the brain uses to regulate mood, motivation, sleep, and stress tolerance. Once you see the pathway, your choices around food start to feel less moral and more mechanical. The work becomes adjusting inputs, not managing guilt.

The gut-brain axis, briefly

Around 90% of the body’s serotonin, the neurotransmitter most closely associated with mood and calm, is produced in the gut rather than the brain. The 2015 Cell paper by Yano and colleagues at Caltech showed that specific gut bacteria signal intestinal cells to produce it. Take those bacteria away in germ-free mice, and serotonin drops by more than half.

silhouette of a man against a circular blue light
Credit: Ben Sweet

The gut and brain are in constant two-way conversation through the vagus nerve, the immune system, and the hormones they each produce. What you eat changes the microbiome. The microbiome changes the neurotransmitters. The neurotransmitters change how you feel, which changes what you reach for next. This is why a bad-eating week lowers mood, and a low mood drives the bad-eating week. The loop is the point.

A 2024 review in Medicine pulled this together across the current literature: gut microbiota modulate serotonin, dopamine, GABA, and glutamate, all of which are directly implicated in depression, anxiety, and stress response. This is no longer fringe nutrition. It is mainstream psychiatric research.

Amino acids build specific feelings

Neurotransmitters are built from amino acids you get from food. Tryptophan becomes serotonin (calm, contentment, steady mood). Tyrosine becomes dopamine (motivation, focus, drive). The body cannot synthesise tryptophan at all, so every molecule you have came from something you ate.

Tryptophan-rich foods: chickpeas, oats, eggs, tofu, turkey, salmon, bananas, almonds, pumpkin seeds. Research published in Nutrients confirmed that tryptophan crosses the blood-brain barrier more efficiently when paired with a carbohydrate, which is why oatcakes with almond butter or lentils with brown rice works better than either alone.

Tyrosine-rich foods: seeds, wholegrains, lentils, nuts, eggs, dairy, lean meat, dark chocolate. Useful for the mornings when the problem is motivation rather than anxiety. Protein at breakfast, rather than leaving it until dinner, front-loads tyrosine for the day.

Why sugar does work, briefly, and then doesn’t

Refined sugar genuinely does raise serotonin in the short term. This is the frustrating part of the comfort-eating loop: it is not imagined. The crash is also not imagined. Blood sugar spikes, then drops below where it started. Mood follows. The brain logs “sugar fixed it” and the pattern reinforces.

The workaround is not willpower. It is choosing foods that raise serotonin without the crash: slow carbohydrates paired with protein, fermented foods that feed the microbiome, consistent meals rather than long gaps followed by collapse. If you want to go deeper on this, the companion piece is natural ways to boost serotonin and dopamine.

The foods that actually build resilience

Omega-3 fatty acids. The brain is roughly 60% fat, and omega-3s (from oily fish, walnuts, flaxseeds) are structural components of brain cells. A 2019 meta-analysis in Translational Psychiatry found omega-3 supplementation produced measurable antidepressant effects, particularly at higher EPA doses.

A selection of fruits and vegetables, including carrots, orange, melon, kiwi, avocado and strawberries against a black textured background.
Credit: Amoon Ra

Fermented foods. Kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut, miso, live yoghurt, kombucha. They introduce bacterial strains that the microbiome uses to produce and modulate neurotransmitters. A 2015 study in Psychiatry Research from William & Mary and the University of Maryland found fermented food intake was associated with reduced social anxiety symptoms in young adults.

B vitamins, zinc, magnesium. Cofactors in the chemistry that converts tryptophan to serotonin and tyrosine to dopamine. Deficiency shows up as a flat mood before it shows up as anything clinical. Wholegrains, leafy greens, nuts, seeds, and eggs cover most of it.

Polyphenols from plants. The colour pigments in berries, dark leafy greens, olive oil, and cacao. Antioxidant effects, anti-inflammatory effects, measurable microbiome effects. Variety matters more than any single “superfood.”

Consistency beats perfection

One salmon dinner will not fix anything. A consistent pattern of protein at breakfast, a mix of plants across the week, fermented foods a few times a week, and less reliance on refined sugar will shift how you feel. A 2017 Australian SMILES trial in BMC Medicine randomised adults with moderate-to-severe depression into either dietary counselling (towards a Mediterranean-style pattern) or social support. After 12 weeks, the diet group showed clinically meaningful improvements in depression scores. A food-as-medicine trial, with food as the only intervention. The SMILES findings have since been largely replicated: a 2025 systematic review and meta-analysis in Nutrition Reviews covering randomised controlled trials found Mediterranean diet interventions significantly alleviated depressive symptoms in adults with depression, and a 2025 meta-analysis in Annals of Internal Medicine confirmed that dietary interventions produce moderate-term reductions in depressive symptoms compared with no specific dietary advice.

A note on absorption: if bloating, IBS, or reflux is disrupting digestion, nutrient uptake drops and the rest of the strategy falters. The best foods for bloating guide covers the absorption side.

When food is part of the answer, and when it is not

Food matters. It is rarely the whole picture. Clinical depression, anxiety disorders, and other mental health conditions usually need more than a dietary shift, and sometimes need medication, therapy, or both. Food supports those treatments, it does not replace them. If mood is sustained low for more than two weeks, or if it is interfering with daily life, talk to your GP. Mind UK’s depression treatment guidance has clear, non-alarmist information on the treatment pathways available, from talking therapies to medication. The NHS clinical depression treatment page is also a useful starting point for understanding what is available on the NHS.

If what you want is a steadier baseline, start small. Protein and slow carbs at breakfast for two weeks. Notice what shifts. The connection becomes undeniable once you feel it.

Explore more in Gut Health, or browse Eat Well for the full set of food-and-mood guides.

FAQs

How quickly does food affect mood?

Some effects are almost immediate: blood sugar stability changes how you feel within a few hours of a meal. Microbiome-level changes take longer. The SMILES trial in BMC Medicine found clinically meaningful improvement in depression scores after 12 weeks of a Mediterranean-style dietary pattern. Most people notice a steadier baseline within two to three weeks of consistent eating.

Does the gut really produce 90% of your serotonin?

Yes, and it is well-established. A 2015 study by Jessica Yano and Elaine Hsiao at Caltech, published in Cell, showed that specific gut bacteria signal intestinal cells to produce serotonin. When the bacteria were removed, serotonin levels dropped by more than half in germ-free mice. The 90% figure refers to where serotonin is produced; only around 5% sits in the brain.

What foods raise serotonin naturally?

Tryptophan-rich foods paired with slow-release carbohydrates. Chickpeas with brown rice, oats with almond butter, eggs on wholegrain toast, salmon with sweet potato. Fermented foods help too, by supporting the gut bacteria that drive serotonin production. B vitamins, found in wholegrains and leafy greens, are essential for the conversion.

Can diet replace antidepressants?

No. Diet is a supporting intervention, not a replacement for clinical treatment. Medication and therapy do work that food cannot do on its own, particularly for moderate-to-severe depression. Food supports those treatments by stabilising the underlying biochemistry. Never stop medication without your GP.

What’s the single most useful change for mood?

Protein at breakfast. Most people eat their protein late in the day (lunch, dinner), which means the brain has limited tyrosine and tryptophan through the morning when motivation and mood tend to be most fragile. Front-loading protein changes the shape of the whole day for more people than any other single intervention.