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  • Danger Coffee Review: Is It Worth the Hype? My Honest Take

    Danger Coffee Review: Is It Worth the Hype? My Honest Take

    Sharing my full review of Danger Coffee. If you’d like to try it, you can get 10% off your purchases here with the code FITNESSISTA. Updated May 2026. Hi friends! Let’s talk about something near and dear to my heart: coffee. As an Integrative Health Practitioner, I’m pretty particular about what I put in my…

    The post Danger Coffee Review: Is It Worth the Hype? My Honest Take appeared first on The Fitnessista.

    Hi friends! This post contains some affiliate links – I only share things I actually use and love.

    Hi friends! Can we talk about grocery prices for a second? Because wow. Every time I check out lately I do a little internal scream.

    The good news: meal prepping has been an absolute lifesaver for keeping our food budget in check without sacrificing the quality and nutrition my family actually needs. As an integrative health practitioner, I care a lot about what we’re eating — but as a mom trying not to lose her mind at Whole Foods, I also care a lot about what it costs.

    Today I’m sharing my full system: how to meal prep for a week on a budget, including a real grocery list, cost breakdowns, and the actual recipes we rotate through. Let’s get into it!

    How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (With a Full Plan + Grocery List)

    Why Meal Prepping Actually Saves Money

    When you don’t have a plan, you end up with two things: random groceries that don’t make full meals, and a DoorDash order at 6pm because nothing came together. (Been there. No judgment.)

    Meal prepping flips that script. You buy exactly what you need, use everything you buy, and the “what’s for dinner?” panic disappears. Studies show that meal planning is one of the most effective strategies for reducing food waste and household food spend – and in my own life, it’s the difference between a $300 grocery week and a $150 one.

    The other bonus? When healthy food is already prepped and waiting in your fridge, you actually eat it. It’s wild, I know.

    Budget-Friendly Ingredients to Build Around

    These are the staples I always keep stocked. They’re cheap, nutritious, and endlessly versatile — and as an IHP, I love that they also support gut health, stable blood sugar, and sustained energy (which matters a lot for busy moms in particular):

    Proteins: Eggs, canned tuna, canned salmon, chicken thighs (cheaper than breasts and more flavorful), dried or canned beans and lentils, organic ground beef when on sale, organic sprouted tofu

    Carbs/bases: Brown rice, quinoa, oats, sweet potatoes, regular potatoes, whole grain pasta

    Produce: Whatever’s in season (always cheaper), frozen vegetables (frozen at peak freshness — totally underrated), bananas, apples, cabbage, carrots, onions

    Pantry heroes: Olive oil, canned tomatoes, coconut milk, chicken or veggie broth, spices you already own

    My shopping strategy: I try to hit Trader Joe’s first for the best prices, grab pantry staples from Thrive Market (that link gets you 40% off your first order!), and fill in the rest at Whole Foods. A little extra effort, but it makes a real difference.

    My Weekly Meal Prep System

    I keep it simple: 2-3 main meals + 1 breakfast + snacks, prepped on Sunday. That’s it. I used to try to prep 6 different things and end up with food waste and a messy kitchen. Scaling back was the move.

    Here’s my Sunday rhythm:

    1. Check the pantry first before writing a single grocery list. You probably have more than you think — a forgotten can of beans, half a bag of rice, some frozen chicken.
    2. Pick your proteins and cook them all at once (sheet pan, Instant Pot, or stovetop)
    3. Cook a big batch of grains — rice or quinoa that can go into multiple meals
    4. Roast a sheet pan of veggies — they go with everything
    5. Assemble into containers for grab-and-go meals

    Total active time: usually 1.5–2 hours. Then I’m done for the week.

    I store everything in glass containers and use Souper Cubes for soups and stews I want to freeze — you can pop them out and store them in bags, which is incredibly satisfying.

    Full Weekly Meal Plan (Under $150 for a Family of 4)

    Here’s a sample week. Mix and match based on what you have and what’s on sale.

    I made a full PDF of this plan that you can download and print here: meal_plan_grocery_printable

    Sunday Prep: Cook shredded chicken thighs, a big pot of rice, hard-boil eggs, roast a sheet pan of veggies, make a batch of overnight oats

    Monday

    • Breakfast: Overnight oats with banana and almond butter
    • Lunch: Rice bowl with shredded chicken, roasted veggies, and salsa
    • Dinner: Vegetarian chili (recipe below) with cornbread

    Tuesday

    • Breakfast: Scrambled eggs with leftover roasted veggies
    • Lunch: Vegetarian chili leftovers
    • Dinner: Greek pasta salad with chickpeas

    Wednesday

    • Breakfast: Overnight oats
    • Lunch: Greek pasta salad leftovers
    • Dinner: Southwest chicken bowls

    Thursday

    • Breakfast: Eggs + fruit
    • Lunch: Southwest chicken bowl leftovers
    • Dinner: Quick lentil soup (recipe below)

    Friday

    • Breakfast: Smoothie with frozen fruit + oats
    • Lunch: Lentil soup leftovers
    • Dinner: Sheet pan salmon (or tuna) with rice and whatever veggies are left

    Weekend: Use up whatever’s left, clean out the fridge, start fresh Sunday

    Grocery List for the Week Above

    Proteins

    • 2 lbs chicken thighs
    • 1 dozen eggs
    • 2 cans canned salmon or tuna
    • 2 cans chickpeas
    • 1 bag dried lentils

    Grains & Carbs

    • 2 cups brown rice or quinoa
    • 1 lb whole grain pasta
    • Rolled oats

    Produce

    • Bananas, apples
    • 2 sweet potatoes
    • 1 head of broccoli or bag of frozen broccoli
    • Bell peppers, onions, garlic
    • 1 bag baby spinach or mixed greens
    • Frozen mixed veggies

    Pantry

    • 2 cans diced tomatoes
    • 1 can black beans
    • 1 can kidney beans
    • 1 can green chilies
    • Chicken broth
    • Olive oil, chili powder, cumin, oregano, salt, pepper

    Estimated total: ~$120–$145 depending on your store and region. Trader Joe’s and Thrive Market will get this number down further.

    Download your printable here: meal_plan_grocery_printable

    Cheap & Healthy Meal Prep Recipes

    Vegetarian Chili (~$2.00/serving)

    This is our most-made recipe. One pot, packed with fiber and plant protein, and it genuinely gets better the next day.

    Ingredients:

    • 1 can black beans
    • 1 can kidney beans
    • 1 can diced tomatoes
    • 2 sweet potatoes, diced and cooked
    • 1 onion, diced
    • 1 bell pepper, chopped
    • 1 can green chilies
    • 1 tbsp chili powder
    • ½ tsp oregano
    • ½ tsp cumin
    • Salt, pepper, and a squeeze of lime to finish

    Instructions: Sauté onion and bell pepper in olive oil until soft. Add everything else and simmer for 30 minutes. Let cool, portion into containers. Done!


    Southwest Chicken Bowls (~$2.50/serving)

    Shredded chicken thighs + rice + black beans + roasted veggies + salsa. Customize with cheese, avocado, or hot sauce. Make a big batch and it handles lunch and dinner for two days.


    Easy Lentil Soup (~$1.50/serving)

    • 1 cup dried lentils (rinsed)
    • 1 onion, diced
    • 3 cloves garlic
    • 2 carrots, chopped
    • 1 can diced tomatoes
    • 4 cups chicken or veggie broth
    • 1 tsp cumin, ½ tsp turmeric, salt and pepper

    Sauté onion, garlic, and carrots. Add lentils, tomatoes, broth, and spices. Simmer 25–30 minutes until lentils are tender. Lentils are genuinely one of the best budget foods out there — they’re high in fiber, plant protein, and folate, which is especially important for women.


    Greek Pasta Salad with Chickpeas (~$2.00/serving)

    Cook whole grain pasta, toss with chickpeas, cucumber, cherry tomatoes, olives, red onion, and a simple olive oil + lemon + oregano dressing. Stays great in the fridge for 4 days. Perfect for no-heat lunches.


    Overnight Oats (~$0.75/serving)

    ½ cup rolled oats + ½ cup almond milk + 1 tbsp chia seeds + banana or frozen berries. Mix the night before, grab in the morning. That’s it. Oats are one of the most underrated blood-sugar-friendly breakfast options — the beta-glucan fiber keeps you full for hours.


    Tips to Stretch Your Budget Even Further

    Buy frozen produce without guilt. Frozen fruits and veggies are picked and frozen at peak ripeness, so the nutrient content is often better than fresh produce that’s been sitting in transit for a week. Frozen broccoli, peas, and mixed berries are staples in my house.

    Cook once, eat twice (or three times). Every dinner should make enough for at least one lunch the next day. This is built into the plan above and it’s genuinely the biggest money-saver.

    Use your freezer aggressively. Soups, chilis, and cooked grains all freeze beautifully. Whenever I make a big batch of chili, I freeze half in Souper Cubes so future-me has a whole meal waiting.

    Embrace the “bowl” format. A protein + a grain + a veggie + a sauce = infinite meal combinations from the same prepped components. It doesn’t have to be complicated to be good! We loooove the Kevin’s sauces for quick and easy meals.

    Shop sales strategically. If chicken thighs or ground beef are on sale, buy more than you need and freeze it. Same with canned goods – stock up when prices are low.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How do I meal prep for a week on a budget? Start by checking your pantry, then build your plan around 2–3 affordable proteins, a batch of grains, and whatever produce is in season or on sale. Cook everything on Sunday in one focused session and you’re set for the week.

    What is the cheapest meal to meal prep? Lentil soup and vegetarian chili are the most budget-friendly – both come in under $2 per serving, make a huge batch, and freeze well. Eggs are also your best friend at any meal. While they’re expensive for a dozen, the cost per serving is pretty low.

    How much does it cost to meal prep for a week for one person? With the ingredients above, a single person could easily prep for a week on $40–$60 depending on your store and region. Splitting the recipes in half and focusing on eggs, lentils, and canned beans keeps costs lowest.

    Is meal prepping actually worth it? 100% yes – especially right now when grocery prices are genuinely painful. Beyond the money savings, you waste less food, make healthier choices by default (because the food is already there), and eliminate the daily “what are we eating” stress. Worth every minute of the Sunday prep session.

    How long does meal prepped food last in the fridge? Most cooked proteins and grains last 4–5 days. Soups and stews last up to 5 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer. Overnight oats are good for 3–4 days. When in doubt, freeze it.

    What containers are best for meal prep? I love glass containers for fridge storage and Souper Cubes for freezing soups and stews in portioned blocks.

    Meal prepping on a budget doesn’t have to mean boring food or spending your whole Sunday in the kitchen. With a simple system, a flexible plan, and a few go-to recipes, you can eat well, waste less, and actually look forward to opening your fridge.

    Do you meal prep each week? What are your go-to cheap meals? Drop them in the comments – I’m always looking for new ideas to add to the rotation!

    xo

    I’ve also been loving Thistle meals for healthy lunches. Here is my link to try it out!

    The post How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (With a Full Plan + Grocery List) appeared first on The Fitnessista.

  • 205: GLP-1s, Weight Loss Maintenance & Rebuilding Yourself with Betsy of Boujee Betsy

    205: GLP-1s, Weight Loss Maintenance & Rebuilding Yourself with Betsy of Boujee Betsy

    Hi friends! I have a brand new podcast episode live, and Betsy is back for round two!! If you haven’t heard of Betsy, she is the creator behind Boujee Betsy, a community for women in their 40s who are finally choosing themselves, and she is as real as it gets. She’s also one of my…

    The post 205: GLP-1s, Weight Loss Maintenance & Rebuilding Yourself with Betsy of Boujee Betsy appeared first on The Fitnessista.

    Hi friends! This post contains some affiliate links – I only share things I actually use and love.

    Hi friends! Can we talk about grocery prices for a second? Because wow. Every time I check out lately I do a little internal scream.

    The good news: meal prepping has been an absolute lifesaver for keeping our food budget in check without sacrificing the quality and nutrition my family actually needs. As an integrative health practitioner, I care a lot about what we’re eating — but as a mom trying not to lose her mind at Whole Foods, I also care a lot about what it costs.

    Today I’m sharing my full system: how to meal prep for a week on a budget, including a real grocery list, cost breakdowns, and the actual recipes we rotate through. Let’s get into it!

    How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (With a Full Plan + Grocery List)

    Why Meal Prepping Actually Saves Money

    When you don’t have a plan, you end up with two things: random groceries that don’t make full meals, and a DoorDash order at 6pm because nothing came together. (Been there. No judgment.)

    Meal prepping flips that script. You buy exactly what you need, use everything you buy, and the “what’s for dinner?” panic disappears. Studies show that meal planning is one of the most effective strategies for reducing food waste and household food spend – and in my own life, it’s the difference between a $300 grocery week and a $150 one.

    The other bonus? When healthy food is already prepped and waiting in your fridge, you actually eat it. It’s wild, I know.

    Budget-Friendly Ingredients to Build Around

    These are the staples I always keep stocked. They’re cheap, nutritious, and endlessly versatile — and as an IHP, I love that they also support gut health, stable blood sugar, and sustained energy (which matters a lot for busy moms in particular):

    Proteins: Eggs, canned tuna, canned salmon, chicken thighs (cheaper than breasts and more flavorful), dried or canned beans and lentils, organic ground beef when on sale, organic sprouted tofu

    Carbs/bases: Brown rice, quinoa, oats, sweet potatoes, regular potatoes, whole grain pasta

    Produce: Whatever’s in season (always cheaper), frozen vegetables (frozen at peak freshness — totally underrated), bananas, apples, cabbage, carrots, onions

    Pantry heroes: Olive oil, canned tomatoes, coconut milk, chicken or veggie broth, spices you already own

    My shopping strategy: I try to hit Trader Joe’s first for the best prices, grab pantry staples from Thrive Market (that link gets you 40% off your first order!), and fill in the rest at Whole Foods. A little extra effort, but it makes a real difference.

    My Weekly Meal Prep System

    I keep it simple: 2-3 main meals + 1 breakfast + snacks, prepped on Sunday. That’s it. I used to try to prep 6 different things and end up with food waste and a messy kitchen. Scaling back was the move.

    Here’s my Sunday rhythm:

    1. Check the pantry first before writing a single grocery list. You probably have more than you think — a forgotten can of beans, half a bag of rice, some frozen chicken.
    2. Pick your proteins and cook them all at once (sheet pan, Instant Pot, or stovetop)
    3. Cook a big batch of grains — rice or quinoa that can go into multiple meals
    4. Roast a sheet pan of veggies — they go with everything
    5. Assemble into containers for grab-and-go meals

    Total active time: usually 1.5–2 hours. Then I’m done for the week.

    I store everything in glass containers and use Souper Cubes for soups and stews I want to freeze — you can pop them out and store them in bags, which is incredibly satisfying.

    Full Weekly Meal Plan (Under $150 for a Family of 4)

    Here’s a sample week. Mix and match based on what you have and what’s on sale.

    I made a full PDF of this plan that you can download and print here: meal_plan_grocery_printable

    Sunday Prep: Cook shredded chicken thighs, a big pot of rice, hard-boil eggs, roast a sheet pan of veggies, make a batch of overnight oats

    Monday

    • Breakfast: Overnight oats with banana and almond butter
    • Lunch: Rice bowl with shredded chicken, roasted veggies, and salsa
    • Dinner: Vegetarian chili (recipe below) with cornbread

    Tuesday

    • Breakfast: Scrambled eggs with leftover roasted veggies
    • Lunch: Vegetarian chili leftovers
    • Dinner: Greek pasta salad with chickpeas

    Wednesday

    • Breakfast: Overnight oats
    • Lunch: Greek pasta salad leftovers
    • Dinner: Southwest chicken bowls

    Thursday

    • Breakfast: Eggs + fruit
    • Lunch: Southwest chicken bowl leftovers
    • Dinner: Quick lentil soup (recipe below)

    Friday

    • Breakfast: Smoothie with frozen fruit + oats
    • Lunch: Lentil soup leftovers
    • Dinner: Sheet pan salmon (or tuna) with rice and whatever veggies are left

    Weekend: Use up whatever’s left, clean out the fridge, start fresh Sunday

    Grocery List for the Week Above

    Proteins

    • 2 lbs chicken thighs
    • 1 dozen eggs
    • 2 cans canned salmon or tuna
    • 2 cans chickpeas
    • 1 bag dried lentils

    Grains & Carbs

    • 2 cups brown rice or quinoa
    • 1 lb whole grain pasta
    • Rolled oats

    Produce

    • Bananas, apples
    • 2 sweet potatoes
    • 1 head of broccoli or bag of frozen broccoli
    • Bell peppers, onions, garlic
    • 1 bag baby spinach or mixed greens
    • Frozen mixed veggies

    Pantry

    • 2 cans diced tomatoes
    • 1 can black beans
    • 1 can kidney beans
    • 1 can green chilies
    • Chicken broth
    • Olive oil, chili powder, cumin, oregano, salt, pepper

    Estimated total: ~$120–$145 depending on your store and region. Trader Joe’s and Thrive Market will get this number down further.

    Download your printable here: meal_plan_grocery_printable

    Cheap & Healthy Meal Prep Recipes

    Vegetarian Chili (~$2.00/serving)

    This is our most-made recipe. One pot, packed with fiber and plant protein, and it genuinely gets better the next day.

    Ingredients:

    • 1 can black beans
    • 1 can kidney beans
    • 1 can diced tomatoes
    • 2 sweet potatoes, diced and cooked
    • 1 onion, diced
    • 1 bell pepper, chopped
    • 1 can green chilies
    • 1 tbsp chili powder
    • ½ tsp oregano
    • ½ tsp cumin
    • Salt, pepper, and a squeeze of lime to finish

    Instructions: Sauté onion and bell pepper in olive oil until soft. Add everything else and simmer for 30 minutes. Let cool, portion into containers. Done!


    Southwest Chicken Bowls (~$2.50/serving)

    Shredded chicken thighs + rice + black beans + roasted veggies + salsa. Customize with cheese, avocado, or hot sauce. Make a big batch and it handles lunch and dinner for two days.


    Easy Lentil Soup (~$1.50/serving)

    • 1 cup dried lentils (rinsed)
    • 1 onion, diced
    • 3 cloves garlic
    • 2 carrots, chopped
    • 1 can diced tomatoes
    • 4 cups chicken or veggie broth
    • 1 tsp cumin, ½ tsp turmeric, salt and pepper

    Sauté onion, garlic, and carrots. Add lentils, tomatoes, broth, and spices. Simmer 25–30 minutes until lentils are tender. Lentils are genuinely one of the best budget foods out there — they’re high in fiber, plant protein, and folate, which is especially important for women.


    Greek Pasta Salad with Chickpeas (~$2.00/serving)

    Cook whole grain pasta, toss with chickpeas, cucumber, cherry tomatoes, olives, red onion, and a simple olive oil + lemon + oregano dressing. Stays great in the fridge for 4 days. Perfect for no-heat lunches.


    Overnight Oats (~$0.75/serving)

    ½ cup rolled oats + ½ cup almond milk + 1 tbsp chia seeds + banana or frozen berries. Mix the night before, grab in the morning. That’s it. Oats are one of the most underrated blood-sugar-friendly breakfast options — the beta-glucan fiber keeps you full for hours.


    Tips to Stretch Your Budget Even Further

    Buy frozen produce without guilt. Frozen fruits and veggies are picked and frozen at peak ripeness, so the nutrient content is often better than fresh produce that’s been sitting in transit for a week. Frozen broccoli, peas, and mixed berries are staples in my house.

    Cook once, eat twice (or three times). Every dinner should make enough for at least one lunch the next day. This is built into the plan above and it’s genuinely the biggest money-saver.

    Use your freezer aggressively. Soups, chilis, and cooked grains all freeze beautifully. Whenever I make a big batch of chili, I freeze half in Souper Cubes so future-me has a whole meal waiting.

    Embrace the “bowl” format. A protein + a grain + a veggie + a sauce = infinite meal combinations from the same prepped components. It doesn’t have to be complicated to be good! We loooove the Kevin’s sauces for quick and easy meals.

    Shop sales strategically. If chicken thighs or ground beef are on sale, buy more than you need and freeze it. Same with canned goods – stock up when prices are low.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How do I meal prep for a week on a budget? Start by checking your pantry, then build your plan around 2–3 affordable proteins, a batch of grains, and whatever produce is in season or on sale. Cook everything on Sunday in one focused session and you’re set for the week.

    What is the cheapest meal to meal prep? Lentil soup and vegetarian chili are the most budget-friendly – both come in under $2 per serving, make a huge batch, and freeze well. Eggs are also your best friend at any meal. While they’re expensive for a dozen, the cost per serving is pretty low.

    How much does it cost to meal prep for a week for one person? With the ingredients above, a single person could easily prep for a week on $40–$60 depending on your store and region. Splitting the recipes in half and focusing on eggs, lentils, and canned beans keeps costs lowest.

    Is meal prepping actually worth it? 100% yes – especially right now when grocery prices are genuinely painful. Beyond the money savings, you waste less food, make healthier choices by default (because the food is already there), and eliminate the daily “what are we eating” stress. Worth every minute of the Sunday prep session.

    How long does meal prepped food last in the fridge? Most cooked proteins and grains last 4–5 days. Soups and stews last up to 5 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer. Overnight oats are good for 3–4 days. When in doubt, freeze it.

    What containers are best for meal prep? I love glass containers for fridge storage and Souper Cubes for freezing soups and stews in portioned blocks.

    Meal prepping on a budget doesn’t have to mean boring food or spending your whole Sunday in the kitchen. With a simple system, a flexible plan, and a few go-to recipes, you can eat well, waste less, and actually look forward to opening your fridge.

    Do you meal prep each week? What are your go-to cheap meals? Drop them in the comments – I’m always looking for new ideas to add to the rotation!

    xo

    I’ve also been loving Thistle meals for healthy lunches. Here is my link to try it out!

    The post How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (With a Full Plan + Grocery List) appeared first on The Fitnessista.

  • How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (With a Full Plan + Grocery List)

    How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (With a Full Plan + Grocery List)

    Hi friends! This post contains some affiliate links – I only share things I actually use and love. Hi friends! Can we talk about grocery prices for a second? Because wow. Every time I check out lately I do a little internal scream. The good news: meal prepping has been an absolute lifesaver for keeping…

    The post How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (With a Full Plan + Grocery List) appeared first on The Fitnessista.

    Hi friends! This post contains some affiliate links – I only share things I actually use and love.

    Hi friends! Can we talk about grocery prices for a second? Because wow. Every time I check out lately I do a little internal scream.

    The good news: meal prepping has been an absolute lifesaver for keeping our food budget in check without sacrificing the quality and nutrition my family actually needs. As an integrative health practitioner, I care a lot about what we’re eating — but as a mom trying not to lose her mind at Whole Foods, I also care a lot about what it costs.

    Today I’m sharing my full system: how to meal prep for a week on a budget, including a real grocery list, cost breakdowns, and the actual recipes we rotate through. Let’s get into it!

    How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (With a Full Plan + Grocery List)

    Why Meal Prepping Actually Saves Money

    When you don’t have a plan, you end up with two things: random groceries that don’t make full meals, and a DoorDash order at 6pm because nothing came together. (Been there. No judgment.)

    Meal prepping flips that script. You buy exactly what you need, use everything you buy, and the “what’s for dinner?” panic disappears. Studies show that meal planning is one of the most effective strategies for reducing food waste and household food spend – and in my own life, it’s the difference between a $300 grocery week and a $150 one.

    The other bonus? When healthy food is already prepped and waiting in your fridge, you actually eat it. It’s wild, I know.

    Budget-Friendly Ingredients to Build Around

    These are the staples I always keep stocked. They’re cheap, nutritious, and endlessly versatile — and as an IHP, I love that they also support gut health, stable blood sugar, and sustained energy (which matters a lot for busy moms in particular):

    Proteins: Eggs, canned tuna, canned salmon, chicken thighs (cheaper than breasts and more flavorful), dried or canned beans and lentils, organic ground beef when on sale, organic sprouted tofu

    Carbs/bases: Brown rice, quinoa, oats, sweet potatoes, regular potatoes, whole grain pasta

    Produce: Whatever’s in season (always cheaper), frozen vegetables (frozen at peak freshness — totally underrated), bananas, apples, cabbage, carrots, onions

    Pantry heroes: Olive oil, canned tomatoes, coconut milk, chicken or veggie broth, spices you already own

    My shopping strategy: I try to hit Trader Joe’s first for the best prices, grab pantry staples from Thrive Market (that link gets you 40% off your first order!), and fill in the rest at Whole Foods. A little extra effort, but it makes a real difference.

    My Weekly Meal Prep System

    I keep it simple: 2-3 main meals + 1 breakfast + snacks, prepped on Sunday. That’s it. I used to try to prep 6 different things and end up with food waste and a messy kitchen. Scaling back was the move.

    Here’s my Sunday rhythm:

    1. Check the pantry first before writing a single grocery list. You probably have more than you think — a forgotten can of beans, half a bag of rice, some frozen chicken.
    2. Pick your proteins and cook them all at once (sheet pan, Instant Pot, or stovetop)
    3. Cook a big batch of grains — rice or quinoa that can go into multiple meals
    4. Roast a sheet pan of veggies — they go with everything
    5. Assemble into containers for grab-and-go meals

    Total active time: usually 1.5–2 hours. Then I’m done for the week.

    I store everything in glass containers and use Souper Cubes for soups and stews I want to freeze — you can pop them out and store them in bags, which is incredibly satisfying.

    Full Weekly Meal Plan (Under $150 for a Family of 4)

    Here’s a sample week. Mix and match based on what you have and what’s on sale.

    I made a full PDF of this plan that you can download and print here: meal_plan_grocery_printable

    Sunday Prep: Cook shredded chicken thighs, a big pot of rice, hard-boil eggs, roast a sheet pan of veggies, make a batch of overnight oats

    Monday

    • Breakfast: Overnight oats with banana and almond butter
    • Lunch: Rice bowl with shredded chicken, roasted veggies, and salsa
    • Dinner: Vegetarian chili (recipe below) with cornbread

    Tuesday

    • Breakfast: Scrambled eggs with leftover roasted veggies
    • Lunch: Vegetarian chili leftovers
    • Dinner: Greek pasta salad with chickpeas

    Wednesday

    • Breakfast: Overnight oats
    • Lunch: Greek pasta salad leftovers
    • Dinner: Southwest chicken bowls

    Thursday

    • Breakfast: Eggs + fruit
    • Lunch: Southwest chicken bowl leftovers
    • Dinner: Quick lentil soup (recipe below)

    Friday

    • Breakfast: Smoothie with frozen fruit + oats
    • Lunch: Lentil soup leftovers
    • Dinner: Sheet pan salmon (or tuna) with rice and whatever veggies are left

    Weekend: Use up whatever’s left, clean out the fridge, start fresh Sunday

    Grocery List for the Week Above

    Proteins

    • 2 lbs chicken thighs
    • 1 dozen eggs
    • 2 cans canned salmon or tuna
    • 2 cans chickpeas
    • 1 bag dried lentils

    Grains & Carbs

    • 2 cups brown rice or quinoa
    • 1 lb whole grain pasta
    • Rolled oats

    Produce

    • Bananas, apples
    • 2 sweet potatoes
    • 1 head of broccoli or bag of frozen broccoli
    • Bell peppers, onions, garlic
    • 1 bag baby spinach or mixed greens
    • Frozen mixed veggies

    Pantry

    • 2 cans diced tomatoes
    • 1 can black beans
    • 1 can kidney beans
    • 1 can green chilies
    • Chicken broth
    • Olive oil, chili powder, cumin, oregano, salt, pepper

    Estimated total: ~$120–$145 depending on your store and region. Trader Joe’s and Thrive Market will get this number down further.

    Download your printable here: meal_plan_grocery_printable

    Cheap & Healthy Meal Prep Recipes

    Vegetarian Chili (~$2.00/serving)

    This is our most-made recipe. One pot, packed with fiber and plant protein, and it genuinely gets better the next day.

    Ingredients:

    • 1 can black beans
    • 1 can kidney beans
    • 1 can diced tomatoes
    • 2 sweet potatoes, diced and cooked
    • 1 onion, diced
    • 1 bell pepper, chopped
    • 1 can green chilies
    • 1 tbsp chili powder
    • ½ tsp oregano
    • ½ tsp cumin
    • Salt, pepper, and a squeeze of lime to finish

    Instructions: Sauté onion and bell pepper in olive oil until soft. Add everything else and simmer for 30 minutes. Let cool, portion into containers. Done!


    Southwest Chicken Bowls (~$2.50/serving)

    Shredded chicken thighs + rice + black beans + roasted veggies + salsa. Customize with cheese, avocado, or hot sauce. Make a big batch and it handles lunch and dinner for two days.


    Easy Lentil Soup (~$1.50/serving)

    • 1 cup dried lentils (rinsed)
    • 1 onion, diced
    • 3 cloves garlic
    • 2 carrots, chopped
    • 1 can diced tomatoes
    • 4 cups chicken or veggie broth
    • 1 tsp cumin, ½ tsp turmeric, salt and pepper

    Sauté onion, garlic, and carrots. Add lentils, tomatoes, broth, and spices. Simmer 25–30 minutes until lentils are tender. Lentils are genuinely one of the best budget foods out there — they’re high in fiber, plant protein, and folate, which is especially important for women.


    Greek Pasta Salad with Chickpeas (~$2.00/serving)

    Cook whole grain pasta, toss with chickpeas, cucumber, cherry tomatoes, olives, red onion, and a simple olive oil + lemon + oregano dressing. Stays great in the fridge for 4 days. Perfect for no-heat lunches.


    Overnight Oats (~$0.75/serving)

    ½ cup rolled oats + ½ cup almond milk + 1 tbsp chia seeds + banana or frozen berries. Mix the night before, grab in the morning. That’s it. Oats are one of the most underrated blood-sugar-friendly breakfast options — the beta-glucan fiber keeps you full for hours.


    Tips to Stretch Your Budget Even Further

    Buy frozen produce without guilt. Frozen fruits and veggies are picked and frozen at peak ripeness, so the nutrient content is often better than fresh produce that’s been sitting in transit for a week. Frozen broccoli, peas, and mixed berries are staples in my house.

    Cook once, eat twice (or three times). Every dinner should make enough for at least one lunch the next day. This is built into the plan above and it’s genuinely the biggest money-saver.

    Use your freezer aggressively. Soups, chilis, and cooked grains all freeze beautifully. Whenever I make a big batch of chili, I freeze half in Souper Cubes so future-me has a whole meal waiting.

    Embrace the “bowl” format. A protein + a grain + a veggie + a sauce = infinite meal combinations from the same prepped components. It doesn’t have to be complicated to be good! We loooove the Kevin’s sauces for quick and easy meals.

    Shop sales strategically. If chicken thighs or ground beef are on sale, buy more than you need and freeze it. Same with canned goods – stock up when prices are low.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How do I meal prep for a week on a budget? Start by checking your pantry, then build your plan around 2–3 affordable proteins, a batch of grains, and whatever produce is in season or on sale. Cook everything on Sunday in one focused session and you’re set for the week.

    What is the cheapest meal to meal prep? Lentil soup and vegetarian chili are the most budget-friendly – both come in under $2 per serving, make a huge batch, and freeze well. Eggs are also your best friend at any meal. While they’re expensive for a dozen, the cost per serving is pretty low.

    How much does it cost to meal prep for a week for one person? With the ingredients above, a single person could easily prep for a week on $40–$60 depending on your store and region. Splitting the recipes in half and focusing on eggs, lentils, and canned beans keeps costs lowest.

    Is meal prepping actually worth it? 100% yes – especially right now when grocery prices are genuinely painful. Beyond the money savings, you waste less food, make healthier choices by default (because the food is already there), and eliminate the daily “what are we eating” stress. Worth every minute of the Sunday prep session.

    How long does meal prepped food last in the fridge? Most cooked proteins and grains last 4–5 days. Soups and stews last up to 5 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer. Overnight oats are good for 3–4 days. When in doubt, freeze it.

    What containers are best for meal prep? I love glass containers for fridge storage and Souper Cubes for freezing soups and stews in portioned blocks.

    Meal prepping on a budget doesn’t have to mean boring food or spending your whole Sunday in the kitchen. With a simple system, a flexible plan, and a few go-to recipes, you can eat well, waste less, and actually look forward to opening your fridge.

    Do you meal prep each week? What are your go-to cheap meals? Drop them in the comments – I’m always looking for new ideas to add to the rotation!

    xo

    I’ve also been loving Thistle meals for healthy lunches. Here is my link to try it out!

    The post How to Meal Prep for a Week on a Budget (With a Full Plan + Grocery List) appeared first on The Fitnessista.

  • 202: Regenerative Farming 101 | What’s Really in Your Meat, Animal Welfare & Why It Matters with Jenni Harris of White Oak Pastures

    202: Regenerative Farming 101 | What’s Really in Your Meat, Animal Welfare & Why It Matters with Jenni Harris of White Oak Pastures

    Hi friends! I have a brand new podcast episode live, and today I’m talking about something that is so close to my heart: Where our food actually comes from. I’m joined by the incredible Jenni Harris, fifth-generation farmer and Director of Marketing at White Oak Pastures, a leading regenerative farm in Bluffton, Georgia. If you’ve…

    The post 202: Regenerative Farming 101 | What’s Really in Your Meat, Animal Welfare & Why It Matters with Jenni Harris of White Oak Pastures appeared first on The Fitnessista.

    Hi friends!

    I have a brand new podcast episode live, and today I’m talking about something that is so close to my heart: Where our food actually comes from.

    I’m joined by the incredible Jenni Harris, fifth-generation farmer and Director of Marketing at White Oak Pastures, a leading regenerative farm in Bluffton, Georgia. If you’ve ever stood in the grocery store aisle wondering what “regenerative” or “pasture-raised” actually means (and whether it’s worth it), this episode is going to answer ALL of that for you.

    Here’s what we chat about:

    • What regenerative agriculture actually means and why it goes beyond “sustainable”
    • The three shifts (industrialized, commoditized, centralized) that changed farming for the worse and how White Oak Pastures is swinging the pendulum back
    • Why animal welfare is about more than just being “cage-free” and what it really looks like to let animals express their instinctive behaviors
    • How soil health connects directly to the nutrient density of your food
    • Why White Oak Pastures gave up pesticides and chemical fertilizers and the wild story of how they started using them in the first place
    • How grazing multiple species of livestock actually works as a natural alternative to chemicals
    • The case for regional food systems and why your local farmer matters more than a big national brand
    • How YOU can support regenerative farmers beyond just voting with your dollar

    And so much more!!

    This episode is a friendly reminder that eating well isn’t just about macros and calories, it’s also about knowing and trusting where your food comes from.

    202: Regenerative Farming 101 | What’s Really in Your Meat, Animal Welfare & Why It Matters with Jenni Harris of White Oak Pastures

    (image)

    Find White Oak Pastures here:

    Check out Lumebox here with a discount code just from me: lb68/?_ef_transaction_id=&oid=3&affid=4001&discount=fitnessista

    Make sure you’re subscribed to my newsletter
    For my free Autoimmune Healing ebook, click here.
    Detailed show notes here: 

    Partners:

    Try out luxury handbags and jewelry from Vivrelle and use my code GINAHARNEY for your first month free!

    Check out We Feed Raw! Maisey goes crazy for this! I use it as a topper for her kibble or mix it into her pup loaf. You can try the raw version, the raw dehydrated kibble, and they’ll help you customize a plan for your pup. Use FITNESSISTA40 for 40% off your Meal Plan Starter Box here!

    Check out my new favorite red light device here, and use the code FITNESSISTA for a huge discount. 

    <

  • 3.28 Friday Faves

    3.28 Friday Faves

    Hi friends! Happy weekend to ya! I’m here with Friday Faves on a Saturday. The Pilot was gone all week this week, so I was doing the solo parenting thing. Counting down the days until summer break! We got a little taste of it yesterday and I’m READY. Took the kiddos and some friends to…

    The post 3.28 Friday Faves appeared first on The Fitnessista.

    Hi friends! Happy weekend to ya! I’m here with Friday Faves on a Saturday. The Pilot was gone all week this week, so I was doing the solo parenting thing. Counting down the days until summer break! We got a little taste of it yesterday and I’m READY. Took the kiddos and some friends to the pool after school and it was perfection. I got pressured into riding the water slide and loved it lol.(image)

    The rest of the weekend plans include an epic brunch, watching the Wildcats tonight, and prepping for the week ahead. I hope you have a fun and relaxing weekend, too!

    It’s time for the weekly Friday Faves roundup. I always love hearing about your faves from the week and around the web, so please shout out something you’re loving in the comments section below.

    3.28 Friday Faves

    Fashion, beauty, random:

    These goggles. I’ve shared them before, but rx goggles allow me to be a fun mom at the pool lol. I can swim and drive, ride water slides, and still see what I’m going. I look absolutely ridiculous but I remind myself that the kids will probably only remember that I actually played with them in the water instead of the fact that I look like an insect.

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    This Target skirt. It’s super light and comfy; perfect for game day and pickleball.

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    Another shout out to my favorite “mom swimsuit.” The fabric is super light, it fits perfectly, and they have so many great colors. (I also covers your booty while you’re building sand castles or chasing the kiddos around.) I also wear and love this two piece.

    Read, watch, listen:

    Don’t miss this week’s podcast episode here. I loved this conversation and it’s so important to be aware of where your food is coming from.

    Reading this and while I know it’s going to slowly break my heart, I’m 100% locked in.

    Well, this is exciting.

    What are your kids’ love languages?

    Check this out if you’re looking for Easter basket ideas for teens and tweens this week.

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    Fitness, health, and good eats:

    If you haven’t tried these Good Pop ice cream sandwiches, they are amaaaazing. Gluten-free, dairy-free, and the perfect little sweet bite!

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    High volume low calorie recipes. So many of these are light and fresh; perfect for hotter weather.

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    Definitely try this True Food kale salad copycat recipe.

    Cured sent me some of their Dream gummies to try and I took half of one last night and slept like a baby. Sleep had been hit or miss for me over the past few months – just a lot of stress about quite a few different things paired with a new puppy was a distaster – but their Serenity gummies have been a gamechanger for me. I take half a Serenity gummy if I feel wired before bed and feel instant calm, and don’t feel gross or groggy in the am. If you want to try any of these gummies, you can use GINAH for a discount here! (The Dream gummies won’t be officially released until Monday but you get early access, too!)

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    EquiLife birthday sale continues through tomorrow! If you’ve been wanting to try anything new or stock up on your faves, this is the chance.

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    Here are some of my top picks:

    Daily Nutritional Support– they have a new Strawberry flavor too that is DELICIOUS. I have DNS in protein pudding every single day and I feel a difference in my energy when I skip it.

    Full Spectrum Magnesium

    Magnesium is one of the most common deficiencies I see, and it impacts so many systems in the body. I take this every night and also give it to the kiddos. I’ve tried many different magnesium brands and types and this by far my fave.

    Melatonin can be a nice little boost if you’re having trouble sleeping or if you’re traveling. I take this whenever we travel and it’s how I can go to

  • Best Health and Fitness Certifications (My Favorites After 17+ Years in the Industry)

    Best Health and Fitness Certifications (My Favorites After 17+ Years in the Industry)

    Sharing a roundup of my favorite reputable health and fitness certifications if you’re considering becoming a wellness professional. Check out all of the details below! Hi friends! How are you? I hope that you’re having an amazing week so far! Mine is PACKED with client calls and podcast interviews, but I’m looking forward to a…

    The post Best Health and Fitness Certifications (My Favorites After 17+ Years in the Industry) appeared first on The Fitnessista.

    Sharing a roundup of my favorite reputable health and fitness certifications if you’re considering becoming a wellness professional. Check out all of the details below!

    Hi friends! How are you? I hope that you’re having an amazing week so far! Mine is PACKED with client calls and podcast interviews, but I’m looking forward to a long, relaxing Easter weekend with the fam.

    For today’s post, I wanted to talk a bit about health and wellness certifications, especially now that I’m working my way through two new ones: High Performance Health and Integrative Health Practitioner Level 3.

    I LOVE to learn, and over the past 17 years in the wellness industry, I’ve completed quite a few health and fitness certifications. I won’t recap them all again here (they’re all on the About page!), but I definitely have some favorites. (image)

    I figured I’d share my top certification options if you’re considering expanding your knowledge in the health and wellness space, teaching fitness, or pursuing a new career.

    Whether you want to coach clients, teach classes, dive into functional health, or simply deepen your own knowledge, there are so many incredible programs out there.

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    Best Health and Fitness Certifications

    One of the biggest questions I get is: Where do I even start?

    The answer really depends on your goals.

    Do you want to:

    Work 1:1 with clients?

    Teach fitness classes?

    Build an online wellness business?

    Or simply learn more for yourself and your family?

    I’ve broken this down into a few categories to help you find the best fit.

    Health Coach / Functional Practitioner Certifications

    If you want to help clients get to the root cause of health imbalances, functional lab testing is the BIGGEST gamechanger.

    When you can run labs, analyze them, and recommend appropriate protocols, it’s such an incredible way to serve clients on a deeper level.

    (Friendly reminder that we don’t diagnose, prescribe, cure, or treat. We’re looking for deficiencies and toxicities—and how we can support the body back into balance.)

    Integrative Health Practitioner (IHP) Institute

    This is by far my favorite certification.

    I’ve completed Level 1 and Level 2, and I’m currently working through High Performance Health and Level 3. I’m not exaggerating when I say that IHP has completely changed my life.

    It’s enabled me to help clients in a much deeper capacity, and I’ve also used the testing and protocols on myself and in our family. It was a huge part of my own healing journey.

    What I love most about IHP:

    It combines Eastern and Western approaches

    You learn how to read and interpret functional lab testing

    You’re given clear protocols you can actually implement

    It’s extremely practical and actionable

    If you’re interested in working with clients, running labs, or truly understanding root-cause health, this is the one I recommend again and again.

    You can check it out here and use the code FITNESSISTA for a huge discount.

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    Functional Diagnostic Nutrition Practitioner (FDNP)

    I don’t personally hold this certification, but I have many friends who have completed it and gone on to build thriving online practices.

    From what I understand, it’s similar to IHP in that you’re learning how to become a “health detective” and look at patterns within the body using functional labs.

    The curriculum and testing options are fairly similar, and the goal is the same: helping clients get to the root cause of what they’re experiencing instead of just managing symptoms. You can check out details here. 

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    Nutrition Coach Certifications

    Please note that this is SO different from a Registered Dietitian.

    Only a licensed RD can tell you exactly what to eat or prescribe a specific diet plan. A nutrition coach can provide guidance, education, macro support, and balanced recommendations based on your goals, but cannot prescribe individualized medical nutrition therapy.

    Institute of Integrative Nutrition (IIN)

    I do not hold this certification, but it’s one that I seriously considered.

    One of the biggest perks is that you can specialize based on your interests, whether that’s plant-based nutrition, Paleo, hormone health, or other dietary approaches.

    It’s a great option if you’re looking for a broad, holistic introduction to health coaching and want flexibility in how you apply it.

    Precision Nutrition

    I completed Precision Nutrition a

  • 203: Insights of a Neurosurgeon | Peptides, Minimally Invasive Surgery & the Holistic Approach to Healing with Dr. Amir Vokshoor

    203: Insights of a Neurosurgeon | Peptides, Minimally Invasive Surgery & the Holistic Approach to Healing with Dr. Amir Vokshoor

    Hi friends! I have a brand new episode live and today I’m joined by a neurosurgeon with some AMAZING insights on brain health, spine health, and really just whole-body healing. Dr. Amir Vokshoor is a board-certified MD and Chief of Surgery at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, and he specializes in minimally…

    The post 203: Insights of a Neurosurgeon | Peptides, Minimally Invasive Surgery & the Holistic Approach to Healing with Dr. Amir Vokshoor appeared first on The Fitnessista.

    Hi friends! I have a brand new episode live and today I’m joined by a neurosurgeon with some AMAZING insights on brain health, spine health, and really just whole-body healing. Dr. Amir Vokshoor is a board-certified MD and Chief of Surgery at Providence Saint John’s Health Center in Santa Monica, and he specializes in minimally invasive spine surgery with a genuinely integrative, whole-body approach to brain and spine health. If you’ve ever dealt with back pain, are thinking about longevity, or just want to keep everything moving well as you get older, I think you’re going to love this one.

    Here’s what we chat about:

    • Why Dr. Vokshoor’s go-to tagline is “there’s no health without brain health” — and what that actually means for your daily life
    • The three key areas of spinal mobility he recommends everyone work on (cervical, thoracic, lumbar – plus hips and ankles!)
    • His simple daily movement routine for spinal health that takes just minutes and doesn’t require any equipment
    • What minimally invasive spine surgery actually looks like
    • How AI is changing his practice right now — including letting him actually touch his patients again during visits
    • The promise and honest limitations of peptides
    • Why chronic pain becomes a brain disease — and what that means for treatment

    And so much more!!

    (image)

    203: Insights of a Neurosurgeon | Peptides, Minimally Invasive Surgery & the Holistic Approach to Healing with Dr. Amir Vokshoor

    This episode is a great reminder that your brain health isn’t separate from the rest of your wellness. Whether you’re postmenopausal and thinking about bone health, dealing with chronic pain, or just want to move well as you age, Dr. Vokshoor brings a refreshingly human and holistic perspective to neurosurgery.

     

     

    Check out Dr. Vokshoor’s here:

    Instagram: drvokshoor/?hl=en

    Website:

    Brain Performance Supplement: 

    Make sure you’re subscribed to my newsletter
    For my free Autoimmune Healing ebook, click here.
    Detailed show notes here: 

    Partners:

    Try out luxury handbags and jewelry from Vivrelle and use my code GINAHARNEY for your first month free!

    Check out We Feed Raw! Maisey goes crazy for this! I use it as a topper for her kibble or mix it into her pup loaf. You can try the raw version, the raw dehydrated kibble, and they’ll help you customize a plan for your pup. Use FITNESSISTA40 for 40% off your Meal Plan Starter Box here!

    Check out my new favorite red light device here, and use the code FITNESSISTA for a huge discount. 

    I’ve been using Nutrisense on and off for a couple of years now. I love being able to see how my blood sugar responds to my diet and habits, and run experiments. You can try out Nutrisense here and use GINA30 for 30% off.

    If any of my fellow health professional friends are looking for another way to help their clients, I highly recommend IHP. You can also use this i

  • 4.3 Friday Faves

    4.3 Friday Faves

    Hi friends! Happy Easter weekend and also happy Passover to my friends who are celebrating. I hope you have a lovely weekend ahead! We’re hanging out at the pool – ours is still too cold so it’s nice to have a heated option!- meeting up with friends to watch the U of A game (GO…

    The post 4.3 Friday Faves appeared first on The Fitnessista.

    Hi friends! Happy Easter weekend and also happy Passover to my friends who are celebrating. I hope you have a lovely weekend ahead! We’re hanging out at the pool – ours is still too cold so it’s nice to have a heated option!- meeting up with friends to watch the U of A game (GO CATS!) and spending Easter with the fam. We’re having Easter brunch at my dad’s and then my mom’s side of the family is coming over here to BBQ for dinner.

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    (pics from our fave blues and brews brunch at Loew’s this weekend! Dress is from Rent the Runway)

    For now, I’m hanging out with my red light, avoiding the laundry pile, and thinking about a last-minute run for Easter supplies.

    It’s time for the weekly Friday Faves roundup! This is where I share some of my favorite finds from the week and around the web. I always love hearing about your faves, too, so please shout out something you’re loving in the comments section below.

    4.3 Friday Faves

    Fashion, beauty, random:

    Ordered these sandals from Amazon and was pleasantly surprised! I’m not posting foot pics here lol but but they’re true to size, super comfy and I can tell I’ll wear them a lot. I was looking for a casual sandal to wear with skirts and dresses and these are perfect.

    They’re actually super similar to these at a fraction of the price.

    Also you know you’re getting to a special point in life when you’re excited about a pillow. I was using a flat pillow that I bought during Rona, and I liked it because I hate super fluffy pillows, but it was completely flat. I was folding it up, and often waking up with a sore neck or shoulder since I sleep on my side. (I’m really trying to sleep on my back because it’s better for your skin but I can’t do it.)

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    I did a ton of research and came across this one. It was important to me that it would have nontoxic materials and not be too fluffy. This one is a little on the fluffy side – you can even add more to it if you’d like as it comes with extra fluff – but I think it will calm down over time. I’ve slept really well each night and usually it takes a while to get used to a new pillow. I might get one for the Pilot, too!

    A pic from a full moon meditation and sound bowl class I took with a friend this week. It was so relaxing and the 45 minutes flew by. I can’t wait to do it again!

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    Shopbop is having a HUGE sale!

    Here are some of my top picks:

    Perfect bootcut jeans.

    Obsessed with these woven ballet flats.

    Glow gloss with SPF.

    I adore the details on this dress.

    This gorgeous romper.

    Jellies are back and I’m not mad about it.

    Gorgeous spring dress from one of my favorite brands.

    I haven’t tried these suits yet but I’ve heard amazing things.

    This beach riot bikini.

    Pool slides

    I bought two pairs of these in my Spain and they’re my favorite flats. Size up! (I’m usually a 38 and wear a 39 in these) I’m wearing this pair right now!

    This midi dress

    Another one of my favorite brands (because I’m the only daughter in our family)

    Classic polo for jeans, skirts, or shorts.

    I’ve linked to more on my ShopMy page here! Make sure to follow along there. This is where I love to share shopping finds. Also, if you’re a fellow blogger friend or creator, you can sign up for your own ShopMy storefront here. It’s my favorite one because it’s the most-user friendly, aesthetically pleasing, and you can add links from anywhere.

    Loving facial cupping lately!

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    Read, watch, listen:

    Don’t miss this week’s podcast episode. I’m talking with neurosurgeon Dr. Amir Vokshoor about holistic pain management s