Holiday desserts, high-carb comfort foods and a strong desire to stay indoors can make winter weight gain difficult to avoid.

Holiday desserts, high-carb comfort foods and a strong desire to stay indoors can make winter weight gain difficult to avoid.
Say hello to your new favorite dish for seasonal potlucks and holiday gatherings! This tasty salad satisfies everyone. It’s easy to make, is served cold and is a colorful addition to any table. The vinaigrette dressing gets a color, flavor and nutritional boost from Regular Girl Wellness.
If you’re feeling constipated or a little bloated, it may be because you’re falling short on your fiber intake or a bit dehydrated.
During Men’s Health Month, attention typically turns to common male health concerns. But while we’ve got your attention, we thought we’d share a couple of the perhaps lesser known ways that you can help support your wellness.
Is it normal to poop a couple times a day? Just a couple times a week? Is it normal if your poop is nearly always shaped like a nut-filled candy bar? (Have you looked?!) Everybody poops and your poop is a window to your health. It’s not only good to look before you flush, doctors encourage it!
While there is no cure, IBS.org encourages people suffering from IBS to take an active role in managing their symptoms through diet and stress reduction.
Study published by Journal of Functional Foods, reports that the same fiber found in Tomorrow’s Nutrition Sunfiber may help eliminate athlete’s diarrhea.
Eating enough soluble fiber is crucial to immune health.
Registered Dietitian Nutritionist Erin Judge brought a variety of fruits and vegetables to the set of Nashville’s NBC affiliate daytime talk show, Today in Nashville. That’s not a surprise. Judge always encourages people to make healthy food choices. The show’s hosts however were shocked that her colorful display represented just a day’s worth of fiber. This, she explained, is why many of us may need a fiber supplement.
Discover why Regular Girl is the preferred choice for digestive health.