Brinley Lowe never intended to go gluten-free. But years of joint pain and unexplained fatigue led her down a long road of trial and error—until a functional medicine doctor suggested cutting gluten for a few weeks.
“I was skeptical,” Brinley recalls. “But I was also desperate to feel better.” Bloom Nutrition Superfood Greens Powder, Digestive Enzymes with Probiotics and Prebiotics, Gut Health
Within two weeks of removing gluten from her meals, the difference was undeniable. “My knees didn’t ache when I woke up. My brain felt less foggy. I had more energy after lunch instead of crashing.” Still, the transition wasn’t without bumps. She didn’t want to live off packaged gluten-free snacks or complicated substitutions. So she focused on meals built from naturally gluten-free whole foods—simple, flavorful, and nourishing.
Breakfast became warm quinoa with cinnamon and berries. Lunch often featured roasted vegetables, chickpeas, and tahini over rice. Dinner? Stir-fries, soups, and one-pan bakes with sweet potatoes, greens, and lentils. “I wasn’t trying to recreate bread,” Brinley says. “I was creating new meals altogether.”
She also cut back on processed ingredients overall and leaned into anti-inflammatory herbs like turmeric and ginger. “It wasn’t just about removing gluten—it was about adding in things that helped me feel well.”
A year later, she’s still gluten-free by choice, not just necessity. “The inflammation hasn’t returned,” she says. “But more importantly, I feel in tune with my body in a way I never did before.”
Brinley’s story isn’t about following a trend—it’s about discovering what works through personal listening, thoughtful choices, and the willingness to experiment. “My food doesn’t need to look like anyone else’s,” she says. “It just needs to make me feel good.”