For Quilla Thorne, the decision to try Paleo wasn’t about fitness trends—it was about hormones. After struggling with irregular cycles, stubborn fatigue, and mood swings, she began to explore how nutrition could support her body’s natural rhythms.
“I wanted to feel stable again,” she says. “Not just hormonally, but emotionally too.”
She chose the Paleo approach because it emphasized whole, unprocessed foods and avoided inflammatory triggers like grains, dairy, and added sugars. But instead of jumping in with strict rules, Quilla eased into it with intention—especially at dinnertime, when her energy was lowest and cravings hit hardest.
Dinner became a sacred ritual: a time to nourish, not restrict. She built her meals around quality proteins like grass-fed beef or salmon, paired with vegetables sautéed in olive oil or roasted with herbs. She added slow-burning carbs from sweet potatoes and focused on omega-3 fats to support her cycle.
Within weeks, she noticed a shift. Her sleep improved. Her skin cleared. Her mood swings leveled out. “It felt like my body was finally exhaling,” she says.
But beyond the physical changes, what Quilla values most is the relationship she rebuilt with food. “It became a form of self-respect,” she reflects. “I wasn’t eating for control—I was eating to support myself.”
To this day, her Paleo dinners are an anchor, especially during hormonal fluctuations. “It’s not a phase,” she says. “It’s how I take care of me.”