A naturopathic perspective on “Is it the food… or something else?”
What people mean by “food sensitivity” (and why it gets confusing)
A helpful way to organize the topic is to distinguish between:
If symptoms are rapid, intense, or involve breathing/throat symptoms, that’s a different category of concern than “I feel puffy and tired the next day.” When in doubt, it’s worth prioritizing safety and getting appropriate medical evaluation.
Symptoms that may be associated with food-related reactions
Because these symptoms can overlap with stress, sleep debt, hormonal shifts, gut infections, medication effects, or seasonal allergies, a structured plan is more useful than random restriction.
Testing options: what they can and can’t tell you
A practical, non-extreme plan (built for real schedules)
Use a simple note on your phone: meals, timing, symptoms, sleep, stress, and cycle timing (if relevant). This helps separate “always” foods from “maybe” foods.
Rather than removing five food groups, pick one focused change—often gluten, dairy, or a high-trigger processed category (like protein bars with sugar alcohols).
Reintroduction is where you learn the most. A short-term elimination without reintroduction can accidentally become long-term restriction.
Regular meals, adequate protein at breakfast, hydration, and stress buffering often improve “sensitivities” indirectly by supporting digestion and resilience.
Elimination diets are often described as time-limited (commonly a few weeks) and should be individualized to symptoms and lifestyle so nutrition doesn’t suffer. (eatright.org)
Did you know?
Common “false alarms”
Moriches & Long Island angle: what makes food exploration harder here (and how to make it easier)
If you want more structured support, food sensitivity testing and personalized lifestyle/dietary recommendations can be paired with symptom tracking so your next step is clear and manageable.