Jasmin Corbett
Health And Wellness Coach
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December has a unique energy. It’s a month of excitement and pressure. The end of the year brings deadlines, social commitments, and emotional expectations. Not to mention the feeling that everything needs to be tied up neatly before the calendar turns. For many hard-working women, this creates a perfect storm of stress, disrupted routines, and subtle physical overload.
And your gut feels it.
Every year, I see the same pattern in clients. Around mid-month, symptoms begin to intensify, bloating becomes more frequent, energy drops, bowel habits change, food sensitivities becoem more noticeable, and a constant heavy feeling in the stomach begins to creep in. Many women assume their bodies are acting up for no reason or that they’ve done something wrong with their eating. But the truth is much simpler, and much kinder: your gut is reacting to the season you’re in, not a failure on your part.
“Your gut isn’t weak. It’s overwhelmed.”
I used to experience this cycle myself. By December, I was already tired, pushing through deadlines, juggling commitments, trying to keep up with everything, and telling myself I’d slow down once my out of office was on. Of course, I never did. My gut would start shouting at me long before I gave myself permission to breathe. By Christmas, I would be bloated, drained, and pretty much operating on adrenaline.
I understand why December is such a difficult month for digestion, and more importantly, how you can support your gut through it.
Let’s break it down.
1. Stress Is Higher Than Usual (even if you pretend it’s not)
December is one of the most demanding months of the year. Work deadlines pile up, family expectations intensify, and social calendars fill before you’ve had time to think. Then the pressure to 'finish strong' adds another internal weight. You may tell yourself you’re handling it fine, that you’re used to being busy, that it’s just for a few weeks. But your digestive system is far more honest.
When you feel stressed, your body shifts into sympathetic (fight-or-flight) mode. This naturally slows digestion, affects gut motility, increases inflammation, and changes the balance of your gut microbiome. You might not consciously feel stressed, but your gut always knows the truth.
2. Your Routines Fall Apart
The gut thrives on structure. It loves consistency, regular meals, stable sleep, hydration, movement, and time to digest. December dismantles that routine without warning. Meals become irregular. Sleep is disrupted by late nights or early starts. You grab food on the go. You forget to drink water. Movement gets pushed to the bottom of the list. Your gut simply loses the steady rhythm it relies on.
3. Winter Slows Digestion Naturally
Cold weather changes how your body functions. Circulation slows. The digestive tract becomes more sluggish. You tend to eat heavier, richer foods, which your gut has to work harder to break down. Less daylight also affects mood and energy, which influences your nervous system and, therefore, your gut.
When you’re already run down, these seasonal shifts add another layer of stress on the digestive system.
4. Festive Foods Aren’t “Bad,” But They Are Demanding
December usually brings more alcohol, more sugar, more refined foods, more snacking, and generally more variety than your gut may be used to. None of this is 'bad', and you don’t need to avoid it. But these foods require more digestive effort, and when you place that on top of an already overstimulated system, symptoms naturally flare.
It’s not indulgence that causes problems; it’s the combination of indulgence, stress, lack of sleep, disrupted routine, and a heavy mental load.
5. You’re Running on Empty
By the time December arrives, many women are already close to burnout. You’ve pushed hard all year. You’ve carried responsibilities, overextended yourself, and postponed rest. December is the final push, and your gut is often the first part of your body to show that the pace isn’t sustainable.
“December isn’t gentle on hard-working women and your gut feels every bit of it.”
This is the important part: you do not need to overhaul your diet or cut things out in December. You do not need a detox. You don't need rigid rules or dramatic lifestyle changes.
December is not the month for that.
But you can support your gut in ways that are gentle, simple, and realistic. Even during the busiest time of the year.
1. Add Warmth
Warm foods and drinks can make digestion much easier in winter. Soups, stews, herbal teas, warm breakfasts- these help relax the digestive tract and improve motility. Your gut responds well to comfort.
2. Bring Back Fibre Slowly
Instead of aiming for perfection, just add one source of fibre to each meal. Foods like berries, oats, beans, vegetables, nuts, or seeds. This keeps your microbiome nourished without overwhelming your digestion.
3. Hydrate More Intentionally
Dehydration is one of the hidden causes of holiday bloating. Keep water nearby and sip throughout the day. If you’re feeling drained, add electrolytes or a pinch of salt to support energy and digestion.
4. Regulate Your Nervous System in Micro-Moments
You don’t need long meditations. Two minutes is enough. Slow breaths before meals, a moment of grounding between tasks, or a short walk after feeling overwhelmed can stabilise your gut far more than you think.
5. Keep One Routine Steady
Pick one non-negotiable that anchors your day. It might be breakfast, a morning walk, a set bedtime, or a few minutes of journaling. This small piece of rhythm helps your gut stay regulated even when everything feels chaotic.
Before I understood this cycle, December would wipe me out. My digestion would spiral, my energy would crash, and I’d end the year feeling exhausted. I blamed the food, the events, the lack of willpower. But once I recognised the pattern, the stress load, the loss of routine, the pressure I placed on myself to make everything perfect. Everything began to make sense.
My gut wasn’t failing.
It was responding.
And it was trying to get my attention.
This is the same understanding I now teach to the women I work with. Once you see the pattern, you can finally change it.
“Your symptoms aren’t a mystery. They’re a message.”
December isn’t just busy. It’s demanding. It asks more of your mind, your time, your energy, and, without you even noticing, your gut. Recognising this isn’t about restriction; it’s about awareness. When you understand why your symptoms flare, you can support your gut with compassion.
Small changes can make this season feel lighter, calmer, and far more manageable.
Your gut doesn’t need perfection; it just needs support!
now i dedicate my life to helping you...
When you are ready there are 3 ways we can work together
5 Day Challenge
Get A Handle On Your Health In Just 5 Days - Without ANY Restricting Diets, Excessive Exercise Regimes Or Any Magic Powders Or Pills...
Wellthy28
This is a Game changer for aNYONE who wants to fix their foundations, supercharge their energy & take back control of their health for good
One To One
My high level program where we'll work side by side to rewire your mindset around your health and wellness and make massive changes that last

December has a unique energy. It’s a month of excitement and pressure. The end of the year brings deadlines, social commitments, and emotional expectations. Not to mention the feeling that everything needs to be tied up neatly before the calendar turns. For many hard-working women, this creates a perfect storm of stress, disrupted routines, and subtle physical overload.
And your gut feels it.
Every year, I see the same pattern in clients. Around mid-month, symptoms begin to intensify, bloating becomes more frequent, energy drops, bowel habits change, food sensitivities becoem more noticeable, and a constant heavy feeling in the stomach begins to creep in. Many women assume their bodies are acting up for no reason or that they’ve done something wrong with their eating. But the truth is much simpler, and much kinder: your gut is reacting to the season you’re in, not a failure on your part.
“Your gut isn’t weak. It’s overwhelmed.”
I used to experience this cycle myself. By December, I was already tired, pushing through deadlines, juggling commitments, trying to keep up with everything, and telling myself I’d slow down once my out of office was on. Of course, I never did. My gut would start shouting at me long before I gave myself permission to breathe. By Christmas, I would be bloated, drained, and pretty much operating on adrenaline.
I understand why December is such a difficult month for digestion, and more importantly, how you can support your gut through it.
Let’s break it down.
1. Stress Is Higher Than Usual (even if you pretend it’s not)
December is one of the most demanding months of the year. Work deadlines pile up, family expectations intensify, and social calendars fill before you’ve had time to think. Then the pressure to 'finish strong' adds another internal weight. You may tell yourself you’re handling it fine, that you’re used to being busy, that it’s just for a few weeks. But your digestive system is far more honest.
When you feel stressed, your body shifts into sympathetic (fight-or-flight) mode. This naturally slows digestion, affects gut motility, increases inflammation, and changes the balance of your gut microbiome. You might not consciously feel stressed, but your gut always knows the truth.
2. Your Routines Fall Apart
The gut thrives on structure. It loves consistency, regular meals, stable sleep, hydration, movement, and time to digest. December dismantles that routine without warning. Meals become irregular. Sleep is disrupted by late nights or early starts. You grab food on the go. You forget to drink water. Movement gets pushed to the bottom of the list. Your gut simply loses the steady rhythm it relies on.
3. Winter Slows Digestion Naturally
Cold weather changes how your body functions. Circulation slows. The digestive tract becomes more sluggish. You tend to eat heavier, richer foods, which your gut has to work harder to break down. Less daylight also affects mood and energy, which influences your nervous system and, therefore, your gut.
When you’re already run down, these seasonal shifts add another layer of stress on the digestive system.
4. Festive Foods Aren’t “Bad,” But They Are Demanding
December usually brings more alcohol, more sugar, more refined foods, more snacking, and generally more variety than your gut may be used to. None of this is 'bad', and you don’t need to avoid it. But these foods require more digestive effort, and when you place that on top of an already overstimulated system, symptoms naturally flare.
It’s not indulgence that causes problems; it’s the combination of indulgence, stress, lack of sleep, disrupted routine, and a heavy mental load.
5. You’re Running on Empty
By the time December arrives, many women are already close to burnout. You’ve pushed hard all year. You’ve carried responsibilities, overextended yourself, and postponed rest. December is the final push, and your gut is often the first part of your body to show that the pace isn’t sustainable.
“December isn’t gentle on hard-working women and your gut feels every bit of it.”
This is the important part: you do not need to overhaul your diet or cut things out in December. You do not need a detox. You don't need rigid rules or dramatic lifestyle changes.
December is not the month for that.
But you can support your gut in ways that are gentle, simple, and realistic. Even during the busiest time of the year.
1. Add Warmth
Warm foods and drinks can make digestion much easier in winter. Soups, stews, herbal teas, warm breakfasts- these help relax the digestive tract and improve motility. Your gut responds well to comfort.
2. Bring Back Fibre Slowly
Instead of aiming for perfection, just add one source of fibre to each meal. Foods like berries, oats, beans, vegetables, nuts, or seeds. This keeps your microbiome nourished without overwhelming your digestion.
3. Hydrate More Intentionally
Dehydration is one of the hidden causes of holiday bloating. Keep water nearby and sip throughout the day. If you’re feeling drained, add electrolytes or a pinch of salt to support energy and digestion.
4. Regulate Your Nervous System in Micro-Moments
You don’t need long meditations. Two minutes is enough. Slow breaths before meals, a moment of grounding between tasks, or a short walk after feeling overwhelmed can stabilise your gut far more than you think.
5. Keep One Routine Steady
Pick one non-negotiable that anchors your day. It might be breakfast, a morning walk, a set bedtime, or a few minutes of journaling. This small piece of rhythm helps your gut stay regulated even when everything feels chaotic.
Before I understood this cycle, December would wipe me out. My digestion would spiral, my energy would crash, and I’d end the year feeling exhausted. I blamed the food, the events, the lack of willpower. But once I recognised the pattern, the stress load, the loss of routine, the pressure I placed on myself to make everything perfect. Everything began to make sense.
My gut wasn’t failing.
It was responding.
And it was trying to get my attention.
This is the same understanding I now teach to the women I work with. Once you see the pattern, you can finally change it.
“Your symptoms aren’t a mystery. They’re a message.”
December isn’t just busy. It’s demanding. It asks more of your mind, your time, your energy, and, without you even noticing, your gut. Recognising this isn’t about restriction; it’s about awareness. When you understand why your symptoms flare, you can support your gut with compassion.
Small changes can make this season feel lighter, calmer, and far more manageable.
Your gut doesn’t need perfection; it just needs support!
now i dedicate my life to helping you...
When you are ready there are 3 ways we can work together
5 Day Challenge
Get A Handle On Your Health In Just 5 Days - Without ANY Restricting Diets, Excessive Exercise Regimes Or Any Magic Powders Or Pills...
Wellthy28
This is a Game changer for aNYONE who wants to fix their foundations, supercharge their energy & take back control of their health for good
One To One
My high level program where we'll work side by side to rewire your mindset around your health and wellness and make massive changes that last