Cravings, Bloat, Fatigue? It’s Time to Reset
Many people come out of the holiday season feeling heavier, more bloated, more tired, and much hungrier than usual. Patients often tell us, “I feel like my digestion just shut down,” or “I can’t stop craving sugar.” And that makes perfect sense. Holiday habits can disrupt almost every system involved in digestion and metabolism.
The good news is that once you understand why this happens, it becomes much easier to get things back on track. You don’t need an extreme cleanse or a restrictive detox. Most of the time, the goal is simply to support the body’s natural rhythms again.
Why the Holidays Wreak Havoc on Your Digestion, Hormones, and Metabolism
1. Blood sugar swings confuse hunger and fullness signals
Lots of sugar, grazing throughout the day, big dinners and alcohol can cause blood sugar spikes and crashes. When this happens repeatedly, hunger-related hormones like ghrelin and leptin stop communicating clearly.
That means:
• You feel hungry more often.
• You crave quick-energy foods like sugar or carbs.
• You never quite feel satisfied, even after eating.
This imbalance alone can explain a big portion of post-holiday cravings.
2. Cortisol rises and slows digestion
Holiday stress, travel, disrupted sleep and alcohol all impact your stress hormone cortisol. High cortisol slows stomach emptying and intestinal motility, which makes food sit longer and ferment. This often shows up as bloating, gas, constipation or that “brick in the stomach” feeling.
Cortisol also increases cravings for calorie-dense comfort foods, so it becomes a double hit.
3. The gut microbiome shifts
The microbiome responds quickly to what you eat. A few weeks of holiday meals can:
• Feed gas-producing bacteria
• Reduce beneficial species that help regulate inflammation
• Decrease short-chain fatty acid production, which influences cravings and metabolism
A more imbalanced microbiome can also impact mood and energy, which many people notice in January.
4. Digestive enzymes and stomach acid often drop
Large meals, alcohol and richer foods can temporarily reduce stomach acid and pancreatic enzyme production. When food is not fully broken down, fermentation increases and bloating follows. This is especially true for people who already have mild enzyme insufficiency or slower motility.
5. Liver detoxification can get overloaded
Alcohol, sugar and increased inflammatory foods put more pressure on the liver. When detox pathways become overwhelmed, you may feel puffy, sluggish or fatigued. Supporting liver function helps, but the key is bringing input and output back into balance.
What’s Actually Going On Inside Your Body
Here’s a quick summary in plain language.
Hormones
• Cortisol goes up.
• Insulin spikes more easily.
• Ghrelin rises, so you feel hungrier.
• Leptin signaling weakens, so you feel less full.
This is why cravings feel stronger after the holidays.
Gut Function
• Motility slows.
• Food sits longer and ferments.
• Constipation becomes more common.
• Bloating and gas increase.
Microbiome
• More sugar-loving microbes flourish.
• Beneficial species decrease.
• Inflammation in the gut rises.
Detox and Energy
• The liver has more to process.
• Inflammation increases.
• Fatigue and brain fog are more noticeable.
Steps to Reduce Bloat, Cravings, and Sluggish Digestion
These strategies help reset hormones, digestion, and metabolism without extremes.
1. Reset your meal timing
Going back to a predictable meal schedule is one of the most powerful ways to stabilize hormones. Eating at consistent times helps regulate insulin and cortisol, which naturally lowers cravings and supports smoother digestion.
Try to avoid late-night eating for a while. Motility slows dramatically in the evening, and nighttime eating directly increases bloating and next-day hunger.
2. Strengthen digestive capacity
Simple habits make a big difference:
• Take a few deep breaths before eating to shift out of stress mode.
• Chew more thoroughly than you think you need to.
• Drink most fluids away from meals.
• Eat without multitasking whenever possible.
For people with ongoing fullness after meals, functional stool testing or checking pancreatic elastase can help determine whether enzyme support might help.
3. Nourish the microbiome gradually
Instead of jumping into a high-fiber overhaul, add gut-friendly foods slowly. A sudden fiber increase often makes bloating worse, especially after a low-fiber season.
Aim for small, steady additions like:
• A serving of cooked vegetables with lunch
• A spoonful of chia or ground flax
• A small amount of fermented foods if tolerated
Research from 2024 and 2025 shows that increasing fiber diversity, even in moderate amounts, can shift the microbiome and reduce cravings.
4. Balance blood sugar
This is one of the fastest ways to improve cravings and energy.
Easy ways to do this:
• Eat protein with breakfast.
• Pair carbohydrates with protein, fat or fiber.
• Add a short walk after meals to improve glucose clearance.
Even a 10 minute walk can noticeably reduce bloating by stimulating motility.
5. Reestablish a healthy cortisol rhythm
Most people underestimate how much stress and poor sleep disrupt digestion.
Helpful resets include:
• Morning sunlight exposure
• Limiting screens before bed
• A consistent bedtime and wake time
• Relaxation practices such as breathwork or stretching
When cortisol normalizes, digestion improves and cravings decrease.
6. Increase hydration to improve motility
Dehydration is extremely common after the holidays. Drinking more water helps stool move more easily, reduces bloating and improves detoxification. Slight increases spread throughout the day work better than chugging large amounts at once.
7. Support your liver with targeted nutrition
You do not need an extreme detox. Your liver already knows how to do its job. What it needs is support, especially after an intense season.
Focus on:
• Cruciferous vegetables
• Adequate protein
• Antioxidant-rich foods
• Hydration and consistent meals
This helps the liver rebalance its phase I and II detox pathways.
8. Use functional testing if symptoms continue
If bloating or cravings persist beyond a few weeks, deeper insights may be needed.
Useful tests include:
• Comprehensive stool analysis
• Organic acids testing
• Cortisol rhythm (HPA axis) evaluation
• Fasting insulin and HOMA IR
• Food sensitivity testing if needed
Testing ensures patients get targeted care instead of generalized suggestions.
Once you understand what is happening with hormones, gut motility, microbiome diversity, and detox pathways, you can make simple changes that help your body reset. And if symptoms persist, we can help you with functional testing to uncover deeper causes that deserve attention.
References
Carlson, J. L., Erickson, J. W., Lloyd, B. B., & Slavin, J. L. (2018). Health effects and sources of prebiotic dietary fiber. Nutrients, 10(11), 1610.
Holscher, H. D. (2017). Dietary fiber and prebiotics and the gastrointestinal microbiota. Nutrients, 9(9), 1253.
Paukkonen, I., et al. (2024). The impact of intermittent fasting on gut microbiota. Journal of Metabolic Health, 18, 221 239.
Park, S., et al. (2025). Advanced understanding of dietary fiber with omics. Food Science and Biotechnology Horizons, 5(1), e13.
Leung, C., Rivera, L., Furness, J. B., & Angus, P. W. (2016). The role of the gut microbiota in NAFLD. Nature Reviews Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 13, 412 425.
Jakubowicz, D., et al. (2015). Influence of meal timing on hunger hormones and metabolic regulation. Obesity, 23(11), 2332 2340.

