Good Enough Health | Women’s Health Strategy, Nutrition Systems & Sustainable Habits for High-Functioning Women

PODCAST · health

Good Enough Health | Women’s Health Strategy, Nutrition Systems & Sustainable Habits for High-Functioning Women

Good Enough Health is a women’s health podcast for intelligent, high-functioning women who are done improvising their health and ready to build structured systems that support their leadership and real life.Hosted by Lindsay Martens, Registered Dietitian and women’s health strategist, this show explores how to move from reactive health to sustainable health systems — so you stop starting over and start operating with clarity.If you care about your health and already know a lot — but still find yourself restarting routines, overcommitting to plans, or feeling the mental load of constant health decisions — you are not lacking willpower.You are likely operating without structure.Each episode breaks down topics like:• sustainable health habits for busy women• capacity vs willpower• health decision fatigue• structured health systems• how to stop starting over with your diet• strategi

  1. 19

    Your Body Changed. That Doesn’t Mean You Failed.

    Send us Fan MailHave you ever noticed your body changing and immediately felt like you did something wrong?Maybe your clothes fit differently.Maybe you saw a photo of yourself from an angle you weren’t expecting.Maybe your body just feels unfamiliar.And almost instantly, your brain turns that change into a character assessment:I failed. I let myself go. I should have done something sooner. I should have known better.In this episode of Good Enough Health, we’re slowing that moment down.Because your body changing does not automatically mean you failed.A changing body may be responding to stress, sleep, hormones, medication, appetite, movement, grief, illness, nourishment, capacity, or a new season of life. But for so many women, body change gets translated into self-blame before curiosity even has a chance to enter the room.And that matters.Because the story you attach to body change affects how you care for yourself.This episode explores:Why body changes can feel so personalHow body change gets turned into a story about discipline, control, or failureWhy shame makes it harder to listen to your bodyThe difference between asking “What’s wrong with me?” and “What’s going on here?”Why body discomfort, symptoms, bloating, fatigue, and weight changes deserve curiosity instead of punishmentHow to create a pause before turning your body into evidence against youThis is not about pretending body changes are easy.It is not about ignoring symptoms, dismissing discomfort, or forcing yourself to love every part of your body overnight.It is about creating a pause between:My body changed and I failed.Because in that pause, you have options.You can ask better questions.You can get support.You can notice patterns.You can care for your body without putting yourself on trial.Your body changing is not evidence against you.And shame does not have to be the first explanation.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  2. 18

    The Supportive Health Structure for Women Who Are Tired of Starting Over

    Send us Fan MailIf you’re tired of starting over with your health, the problem may not be your discipline — it may be the kind of structure you’re trying to use.In this episode of Good Enough Health, Lindsay talks about what supportive health structure actually looks like for busy women who want consistency without perfectionism, shame, or all-or-nothing thinking.Instead of building health plans that only work when life is calm, this episode explores how to create structure that keeps care within reach when real life happens.You’ll learn: why rigid health plans often fall apart  how shame and pressure make consistency harder  why “getting back on track” may not be the most useful goal  what supportive structure can look like around food, movement, energy, and capacity  how to build rhythms that flex with your actual life This episode is for women who want sustainable health habits, less self-blame, and a more realistic way to care for themselves without constantly feeling like they need to reset.Take the Your Health Roadblock Quiz: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/roadblock-quiz/If shame, pressure, and self-blame have been driving your health habits, this quiz will help you identify what may actually be getting in the way of consistency — and what kind of support may fit you best.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  3. 17

    Why Shame Fuels All-or-Nothing Health Thinking

    Send us Fan MailOne missed workout shouldn’t be able to wreck your whole week and yet for so many of us, it does. When you’re living in all-or-nothing thinking, a small slip doesn’t stay small. It turns into “I blew it,” “I can’t stick with anything,” or “I’ll start over on Monday,” and suddenly health-promoting habits feels dramatic, fragile, and like they're attacking your character.We walk through why this pattern isn’t random and why it's not a character flaw. From my perspective, as a registered dietitian and a mom who sees real-life schedules up close, all-or-nothing is often what happens when shame enters the room. Shame changes the meaning of behaviour. Instead of a missed walk being useful information, it becomes an identity verdict. And once your brain decides that a moment says something about who you are, flexibility gets hard fast.You’ll hear the simple mechanism behind the spiral (slip, shame goggles, verdict, extreme response), why moderation can start to feel unsafe, and why the “middle” is where consistency is actually built. We talk practical examples across nutrition, exercise, energy, stress, and bedtime routines, plus the reframe that makes health livable: imperfect effort still counts, and support doesn’t disappear when things get messy.If you’re tired of swinging between intensity and collapse, hit play. Then share with a friend who needs less shame around health, and leave a review so more women can find a steadier way forward.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  4. 16

    What Changes When Women Stop Trying to Earn Their Health

    Send us Fan MailWhy do so many women feel like they have to earn their health?For many busy women, health stops feeling like support and starts feeling like something they have to prove themselves through. A hard week turns into guilt. Food feels loaded. Rest feels conditional. And instead of asking what support would help, the instinct becomes: tighten it up, get back on track, do better.In this episode of Good Enough Health, Lindsay Martens explores why so many women feel like they have to earn their health, where that pattern comes from, and what changes when they stop.This episode unpacks the hidden belief that food, rest, ease, trust, and feeling okay in your body have to be justified first. It also walks through what happens when women begin shifting out of that pattern: they come back faster after hard weeks, feel less guilt around food, build more sustainable health habits, and stop needing every day to be a gold-star day in order to feel okay.Lindsay also shares real-life examples of what this shift can look like for women whose food and body thoughts have taken up too much mental space, whose self-acceptance has felt earned, and who are tired of health feeling like a performance review instead of care.In this episode, we explore: why women feel like they have to earn their health  how diet culture and perfectionism make health feel conditional  why food guilt, shame, and “get back on track” thinking are often part of the same pattern  what changes when women stop using pressure as their main health strategy  how to build sustainable health habits that feel more supportive and less punishing If you’ve ever felt like you need to be “good” before you can feel okay again, this episode will feel familiar.Because when women stop trying to earn their health, they become more honest, more supported, and more able to build sustainable health habits that work in real life. And that is where Good Enough Health starts.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  5. 15

    Why Your Health Goals Don’t Fit Real Life

    Send us Fan MailA lot of women think they need more discipline, better motivation, or bigger health goals.But often, that’s not actually the problem.The real problem is that many health goals are built for ideal conditions — not real life.They’re built for the well-rested week.The calm week.The week where work isn’t overflowing, nobody gets sick, groceries are stocked, and your energy is somehow steady all day.And when real life shows up, many women don’t question the goal.They question themselves.In this episode of Good Enough Health, we unpack why realistic health goals are often more effective than ambitious ones — and why sustainable health habits need to fit your actual life, not your fantasy life.If you’ve ever felt like: You keep setting health goals and falling off  You know what to do, but struggle to stay consistent  Healthy habits feel harder to maintain than they “should”  You start strong, then feel behind when real life gets messy  You wonder whether the problem is your discipline This episode will likely feel very familiar.We explore: Why bigger health goals are not always better goals  How women set goals from aspiration instead of observation  The difference between realistic health goals and idealized ones  Why ambitious plans often create guilt instead of consistency  How to build sustainable health habits that work in real life  Why adaptability is often what keeps healthy habits alive  How realistic goals help build self-trust instead of self-blame A realistic health goal is not one that sounds the most impressive.It’s the one that has a decent chance of happening in your actual life.Not your best week.Not your fantasy week.Your real one.Because consistency is not built by choosing the most ambitious plan.It’s built by creating health goals that your life can actually support.If you’re tired of setting goals that collapse the second life gets, well, lifey, this episode will help you build a more honest, sustainable approach to health.And next week, we’re continuing the conversation by looking at what changes when women stop trying to earn their health.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  6. 14

    Why You Think You’re the Problem When Health Feels Hard

    Send us Fan MailWhen health feels hard, inconsistent, or heavier than it should, many women don’t question the plan.They question themselves.Maybe you’ve thought:Why can’t I just do this?Why does this feel harder for me than it should?Why can other women stay consistent when I keep falling off?I know what to do, so what is wrong with me?For a lot of thoughtful, high-functioning women, health struggles don’t just feel frustrating. They start to feel personal.A missed habit becomes proof.A hard week becomes a character assessment.And inconsistency starts sounding like a character flaw instead of information.In this episode of Good Enough Health, we unpack why so many women quickly assume they are the problem when healthy habits feel hard and why that explanation is typically far too simple.Because often, the issue is not that you’re lazy, undisciplined, or failing at health.It’s that you’ve been taught to interpret health struggles through self-blame instead of context.In this episode, we cover:why women so quickly personalize health struggles how self-blame becomes the default explanation when healthy habits feel inconsistent why high-functioning women are especially vulnerable to thinking they should be able to do this by now the difference between personal failure and a mismatch between your health plan and your real life why context, capacity, stress, and mental load matter more than most women have been taught how to interrupt the pattern of turning every hard health moment into evidence against yourself If you’ve ever felt like struggling with healthy habits means something is wrong with you, this episode will give you a more accurate and much more useful lens.Because difficulty is not always proof that you are the problem.Sometimes it is feedback.Sometimes it is context.Sometimes it is a sign that your current approach needs more support, not more shame.And in Episode 13, we’ll keep building on this by talking about what happens when your health goals are built for your real life instead of your fantasy life.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  7. 13

    Why Shame Is Not a Health Strategy (And What Actually Supports Consistency)

    Send us Fan MailThere’s a quieter kind of shame that shows up in health all the time.It doesn’t always sound dramatic or obviously harsh.If you’ve ever noticed that the second you feel behind, your health goals suddenly get bigger… this episode is for you.In this episode of Good Enough Health, we unpack why shame can feel productive in the moment while quietly making health heavier, stricter, and harder to sustain.We explore: why shame is not a health strategy  how self-criticism can masquerade as honesty, accountability, or discipline  why so many women respond to inconsistency by tightening, escalating, and adding more  the difference between punishing goals and supportive goals  why “harder” is not always more helpful  how to start choosing health goals that can actually live in your real life This episode also looks at a pattern many high-functioning women know well: the moment health feels shaky, the instinct is to push harder.But often, that isn’t strategy.It’s shame.And shame always wants more.It sounds like:“I should be doing better.” “This shouldn’t be this hard.” “Why can’t I just get it together?” “What is wrong with me?”If health has been feeling heavier than it needs to, this conversation will help you notice the voice behind that weight and start asking better questions.Not:“What else should I add?” “How do I force myself to do this properly?”But:“What would actually support me here?” “What would be realistic in this season?” “What would help this feel steadier, not just stricter?”Because sustainable health is not built by punishing yourself into compliance.It’s built by creating something you can come back to without needing to be punished first.If this episode resonates, share it with a friend who needs a gentler and more useful way into health.And next week, we’re continuing this conversation by looking at why so many women end up believing the problem is them.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  8. 12

    How to Build Healthy Habits That Actually Hold in Real Life

    Send us Fan MailIf your health feels harder to maintain than it should, it may not be because you’re doing everything wrong. It may be because one part of your foundation is under-supported and everything else is being affected by it.In this episode, Lindsay walks you through how to identify the area of your health that needs the most support right now and how to choose one realistic, specific anchor habit that can actually hold in real life.You’ll look at four core domains of Good Enough Health — food and nutrition, sleep, movement, and capacity/stress management — and learn why your health often feels as unstable as your lowest-supported area, not as good as your strongest one.This episode also breaks down the difference between a health category and a true anchor. Because “eat better,” “sleep more,” or “manage stress” are not actually anchors yet. A useful anchor is specific, repeatable, realistic for your season of life, and connected to a real problem you’re having.Inside this episode:how to quickly assess your four core health domainshow to identify where to startwhat makes a strong health anchorwhy vague health goals usually don’t holdexamples of realistic anchors for food, sleep, movement, and stress managementhow to know if your anchor is actually helpingIf you’re tired of starting over, trying harder, or feeling like healthy habits only work when life is calm, this episode will help you choose one point of support that makes health feel more doable in real life.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  9. 11

    The Health Audit: Why Health Changes Don’t Stick (And What to Look at First)

    Send us Fan MailMost women already know what they should change about their health.What they often don’t have is a clear picture of what’s actually working.When that clarity is missing, the instinct is usually to add more. More supplements. More routines. More effort. But without understanding the foundation you’re building on, those changes rarely stick.In this episode, we slow down before the overhaul.I walk you through a simple four-domain health audit designed to help you see your health system more clearly. This isn’t a clinical assessment or a performance review. It’s a way of gathering information about what’s holding, what feels shaky, and where support might make the biggest difference.Instead of trying to fix everything at once, you’ll learn how to identify the one area that could act as an anchor for the rest of your health.Because sustainable change doesn’t start with doing more.It starts with seeing clearly.In this episode we exploreWhy the instinct to “add more” often makes health feel harderThe step most high-functioning women skip when trying to improve their healthA simple four-domain health audit of food, sleep, movement, and capacityHow to identify the one area that may have the biggest impact on everything elseWhy clarity is the first step in designing health that actually holdsBefore you reset, overhaul, or start over, pause long enough to see what’s already there.What’s holding.What’s shaky.What needs support instead of more effort.That clarity is the foundation that sustainable health is built on.In the next episode, we’ll go deeper into the domains from today’s audit and explore what it actually means to build a health anchor that holds in real life.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  10. 10

    Why Good Enough Health Isn’t Lowering the Bar for Women’s Health

    Send us Fan MailIf you’ve ever wondered why health still feels overwhelming even when you’re trying to do everything right, this conversation is for you. When high-functioning women hear the phrase “good enough health,” the reaction is often immediate.A pause.A raised eyebrow.Maybe even a little discomfort.Because when you are someone who takes responsibility seriously, good enough can sound like settling. Like lowering the bar. Like caring less.But that’s not what Good Enough Health means at all.In this episode, I explain why good enough is not resignation -  it’s resolution.Many capable, intelligent women are doing a lot for their health. They read, research, track, adjust, and try to improve things whenever something feels off. Yet underneath all of that effort, there is often a quiet question running in the background:Am I doing enough?When the bar keeps moving, health never feels settled.You never get to feel like you are actually doing a good job.This episode explores why so much health messaging today lives in two extremes.On one side, we have reactive health — waiting until something breaks before responding.On the other, we have optimization culture — trying to upgrade everything all the time.Neither of these approaches truly supports the lives of busy, capable women.What’s missing is the middle.The space where you can operate intelligently without operating obsessively.That is what Good Enough Health is about.It means defining what enough looks like and building habits that support your life without turning health into constant surveillance or endless optimization.Because intensity might spike for a while.But devotion and consistency are what actually compound over time.When “enough” is clearly defined, health stops feeling like a moving target and starts feeling like something you can stand on.In This Episode We Explore:Why high-functioning women often feel like they are never doing enough for their healthThe difference between reactive health and optimization cultureWhy constantly raising the bar erodes confidence and increases health decision fatigueWhat it means to build sustainable health habits without constant tracking or perfectionismWhy devotion and consistency outperform short bursts of intensityHow defining “enough” creates clarity and confidence in your health decisFollow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  11. 9

    Why You Always Feel Like You Need to Get Back on Track

    Send us Fan MailThere’s a pattern many intelligent, high-functioning women quietly live inside.Something shifts.Energy dips.Stress rises.Your body changes.And suddenly you feel like you need to get back on track.So you tighten up.You reset.You restart your habits.You correct.And before long, you’re starting over with your health again.In this episode, we unpack why you keep starting over with your health — and why that cycle has less to do with discipline and more to do with the health model you’ve been operating inside.Reactive health sounds responsible.It waits for disruption, then responds with intensity.But reactive health is what keeps women trapped in correction cycles:Restarting diets.Rebuilding routines.Recommitting every time life fluctuates.We explore:• The difference between reactive health and proactive health• Why correction cycles feel productive but don’t build consistency• How reset culture reinforces health decision fatigue• The role of capacity vs willpower in sustainable health habits• What structured health systems actually look like for busy, high-functioning womenReactive health has a role. True emergencies require response.But energy fluctuation is not a crisis.Hormonal shifts are not character flaws.Capacity changes are not personal failure.When everything feels like something to fix, starting over becomes the default.Proactive health is different.It doesn’t mean doing more.It doesn’t mean optimizing every variable.It means building sustainable health systems that hold under normal life pressure.Instead of asking, “What do I fix right now?”Proactive health asks, “What would make this steady enough that I don’t have to start over every time life gets busy?”That distinction changes everything.Because health without perfectionism isn’t passive.It’s structured.It’s calibrated.It’s repeatable.If you’re tired of getting back on track and ready to stop starting over with your health, this episode will give you language for what’s actually happening.Next week, we define something important:What does “good enough” actually mean — and why is that not settling, but self-leadership?Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  12. 8

    Why Health Feels Harder the More You Try

    Send us Fan MailThere’s a quiet moment many high-functioning women experience in their health.It doesn’t sound dramatic.It sounds reasonable.“I just need to be more on top of this.”Not overhaul everything.Not start over.Just tighten up a little.Pay closer attention.Be more consistent.Try a little harder.But what happens when health actually starts to feel harder the more you try?In this episode, we unpack why effort can sometimes make health feel heavier instead of clearer — and why trying harder isn’t always what builds consistency.If you’ve ever felt like:You care deeply about your health, but it still feels mentally exhaustingThe more you monitor and manage, the more pressure you feelConsistency starts to feel personalYou’re doing a lot, but it still takes too much mental energyThis conversation will likely feel familiar.We explore:Why high-functioning women default to effortThe difference between effort and structureHow pressure quietly reduces flexibilityWhy sustainable health habits require design, not just disciplineThe connection between capacity and consistencyEffort is not the problem.But when effort is used as a substitute for support, something shifts.Health decision fatigue builds.Pressure increases.Learning narrows into self-evaluation.And health begins to feel like something you’re managing instead of something that supports you.This episode helps you move from managing your health with effort to building sustainable health systems with clarity.We’re not lowering standards.We’re refining how consistency is built.In the next episode, we’ll explore what replaces control when you shift from managing health to structuring it.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  13. 7

    Why You Keep Following Health Advice Without Feeling Certain

    Send us Fan MailWhen health starts to feel high stakes, confusing, or urgent, many women stop asking, “Does this make sense for me?” and start asking, “What am I supposed to be doing?”This episode explores a pattern that is far more common than we talk about: following health advice without feeling fully certain about why.Not because you are uninformed.Not because you lack intelligence.But because modern wellness culture makes uncertainty feel risky.In this episode of Good Enough Health, we unpack:Why health advice often feels urgent, moralized, and difficult to evaluateHow supplements, protocols, and wellness trends become sources of borrowed certaintyWhy following advice can feel safer than sitting in uncertaintyThe psychological cost of relying on external rules instead of internal contextHow pressure increases vigilance and second guessing rather than trustWhy curiosity creates clarity, while pressure collapses itThis is not an episode about judging supplements, health trends, or the choices you have made.It is about understanding why certainty can feel so necessary in the first place.If you have ever found yourself adding something “because you heard it was good for you,” stacking routines without fully knowing what each one is for, or feeling unsettled even while doing all the right things, this conversation will help you slow down and reconnect with context.Because confidence in your health decisions does not come from compliance.It comes from understanding.In the next episode, we explore what happens when trying harder becomes the default response and why effort often increases pressure instead of resolving it.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  14. 6

    Why Taking Care of Your Health Feels Like Pressure

    Send us Fan MailAt some point, taking care of your health stopped feeling supportive.It started feeling heavy.Measured.Monitored.High stakes.If taking care of your health feels like pressure instead of care, there’s a reason for that.In this episode of Good Enough Health, we zoom out from habits and follow-through to examine a deeper shift many intelligent, high-functioning women sense but rarely have language for.Why does taking care of your health feel so stressful now?We explore:• How health became more visible and measurable• Why tracking, monitoring, and optimization quietly raise the stakes• How prevention culture increases pressure as we age• The difference between care and control• Why pressure does not motivate the nervous system• The hidden cost of building health on performance instead of supportHealth didn’t always feel this intense.As conversations around longevity, prevention, and “doing it right” became louder, so did the pressure to manage every variable.What used to feel like care can slowly shift into control.Care responds.Control monitors.Care adapts.Control demands consistency.When health becomes something you manage instead of something that supports you, it starts to feel unsafe.Pressure narrows flexibility.It increases vigilance.It turns meals into tests.It turns habits into evidence.It makes normal fluctuations feel like problems to fix.Over time, building health on pressure costs:• Trust in your body• Ease around food• Flexibility during stressful seasons• Confidence in your own judgmentThis episode reframes health pressure not as a personal failure, but as the predictable result of a system that equates care with control.Because taking care of your health was never meant to feel like performance.And in the next episode, we explore what happens when pressure creates uncertainty — and we begin looking outside ourselves for answers.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  15. 5

    Why Willpower Isn’t the Problem (It’s Capacity)

    Send us Fan MailIf you know what to do for your health but still struggle to follow through, you’ve probably blamed willpower at some point.Most of us have.We’re taught that consistency comes from discipline.That habits stick if we want them badly enough.That struggling means we need to try harder.But what if willpower isn’t the problem?In this episode of Good Enough Health, we explore why consistency has less to do with discipline and more to do with capacity.If you’ve ever thought:• Why don’t I have enough willpower?• Why can I stay consistent sometimes but not others?• Why do healthy habits fall apart when life gets stressful?• Why does follow-through feel unpredictable?This episode offers a different explanation.Habits don’t exist in isolation.They live inside nervous systems.And nervous systems have limits.You’ll learn:• Why willpower doesn’t work the way we think it does• What “capacity” actually means in real life• How stress, hormones, sleep, and emotional load affect consistency• Why skills can feel accessible one day and out of reach the next• How pressure reduces capacity instead of strengthening itThrough a real client example, we unpack how habits can work beautifully when life is steady and still feel harder when demands increase — not because you failed, but because your system is already carrying more.Consistency is contextual.When stress rises, capacity shifts.When capacity shifts, access to skills changes.That isn’t weakness.It’s physiology.If you’ve ever told yourself “I don’t have a good track record” or “I always fall off,” this conversation will help you see those moments differently — as information about load, not evidence against you.Because sustainable health isn’t built on willpower.It’s built on understanding what your system can realistically hold — and designing from there.And in Episode 6, we expand on what happens when trying harder replaces support.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  16. 4

    Why Eating Feels Mentally Exhausting (Understanding Food Noise)

    Send us Fan MailEating isn’t just about food anymore.It’s planning.Second guessing.Monitoring.Wondering if you did it “right.”Feeling guilt even when you’re trying your best.For many women, eating feels mentally exhausting — not physically difficult, but mentally loud.In this episode of Good Enough Health, we unpack why eating feels mentally exhausting and introduce the concept of food noise in a way that brings clarity instead of blame.If you’ve ever experienced:• Constant thoughts about food• Overthinking every meal• Guilt no matter what you choose• Mental exhaustion around eating• A loud internal commentary about “good” and “bad” foodsYou’re not imagining it.We explore:• What food noise actually is (and what it isn’t)• Why food noise is learned, not a personal defect• How diet culture and food rules create mental exhaustion• Why body monitoring increases cognitive load• How ADHD and neurodivergent brains may experience food noise differently• Why medications may quiet appetite or attention without addressing deeper belief systemsFood noise isn’t about hunger.It’s the cognitive and emotional chatter that builds when food becomes something to monitor, manage, and moralize.Over time, that constant mental processing creates decision fatigue, guilt, and exhaustion.Instead of treating food noise as something broken in you, this episode reframes it as an adaptive response to pressure — one that can be understood and gradually untangled.Because mental exhaustion around food isn’t a character flaw.It’s often the result of living in a system that taught you to distrust your body.And in Episode 3, we unpack one of the biggest reasons food noise sticks around: capacity vs willpower.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  17. 3

    Why You Know What to Do for Your Health But Still Can’t Follow Through

    Send us Fan MailThere’s a quiet frustration many high-functioning women carry:“I know what I should be doing for my health… so why can’t I just do it?”You’ve read the books.Saved the posts.Listened to the podcasts.You know what works.And yet, following through on healthy habits can feel inconsistent, exhausting, or impossible.In this first episode of Good Enough Health, we unpack why knowing what to do for your health is rarely the real issue — and why the gap between knowledge and follow-through often has nothing to do with motivation or discipline.If you’ve ever wondered:• Why you know what to do but still can’t follow through• Why consistency feels harder than it should• Why healthy habits fall apart even when you care• Why you struggle to stay consistent with health goalsThis episode will give you a different lens.We explore:• The difference between knowledge and capacity• Why willpower isn’t the missing piece• How mental load and emotional bandwidth affect consistency• Why expectations that don’t match capacity quietly create pressure• How comparison distorts what sustainable health habits actually look likeThe problem isn’t that you don’t want it badly enough.Often, the problem is trying to build health on top of already full lives without accounting for energy, bandwidth, and adaptability.Consistency isn’t about forcing the same routine forever.It’s about building habits that flex with real life — without turning inconsistency into self-judgment.If you’ve been blaming yourself for not following through, this episode will help you understand what’s actually happening beneath the surface.And in Episode 3, we go deeper into one of the most overlooked pieces of health consistency: capacity vs. willpower.Because struggling doesn’t mean you’re failing.It often means the design needs adjustment.Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

  18. 2

    Trailer | Good Enough Health

    Send us Fan MailGood Enough Health is a podcast for women who care about their health but feel tired of trying to control their bodies.If you know what to do, but struggle to do it consistently…If health feels mentally exhausting instead of supportive…If food, rest, and self care come with pressure, guilt, or second guessing…you’re not alone.Hosted by registered dietitian Lindsay Martens, this podcast explores why health habits can feel so hard when your body is overwhelmed, overextended, and constantly reacting to the world around it.You’ll hear grounded science, gentle reframes, and thoughtful conversations that make room for nuance not perfection.This is about learning how to work with your body instead of against it so health stops feeling like pressure and starts feeling possible again.Welcome to Good Enough Health.New episodes every week. Follow the Podcast If you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to Good Enough Health so you don’t miss future conversations about sustainable health habits and building a version of health that supports your real life.New episodes release every week.This podcast is for busy women who want structure, clarity, and a realistic approach to health.The Good Enough Health Club The Good Enough Health Club helps women build realistic health habits with structure and support that fit a full life.Because health should support your life, not become another full-time job. Inside, we focus on one area each month so you can: build habits that work in a full life  make the basics of health feel simpler and more doable  create realistic structure and follow-through  take care of your health without all-or-nothing thinkingExplore the Club: https://lindsaymartensnutrition.com/club*** This podcast is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace individualized medical, nutrition, or mental health care. For support specific to your needs, please consult a qualified healthcare provider. 

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Good Enough Health is a women’s health podcast for intelligent, high-functioning women who are done improvising their health and ready to build structured systems that support their leadership and real life.Hosted by Lindsay Martens, Registered Dietitian and women’s health strategist, this show explores how to move from reactive health to sustainable health systems — so you stop starting over and start operating with clarity.If you care about your health and already know a lot — but still find yourself restarting routines, overcommitting to plans, or feeling the mental load of constant health decisions — you are not lacking willpower.You are likely operating without structure.Each episode breaks down topics like:• sustainable health habits for busy women• capacity vs willpower• health decision fatigue• structured health systems• how to stop starting over with your diet• strategi

HOSTED BY

Lindsay Martens | Registered Dietitian & Women’s Health Strategist

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