Histamine Health Coach

PODCAST · health

Histamine Health Coach

Welcome to Histamine Health Coach, the podcast for women ready to take control of their histamine intolerance, calm unpredictable symptoms, and feel like themselves again—without fear, overwhelm, or extreme restrictions.I’m Teresa, a Functional Medicine Certified Health Coach who’s been there—living with mast cell issues, hives, and the daily uncertainty that comes with histamine-related conditions. Here, we go beyond just lists of “yes” and “no” foods. You’ll get real talk on how to support your body through nutrition, stress management, movement, and mindset—plus practical tips to help you enjoy life again.Whether you’re navigating MCAS, mastocytosis, or just curious if histamine is behind your symptoms, you’ll find education, encouragement, and simple tools to help you feel more resilient, more energetic, and more at ease in your own skin.Ready to feel better? Let’s get started.

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    Episode 34 - Histamine Intolerance And The Nighttime Alarm System

    Send us Fan MailYou crawl into bed exhausted, fall asleep, and then it happens again: you wake up in the middle of the night and your body feels wide awake. Maybe it’s the same window every night. Maybe your mind spins, you feel warm or restless, or you even notice itching, flushing, or that uncomfortable “on” feeling that makes no sense when you were so tired at bedtime.I’m Teresa Christensen, a functional medicine certified health coach, and I live with histamine intolerance too. Here, I unpack a different way to understand nighttime awakenings and insomnia: sometimes the real issue isn’t sleep itself, it’s what your body is doing while you’re trying to sleep. We talk about why sleep is supposed to be a time of deep regulation, from hormone balance to blood sugar control, and what changes when your system stays slightly activated instead of settling into repair.You’ll hear how histamine supports wakefulness, why nighttime histamine can feel like a surge in a sensitive body, and how stress hormones like adrenaline and cortisol can flip the switch from rest to alert. I also share a personal CGM experiment that revealed unexpected overnight blood sugar changes, making it clear that a “random” wake up can actually be your body stabilizing in real time. We end with a mindset shift that helps: asking what your body is trying to regulate, and focusing on rhythm, safety cues, and overall load rather than blaming yourself for one bad night.If this resonates, subscribe for more practical support for histamine intolerance, share this with a friend who wakes up at 2 a.m., and leave a review so more women can find relief. What time do you usually wake up at night?I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 33 - Latex: The Hidden Trigger (With an Added Ingredient)

    Send us Fan MailA “simple” bandage shouldn’t leave your skin looking and feeling burned for days, yet that’s exactly what can happen when latex enters the picture and your histamine threshold is already low. We’re unpacking the sneaky role of hidden latex exposure in histamine intolerance, MCAS, and mast cell flares, especially when reactions feel random or out of proportion. If you’ve ever thought, “Why is my body doing this?” this conversation offers a missing piece that can finally make the pattern click.I share my personal experiences with latex burns from bandages, immediate stinging from a cosmetic sponge, and welts triggered by workout clothes where sweat and friction turn an elastic waistband into a problem. We break down the difference between Type 1 IgE latex allergy and Type 4 delayed contact sensitivity, plus why heat, moisture, and skin irritation can amplify symptoms when your system is already primed for a histamine storm.We also talk about a topic many people don’t connect to latex at all: condoms. If you’ve had burning, itching, or pain after sex, natural rubber latex may be worth considering, and there are latex-free alternatives like polyisoprene options (including SKYN). Then we get practical with everyday steps: requesting latex-free supplies at the dentist and doctor, choosing safer bandages, rethinking makeup tools, and making smarter clothing choices to reduce triggers.If this helps you see your symptoms differently, subscribe, share the episode with a friend who needs answers, and leave a review so more women can find real support for histamine intolerance and MCAS. What’s one “random” reaction you’re ready to investigate?Here's the link to Histamine, Latex, and Food - What's the connection?https://histaminehealthcoach.com/articles-%26-episodes/f/histamine-latex-and-food%E2%80%94what%E2%80%99s-the-connectionI’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 32 - Wheat Is Not High Histamine… So Why Is It Wrecking Your Week?

    Send us Fan MailWheat can feel like the ultimate “gotcha” food when you live with histamine intolerance. One week you eat bread with no problem, the next week you get headaches, body aches, GI symptoms, or brain fog and you start questioning everything. We get why that spiral happens, and we slow it down with a more realistic lens: wheat is not usually a high histamine food, but it can still affect your histamine load and push a full histamine bucket over the edge.We walk through my own recent experiment with eating more wheat at home and what changed when I simply pulled back without going extreme. From there we unpack the hidden variables that make wheat such a confusing suspect: portion size, frequency, blood sugar swings, digestion, stress, sleep, and what else your body is managing. We also talk about the “wheat rarely shows up alone” problem, because bread often comes with processed meats, cheese, tomato sauce, and leftovers, all of which can raise histamine or create a stack of triggers that gets mislabeled as a gluten issue.We also zoom out to the bigger story: the gluten-free era, the COVID bread baking boom, and why trends can’t replace body awareness. If you are navigating histamine intolerance, low histamine diet choices, or suspected wheat sensitivity, you’ll leave with a grounded way to use food, mood, and symptom tracking to find patterns without turning your diet into a rulebook.If this helps, subscribe, share it with a friend who feels stuck with food, and leave a review so more women can find the show. What has been your most confusing “trigger” food lately?I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 31 - Not Every Symptom Means You Have A Food Allergy

    Send us Fan Mail“I’m allergic” is the fastest way to get taken seriously at a restaurant, but it can also keep you stuck in confusion about what’s really happening in your body. I’m Teresa Christensen, a functional medicine certified health coach living with histamine intolerance, and I’m breaking down the real difference between true food allergies, food intolerances, and everyday food choices that get mislabeled as both.We start with the clearest line in the sand: an IgE-mediated food allergy. I explain what happens when the immune system flags a food protein as dangerous, why histamine is released, and why symptoms like hives, swelling, vomiting, breathing trouble, and anaphylaxis can come on quickly and require strict avoidance. We also talk about consistency, one of the biggest clues that separates a classic allergy from other types of food reactions.Then we move into histamine intolerance and the “histamine bucket” concept. If you’ve ever felt fine with a food one day and reacted the next, this framework helps it make sense. We cover how histamine can build from high-histamine foods or mast cell release, how enzymes like DAO and HNMT factor in, and why stress, sleep, hormones, and environmental exposures can change your threshold. You’ll walk away with a calmer way to think about symptoms like itching, flushing, headaches, bloating, and fatigue without automatically assuming “allergy.”If you’re ready to rebuild trust with food and stop over-restricting, listen now, share this with a friend who needs it, and subscribe so you don’t miss what’s next. After you listen, will you leave a review and tell me what food reaction you want help untangling?I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 30 - When Blood Sugar Spikes Mimic Histamine Intolerance

    Send us Fan MailWhat if the flare you blamed on dinner wasn’t a food reaction at all, but a blood sugar swing that pushed your mast cells over the edge? We pull back the curtain on the hidden link between glucose variability, inflammation, and histamine symptoms—and why the path to calm often starts with steadier meals, not deeper restriction.First, we map the biology in plain language. Chronic high blood sugar fuels oxidative stress and advanced glycation end products, turning up cytokines like IL-6 and TNF alpha that prime mast cells to degranulate. Low blood sugar, meanwhile, slams the sympathetic system with adrenaline and cortisol, creating a stress chemistry that feels identical to a histamine flare: flushing, itching, anxiety, heart racing, brain fog. That’s how a “safe” lunch can seem to betray you an hour later. The culprit is often the spike-and-crash, not the ingredient.From there, we get practical. We share how to smooth glucose curves with balanced meals—protein, healthy fats, fiber, and thoughtfully paired carbohydrates—so insulin rises gently and drops predictably. We talk about midlife shifts in estrogen, progesterone, cortisol, and sleep that change insulin sensitivity, why grazing on crackers or skipping breakfast backfires, and how steadiness can make weight regulation easier by lowering background inflammation. The mantra returns again and again: you cannot starve your way into mast cell stability; you build it.We also offer a clear, non-judgmental look at GLP-1 medications. For some, reducing post-meal spikes, improving insulin signaling, and lowering systemic inflammation can remove a layer of immune activation that keeps symptoms loud, even without weight loss goals. For others—especially if underfueling is already an issue—appetite suppression can become a new stressor. The key question: does the tool create steadiness while nourishment stays intact?If you’re ready to swap food fear for metabolic calm, join us. Subscribe, share this episode with someone who needs a reframe, and leave a review to help more people find steady ground.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 29 - How Stress, Genes, and Environment Shape MCAS

    Send us Fan MailWhat if your body isn’t broken, but brilliant at surviving—and ready to learn safety? We unpack how epigenetics and nervous system regulation shape MCAS and histamine intolerance, showing why genes are not destiny and how daily choices flip the switches that guide inflammation and immune tone.We start by reframing the “Is MCAS genetic?” question. While rare mast cell diseases can be mutation-driven, most MCAS looks multifactorial: inherited tendencies meet environment, stress load, sleep disruption, food quality, and toxin exposure. Teresa shares family history and career stress that map a lineage of bracing and hypervigilance—useful for survival, costly for regulation. From there, we make epigenetics practical: if genes are the blueprint, epigenetic marks are the volume knobs, turning pathways up or down based on signals like circadian rhythm, blood sugar stability, connection, and true rest.Then we zoom into the biology. Mast cells sit at the intersection of immune and nervous systems, listening to cortisol, adrenaline, and neural cues. When the nervous system stays on high alert, mast cells often follow, fueling flushing, hives, GI distress, and tachycardia. That doesn’t reduce symptoms to “just stress.” It validates them while revealing leverage points: steady sleep and light exposure to calm circadian noise, protein-anchored meals to smooth glucose swings, gentle movement to support lymph and resilience, simplifying products to lower environmental load, and relational safety plus breath practices to teach a braced system to stand down.The result is a hopeful, actionable path from survival to regulation. No silver bullets, no shame—just consistent signals that nudge inflammation lower and rebuild trust with your body. If you’re ready to live well with histamine intolerance rather than chase every trigger, this conversation offers both science and steps you can start today.Want support applying this in real life? Subscribe, share with someone who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find the show. To work with Teresa, visit histaminehealthcoach.com or email [email protected] with the word “ready.”I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 28 - Cold, Calm, And In Control

    Send us Fan MailWhat if relief from histamine intolerance comes not from avoiding every trigger, but from meeting the right ones in the right dose? We dig into the gentle art of hormesis—small, intentional stressors paired with real recovery—to help your body adapt, calm inflammation, and rebuild trust with food, movement, and daily life. Through a personal story of winter cold, sauna heat, and the surprising ease of a cool rinse, we unpack how temperature contrast, short fasting windows, and right-sized exercise can shift your system from bracing to responding.I walk through the science in everyday language: how brief stress can nudge mitochondria to produce cleaner energy, why less oxidative waste can quiet inflammation, and how cellular housekeeping improves communication across the immune and nervous systems. For women living on high alert, these micro-practices become a roadmap to safety—because resilience grows where stress meets recovery, not where you push through pain. You’ll learn the crucial guardrails: stabilize meals and sleep first, start with tiny doses, change one variable at a time, and always end with recovery so the body feels protected, not provoked.If you’ve felt stuck reacting, restricting, and second-guessing, this conversation offers practical steps to feel clearer and more grounded: warm nights for sleep, a brief cool rinse for morning focus, steady blood sugar before any fasting attempt, and movement that leaves you more present than depleted. Ready to try one small change this week and notice how your body responds? Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review with the gentle practice you’ll test next.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 27 - Your Body Is Talking: Learn What Changes Say

    Send us Fan MailYour body notices structural change before you do. A small shift in the spine can ripple through fascia, nerves, and organs, and the result might look like eased headaches, a heavier yawn, digestive changes, or a brief spike of anxiety hours later. We unpack how structure guides function and why these responses are messages worth decoding, not red flags to fear. With clear, nonjudgmental language and practical steps, we turn vague discomfort into a readable map you can use to support your health.We start by connecting pre‑adjustment clues—neck tension, shallow breathing, a sense of compression—to the way the body compensates over time. From there, we trace how spinal input can reshape gut signaling and why the esophagus, diaphragm, and posture sit on the same team. You’ll hear how fascial networks link muscles to organs, why sensitive nervous systems (including those with mast cell involvement) might feel more, not less, at first, and how hydration steadies circulation, lymph, and neural tone. We also zoom out to bone health, explaining how load, hormones, and time remodel the skeleton and why consistency beats intensity.Most importantly, we share accessible aftercare you can use right away: rest that lowers baseline arousal, gentle walks and light mobility to keep fluids moving, and breath practices with longer exhales to cue safety. Instead of chasing relief with force, we focus on pacing, sensory grounding, and simple inputs that help the system integrate change. The takeaway is empowering and practical—symptoms are data. When you track timing, triggers, and trajectories, you learn how to respond without panic and build trust with your body again.If this conversation resonates, tap follow, share it with a friend who’s navigating chiropractic care or nervous system sensitivity, and leave a quick review to help others find the show. Your stories guide future episodes—send a note and tell us what your body’s been saying lately.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 26 - Cook Smart For Calmer Histamines: Why Cooking Methods Matter More Than You Think

    Send us Fan MailWhat if the real trigger isn’t the food on your plate, but the way it’s cooked? We dig into the hidden link between high-heat browning, advanced glycation end products (AGEs), oxidative stress, and the histamine symptoms that make your day feel unpredictable. Without fear or food rules, we break down how heat, time, and moisture change your body’s response and how small tweaks can rebuild trust with meals you already love.We start with flavor—because browning tastes great—and then map the science behind that golden crust. You’ll learn why AGEs accumulate, how they stir up low-grade inflammation, and why that can lower your threshold for itching, flushing, brain fog, and poor sleep. We connect oxidative stress to daily stressors, explain why two people can eat the same dish and feel totally different, and introduce the concept of inflammaging: the slow, quiet wear-and-tear that shapes how you age. Most importantly, we turn those ideas into everyday choices that reduce total load without sacrificing joy.From practical swaps like steaming, simmering, pressure cooking, and quicker cook times to smart pairing—protein, fat, and fiber—we show how to buffer AGEs and calm the nervous system. You’ll hear why the air fryer can be a friend when used for speed rather than deep browning, how repeated reheating raises histamine, and what to do if you’re living with a short list of safe foods. Rotate methods, shorten time, add fiber and color, and notice subtle wins: steadier energy, clearer head, calmer skin.If you’ve wondered why a “safe” meal sometimes lands wrong, this conversation offers a clear, compassionate roadmap. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs relief, and leave a review to help others find practical tools for calmer histamines and more confident cooking.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 25 - Faith As A Quiet Anchor

    Send us Fan MailWhen your body feels unpredictable and the answers don’t come fast enough, where do you place your trust? Teresa invites you into a quieter lane of healing—one that starts with belief, connection, and the gentle rituals that help the nervous system feel safe. Drawing on early memories of church pews, the hush of a campus chapel, and the stillness of snowy sunrise walks, she shares how spiritual grounding—religious or not—can soften fear and steady the mind when symptoms surge.We unpack why connection to something larger than ourselves can be a powerful health tool: it reduces isolation, buffers uncertainty, and creates inner safety that supports better regulation. From prayer and scripture to yoga, mindful movement, and headphone-free walks, Teresa offers simple, repeatable practices that fit real life. You’ll hear how hospitals make room for chaplains and quiet spaces, why families bring symbols of faith to the bedside, and how online prayer requests reveal a shared instinct toward communal care. None of these rituals promise a cure; they change the experience of illness by transforming panic into presence and overwhelm into breath.If you’re navigating histamine intolerance or any chronic condition that leaves you on edge, this conversation makes space for both science and spirit. You’ll walk away with practical ways to anchor your day—morning moments of stillness, gratitude before meals, and nightly release rituals—that signal safety to your body and help you rebuild trust with food and yourself. Press play to experiment with one gentle practice, notice what shifts, and keep what brings you peace. If this resonates, subscribe, share with a friend who needs it, and leave a review to help others find the show.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 24 - How Organic and Grass-Fed Choices Affect Histamine

    Send us Fan MailYour tomato isn’t the problem—your histamine bucket might be. We dig into a persistent myth around organic produce and grass-fed meats: they don’t lower histamine in the food, but they can lower the overall stress on your body so you react less. With a clear, friendly breakdown of DAO versus HNMT, we connect the dots between pesticides, environmental load, and the internal histamine your tissues release when inflammation runs high.We explore the ripple effect that many women with histamine intolerance feel every day: more toxins raise baseline inflammation, sensitize mast cells, and push HNMT to its limit. That’s why the same meal can feel safe one week and edgy the next. You’ll hear how soil health shapes nutrient density—more antioxidants, more polyphenols, more support for detox—and why that helps your system stay steadier even when your menu doesn’t look perfect. We also name the safe food trap and explain how very low fiber can make reintroductions feel like “histamine reactions” when they’re really a gut readiness issue.On the protein side, we clarify what grass-fed actually delivers: a calmer fat profile that can reduce inflammation, not a lower histamine count. You’ll get practical guidance you can use today—when to choose organic, when conventional wins, how to shop smarter by reading ingredients, and why frozen organic vegetables and berries are budget-friendly allies that pause histamine growth and add color back to your plate. By the end, you’ll have a kinder framework for choosing food that supports your nervous system, detox pathways, and histamine tolerance without chasing perfection.Want more tools to expand your capacity and feel safer with food? Explore the Can I Eat This blog series, grab the Low Histamine Diet Starter Plan, and subscribe for weekly notes from the coach’s desk. If this conversation helped, share it with a friend and leave a review—your support helps others find their way back to nourishment.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 23 - Plastic, People, And Peace

    Send us Fan MailWhat if detox had nothing to do with juice cleanses and everything to do with feeling safe in your body? We take a clear-eyed look at the hidden sources that keep histamine symptoms flaring—heat plus plastic in the kitchen, nonstick fumes, synthetic fragrances, stale indoor air, and the emotional pressure of jobs and relationships that drain your energy.We start in the everyday places people overlook: oils and syrups stored in warm plastic, takeout containers popped into microwaves, and utensils that break down with heat. Then we trade convenience for durable, low-tox tools—cast iron for nonstick, glass and ceramic for reheating, stainless and wood for plastic—so you can reduce exposure without overhauling your entire routine. We widen the lens to home air quality, from fabric softeners and plug-in air fresheners to wood smoke and mold, and share simple fixes like unscented detergents, vinegar and baking soda cleaning, mindful window use, and air purifiers.The conversation also tackles the emotional side of toxic load. Chronic stress keeps the nervous system in fight or flight, magnifying inflammation and histamine reactivity. Progress beats perfection here: set boundaries, take short pauses, and invite more of what soothes—music, light, pets, and spaces that feel like a welcome. By breaking the heat-and-plastic pairing, streamlining products, and choosing supportive relationships, you lower the background noise that overwhelms your body.If you’re ready to calm symptoms with practical, sustainable steps, this guide is your starting point. Subscribe to stay connected, share this episode with a friend who needs a gentler path, and leave a review to help more listeners find low-tox, nervous-system-friendly living.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 22 - Fix The Engine, Calm The Histamine

    Send us Fan MailWhat if your toughest histamine symptoms aren’t just about what’s on your plate, but what’s happening inside your cells? We dig into the surprising link between mitochondrial function and histamine intolerance, showing how your body’s energy system shapes reactions like headaches, flushing, itching, and brain fog—even when your diet looks dialed in.I break down how DAO and HNMT—the enzymes that clear histamine in the gut and inside cells—depend on energy, nutrients, and antioxidant balance to work well. You’ll learn why sluggish mitochondria and rising oxidative stress can slow these enzymes and create a feedback loop of fatigue, sensitivity, and inflammation. From there, we map a practical plan: histamine-friendly, colorful foods for antioxidant support; quality proteins and healthy fats for cellular repair; gentle movement to spark mitochondrial biogenesis; and sleep routines that restore nightly recovery. We also tackle chronic stress with extended exhale breathing and mindfulness, plus simple ways to cut everyday toxins like synthetic fragrances and plastics.If symptoms continue despite good habits, I outline when to work with a functional medicine practitioner and what targeted testing can reveal about mitochondrial function, oxidative stress markers, and enzyme activity. The goal isn’t lifelong restriction—it’s a stronger system that handles triggers with more ease. By caring for your mitochondria, you support energy, mood, resilience, and your capacity to enjoy food without fear.If this message resonates, subscribe for more guidance and stories, share the episode with someone who needs steadier energy, and leave a review so others can find these tools. Your body can feel safer and steadier—let’s build that foundation together.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 21 - Your Brain Doesn’t Read Clocks, It Reads Light

    Send us Fan MailWe explore how the fall time change disrupts circadian rhythm and why women with histamine intolerance often feel foggy, wired, and fatigued. We share light-based strategies, gentle movement, hydration, and steady meals to steady mood and energy and reframe the season as a reset.• why the brain follows light, not clocks• how time change triggers fatigue, mood dips, brain fog, and flares• light therapy lamps and morning sunlight as anchors• benefits of brief, gentle movement across the day• hydration as a quick focus reset• steady meals with protein, fats, and fiber for balance• seasonal mindset shift from dread to reset• links to low histamine diet starter plan and newsletterYou can download my low histamine diet starter plan. You’ll find the link right on my homepage at histaminehealthcoach.com. You can subscribe to my mailing list at histaminehealthcoach.com to get helpful tips, stories, and support delivered right to your inbox. If this episode had resonated with you, share it with a friend who might also be feeling the seasonal shift.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 20 - Power, Restored

    Send us Fan MailWhat if power isn’t about hitting 100%—but about staying plugged into what gives you energy, confidence, and calm? Teresa opens up about a raw, unforgettable moment of feeling “battery exhausted,” then walks through the simple, steady practices that rebuilt trust with her body and made daily life with histamine intolerance feel possible again.We explore a clear framework for recharging: meal planning that removes fear and decision fatigue, sleep routines that stabilize histamine and mood, and breath work that acts like a fast charger for the nervous system. You’ll hear why preparation beats perfection, how boundaries become your power-saving mode, and the surprising ways community support strengthens resilience. Along the way, Teresa shares practical scripts, small habit ideas, and compassionate reframes that help you move from survival mode to a more grounded, confident rhythm.If you’ve been skipping social plans, second-guessing every bite, or waking up already tired, this conversation offers a map back to yourself. Think predictable meals, earlier lights out, longer exhales, and gentle movement on days you feel even a little better. Each small action adds a percent or two to your battery, and over time that becomes the power to live well with histamine intolerance instead of fighting against it. Ready to take a gentle first step? Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs it, and leave a review with one habit you’ll try this week. Your body isn’t broken—it’s asking to recharge.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  16. 19

    Episode 19 - Pregnancy, Histamine, Clarity

    Send us Fan MailYour body isn’t confused—you’re watching a delicate tug-of-war between rising estrogen, steadying progesterone, and mast cells that decide how loudly histamine speaks. We unpack that push–pull with clear, compassionate guidance so you can tell the difference between “just pregnancy” and histamine overload, and make small choices that add up to big relief. From first-trimester queasiness through late-term flushing, we explain how immune recalibration shapes symptoms, why DAO and HNMT matter, and how patterns can shift from calmer second trimester to a possible late bump when estrogen peaks.We walk through practical steps that respect both pregnancy safety and histamine sensitivity. On the plate, that means fresher is better: colorful produce, lean proteins cooked close to mealtime, and a careful eye on leftovers and fermented or aged foods. We spotlight seafood pitfalls—why tuna and mackerel build histamine fast—and align them with mercury guidance so you can choose safer options without anxiety. Beyond food, we share low-effort habits that make a real difference: slow breathing, prenatal-friendly movement, fragrance-free products, an air purifier for pollen-heavy days, hydration that supports energy and headache control, and a cool bedroom to reduce night flushing.You’ll also get a simple framework for journaling symptoms, meals, and exposures to reveal patterns you can act on with your OBGYN, allergist, or nutrition professional. And we look ahead to postpartum: how lower estrogen can help, how sleep debt and stress can hinder, and which routines keep you steady while you bond with your baby. If this season feels messy, you’re not alone—and you don’t need a perfect plan to feel better. Subscribe, share this episode with someone who needs it, and leave a review to help more women find these tools. Ready for tailored support? Reach out at histaminehealthcoach.com.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  17. 18

    Episode 18 - Beyond the Medicine Cabinet: Rethinking Histamine Management

    Send us Fan MailStepping away from medication dependence doesn't happen overnight. For years, antihistamines were my constant companions—seven different prescriptions daily that I believed were essential to my survival with histamine intolerance and mast cell activation syndrome. My medicine cabinet told the story: H1s, H2s, PPIs, asthma inhalers, eye drops, and nasal sprays, each addressing different symptoms of the same underlying condition.When my allergist announced his retirement, I faced a pivotal moment of truth: continue medication stacking or explore another path? This episode unpacks the crucial differences between H1 antihistamines (like Allegra, Zyrtec, and Claritin) that target classic allergy symptoms and H2 antihistamines (such as Zantac and Pepcid) that address stomach acid and GI issues. I share my personal panic when Zantac was pulled from shelves in 2020 and how that disruption became part of my journey toward a more holistic approach.Through functional medicine, I discovered that while antihistamines can provide necessary relief, they're just one piece in a complex puzzle that includes hormones, stress, nutrition, and environmental factors. Today, my approach to histamine intolerance has fundamentally shifted—I no longer reach automatically for medication but instead look for root causes while using pharmaceuticals thoughtfully when truly needed. Whether you're currently taking multiple antihistamines or simply exploring options for managing histamine-related symptoms, this episode offers both practical information and encouragement that a different relationship with medication is possible. Ready to rethink your approach to histamine management? Visit histaminehealthcoach.com for resources to support your journey toward sustainable wellness.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  18. 17

    Episode 17 - Hot Flash or Histamine Flush? The Perimenopause Puzzle

    Send us Fan MailThe mysterious connection between perimenopause and histamine intolerance finally explained! If you've wondered why your perimenopause symptoms feel more intense than what friends describe, this episode reveals the hidden mechanism making your experience uniquely challenging.Perimenopause isn't the steady hormone decline many expect—it's a rollercoaster where estrogen spikes trigger mast cells to release histamine while simultaneously reducing your body's ability to break it down. Meanwhile, progesterone—your body's natural "calm down" signal for mast cells—steadily declines, creating the perfect storm for histamine overload. This explains why symptoms like hot flashes, migraines, anxiety, and digestive issues can feel overwhelming during this transition.What makes diagnosis particularly frustrating is how perimenopause and histamine symptoms mirror each other. Doctors often dismiss everything as "just hormones" when histamine is actually amplifying your experience. Even birth control, frequently prescribed during perimenopause, comes with complexities—synthetic hormones can still trigger histamine reactions in sensitive individuals, explaining why some women feel worse on hormonal contraceptives.The most powerful takeaway? You're not imagining things or overreacting. Your body is navigating the double impact of shifting hormones and histamine reactivity. Simple strategies like stabilizing blood sugar, managing stress, and proper hydration can make a significant difference in how you feel. When you understand this connection, you can stop blaming yourself and start finding practical ways to feel more like yourself again during this transformative life stage.Have you noticed your histamine symptoms changing during different phases of your cycle? Share your experience or reach out directly at [email protected]—I'd love to hear your story.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  19. 16

    Episode 16 - Rest to Reset: Sleep's Critical Role in Managing Histamine Intolerance

    Send us Fan MailEver found yourself wide awake at 3 AM, itchy and restless, wondering why your body seems to sabotage your sleep? The connection between histamine intolerance and disrupted sleep patterns runs deeper than most realize.Sleep isn't just about rest—it's a foundational element of histamine regulation. During quality sleep, your brain undergoes a crucial "rinse cycle" called glymphatic flow, washing away inflammatory compounds and resetting your system. For those of us navigating histamine intolerance, this cleansing process becomes even more vital, yet often more elusive.Those middle-of-the-night wake-ups with itching, congestion, or racing thoughts have a name: histamine dumps. They happen when mast cells become especially active during sleep cycles, releasing histamine when your body should be resting. Combined with hormonal fluctuations (particularly during perimenopause), environmental triggers, and digestive activity, it creates the perfect storm for disrupted sleep.The good news? Small, consistent changes can transform your sleep quality. Dimming lights before bed supports natural melatonin production, while keeping your bedroom between 63-68°F creates optimal sleep conditions. Timing matters too—finishing your low-histamine dinner several hours before bedtime gives your body time to digest, reducing overnight histamine release.Tracking your sleep—whether through apps like Sleep Cycle or simply journaling—helps identify patterns and triggers unique to your body. These insights become powerful tools for reclaiming restful nights and clearer mornings. Remember, quality sleep isn't a luxury when managing histamine intolerance—it's essential medicine for your sensitive system.Visit histaminehealthcoach.com for resources and personalized support in calming your symptoms and recognizing triggers. Your journey toward better sleep and balanced histamine levels starts with understanding this crucial connection.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  20. 15

    Episode 15 - The Female Hormone-Histamine Connection

    Send us Fan MailEver wondered why your symptoms seem to flare right before your period? The answer lies in the fascinating and often overlooked connection between female hormones and histamine intolerance. Women are twice as likely to suffer from histamine-related issues compared to men, and it's not by chance. Your body's natural hormone fluctuations create a perfect storm for histamine sensitivity. When estrogen rises before ovulation and menstruation, it activates mast cells throughout your body, triggering histamine release. Meanwhile, this same estrogen suppresses DAO, the enzyme responsible for breaking down histamine in your digestive system. Adding to this challenging cascade, progesterone—which normally helps stabilize mast cells—drops dramatically before your period, removing one of your body's natural protective barriers.My own journey with histamine intolerance took an unexpected turn after my complete hysterectomy in 2017. Following surgery, I experienced months of symptom relief that seemed miraculous—energy returned, digestion normalized, and food sensitivities disappeared. This personal revelation led me to investigate the hormone-histamine connection that affects so many women during various life stages including perimenopause, menopause, pregnancy, and throughout the monthly cycle.Understanding this connection isn't just fascinating—it's empowering. Once you recognize how your hormones influence histamine levels, you can begin to anticipate symptom patterns, identify triggers, and work with your body's natural rhythms rather than against them. Share your own experience with hormones and histamine by emailing [email protected], and don't miss our previous episodes on DAO (episode 7) and HNMT (episode 10) to deepen your understanding of histamine metabolism.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  21. 14

    Episode 14 - Latex: The Hidden Trigger

    Send us Fan MailMysterious skin reactions happen to many women with histamine intolerance, but the source often remains elusive. Through years of painful trial and error, I discovered a common culprit lurking in countless everyday items: latex. What began as unexplained "burns" from ordinary bandages evolved into a broader understanding of how this ubiquitous material was triggering my histamine system.The detective work started when bandages left my skin inflamed and irritated for days. Later, I noticed welts forming along my waistband and sports bra lines during workouts—but curiously, only when I was sweating. These seemingly disconnected experiences shared a common thread: latex combined with moisture was creating the perfect storm for my already sensitive histamine system. This sensitivity isn't limited to obvious sources like gloves or balloons—it hides in elastic bands, cosmetic applicators, medical supplies, and even intimate products like condoms, where the combination of latex and moisture can trigger especially uncomfortable reactions.For those of us navigating histamine intolerance or mast cell issues, our bodies operate with a lower threshold for triggering reactions. Understanding the difference between immediate Type 1 latex allergies and delayed Type 4 sensitivities helped me connect these dots and make crucial changes to my daily habits. I've switched to latex-free alternatives like Next Care bandages, cotton bras, nylon/spandex compression sleeves, and non-latex cosmetic tools. These simple adjustments have dramatically reduced my unexpected flare-ups and improved my quality of life. If you're experiencing unexplained skin irritation, burning, or welts—especially after using medical supplies or during/after exercise—consider investigating the hidden latex in your life. Your body might be sending signals you've been missing. Have you noticed similar reactions? Join our Facebook community "I Don't Eat Leftovers" where women like us share experiences and solutions for our unique challenges.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  22. 13

    Episode 13 - Too Hot to Heal? How Heat Triggers Histamine Intolerance

    Send us Fan MailWhen the mercury rises, those of us with histamine intolerance face unique challenges. Recording this episode during a brutal Midwest heat wave without air conditioning gave me a visceral reminder of how temperature extremes can wreak havoc on our sensitive systems.Heat stress triggers mast cell degranulation and histamine release, causing blood vessels to dilate and creating a cascade of symptoms many of us know all too well: swelling in the extremities, debilitating headaches, brain fog, nausea, and the kind of bone-deep exhaustion that seems disproportionate to your activity level. For the histamine-sensitive among us, these aren't just discomforts—they're signals that our bodies are struggling to maintain balance.Fortunately, there are practical strategies that can provide relief. Prioritizing quality sleep is crucial, even if it means booking a hotel room for a night to escape the heat. Strategic fan placement, staying hydrated with electrolyte-enhanced water (try adding a pinch of Celtic sea salt), taking cold showers, and using ice packs on pulse points can all help regulate your body temperature. Timing matters too—schedule outdoor activities before 10 AM or after 4 PM to avoid peak heat hours.Perhaps most fascinating is the concept of hormesis—the idea that controlled exposure to stressors like heat can actually build resilience. While my first night without AC was manageable, the cumulative stress quickly overwhelmed my system. This highlights an important truth for those with histamine issues: the line between beneficial stress and harmful triggers is exceptionally thin and highly individual.Whether you're navigating a temporary heat wave or looking for long-term strategies to manage temperature sensitivity, listening to your body's early warning signals is your most powerful tool. Join our Facebook group "I Don't Eat Leftovers" to connect with other women experiencing similar challenges, and email me at [email protected] with topics you'd like to explore in future episodes.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  23. 12

    Episode 8: Tired, Foggy, Bloated? Your Gut Knows Something the Tests Don’t

    Send us Fan MailHave you ever felt something was wrong with your body long before any test could confirm it? That gut feeling isn't just intuition—it's your body's intelligence speaking directly to you. When fire ants attacked me during what should have been a relaxing day in South Beach, my body sounded an alarm I couldn't ignore. Within minutes, my hands swelled, my legs failed, and I lost consciousness in the park grass. That terrifying experience with anaphylaxis completely transformed my understanding of histamine intolerance and taught me the life-saving power of trusting my body's signals. Women navigating histamine intolerance often face a frustrating paradox: we know something's wrong—the bloating, brain fog, headaches, and fatigue are real—yet medical tests come back "normal" and we're told it's probably just stress. But in functional medicine, we understand that stress isn't just in your head; it directly impacts your nervous system, immune response, and gut function. When chronic stress slows digestion and increases gut permeability, histamine levels rise, creating a cascade of symptoms that deserve serious attention, not dismissal.Your gut houses 70% of your immune system and serves as your body's first responder. When it sends warning signals through uncomfortable symptoms, it's not overreacting—it's protecting you. Learning to trust these signals isn't weakness; it's profound wisdom that can transform your health journey.Ready to reconnect with your body's wisdom? Download my free low-histamine diet starter plan at histaminehealthcoach.com and begin decoding what your gut has been trying to tell you all along. Remember, you are your own best health expert—trust that knowledge and watch your healing journey transform.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  24. 11

    Episode 7 - The Real Reason Certain Foods Make You Miserable

    Send us Fan MailDiscover how the enzyme Diamine Oxidase (DAO) affects histamine intolerance and why it might be the missing piece in understanding your symptoms.• DAO is an extracellular digestive enzyme that breaks down histamine from food and drinks• DAO deficiency can occur from gut damage, inflammation, or conditions like IBS, IBD, and SIBO• Nutrient deficiencies in copper, vitamin B6, vitamin C, zinc, and magnesium can reduce DAO effectiveness• Genetic variances like AOC1 SNPs may cause naturally lower DAO production• Over 50 medications including NSAIDs, antidepressants, and antihistamines can block DAO production• Hormonal fluctuations during perimenopause, menopause, and menstrual cycles affect DAO levels• Alcohol inhibits DAO production while also adding to histamine load• Stress depletes nutrients needed for DAO and contributes significantly to deficiency• Many women take DAO supplements to help manage symptoms when eating high histamine foodsIf you're ready to begin a low histamine diet, you can download the low histamine diet starter plan on my website at histaminehealthcoach.com. I've also gathered trusted supplement options in the wellness booster section for those who have spoken with their physician.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  25. 10

    Episode 6 - What is Histamine?

    Send us Fan MailYour body's alarm system might be working overtime—and it's not just about the food you're eating. That mysterious rash, unexplained digestive distress, or persistent brain fog? Histamine could be the missing piece of your health puzzle.Histamine isn't simply an allergic response; it's your body's natural protective mechanism. When functioning properly, it helps defend against threats and initiates healing. However, when histamine builds up faster than your body can process it, the result is a condition known as histamine intolerance. Unlike immediate allergic reactions, this imbalance creates a gradual accumulation of symptoms that can affect everything from your skin to your digestive system to your mental clarity.The "histamine bucket" concept explains why your reactions can be inconsistent and unpredictable. Every exposure—whether it's high-histamine foods like aged cheese and leftovers, chronic stress, hormone fluctuations, poor sleep, environmental toxins, or even toxic relationships—adds to your bucket. When it finally overflows, symptoms appear. This explains why sometimes you can eat certain foods without issue, while other times they trigger intense reactions. For women especially, hormone cycles create another layer of complexity, with estrogen significantly influencing histamine levels throughout the month. These cyclical flares aren't imaginary—they're biologically real and understanding them is crucial to finding relief.Breaking free from histamine intolerance requires more than just eliminating certain foods. It demands a holistic approach addressing stress management, quality sleep, gentle movement, and reducing your overall toxic load. Ready to take control of your histamine health? Visit histaminehealthcoach.com for a free low histamine diet starter plan and discover how working with a specialist can help you address the lifestyle factors keeping you trapped in the histamine cycle. You don't have to navigate this journey alone.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  26. 9

    Episode 5 - Managing Seasonal Allergies and Histamine Intolerance Naturally

    Send us Fan MailSeasonal allergies can significantly worsen histamine intolerance by increasing the body's overall histamine load and creating a cycle of inflammation. I share my personal journey from masking symptoms with antihistamines and caffeine to understanding the root causes and finding sustainable relief.• Histamine intolerance can make seasonal allergy symptoms more severe• Allergies weaken the immune system, which increases histamine levels• Inflammation from poor nutrition, stress, and lack of sleep compounds allergy symptoms• Antihistamines provide temporary relief but don't address underlying issues• A low histamine diet should be a tool for reset, not a permanent restriction• The goal is to build tolerance and find food freedom, not perpetual limitation• Small changes to reduce overall inflammation can dramatically improve symptomsDownload my free Low Histamine Diet Starter Plan at histaminehealthcoach.com to help you lower your histamine load, track symptoms, and start feeling better without obsessing over every bite.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  27. 8

    Episode 4 - Histamine Flares & Public Stares: When Your Skin Tells Your Story

    Send us Fan MailNavigating the emotional impact of visible histamine reactions can be just as challenging as managing the physical symptoms themselves. Today I share my personal experience with skin flushing at a chiropractor appointment and how comments from others can trigger feelings of embarrassment and self-consciousness.• Living with urticaria pigmentosa for more than half my life but still feeling caught off-guard when someone notices my skin reactions• How temperature changes can trigger mast cell activation, causing visible skin flushing and redness• The uncomfortable experience of being treated like a "medical exhibit" by my allergist and his students• Developing strategies to reframe these situations instead of avoiding appointments or social situations• The importance of remembering that people's comments are usually observations, not judgmentsShare your own experiences with visible histamine reactions by replying to this email. If you want more strategies for navigating histamine intolerance, head to histaminehealthcoach.com and sign up for my emails where I share tips you can actually use in daily life.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  28. 7

    Episode 2 - How Stress Triggers Histamine Intolerance and MCAS Symptoms

    Send us Fan MailStress isn't just a feeling—it's a physical response that can wreak havoc on your body when you have histamine intolerance. Welcome to a deep dive into the powerful connection between stress and histamine reactions that could be triggering your unexplained symptoms.When your body perceives stress, it releases cortisol and adrenaline, sending your mast cells into overdrive and flooding your system with histamine. This creates a perfect storm where even "safe" foods suddenly trigger reactions, sleep becomes elusive, and social situations feel fraught with danger. As someone who's been there—scratching my arm before television broadcasts until hives appeared, experiencing migraines from exercise, and navigating family gatherings with food fears—I understand the isolation and frustration that comes with these unpredictable symptoms.The most challenging part? Stress creates vicious cycles in every aspect of life with histamine intolerance. Fear of foods makes digestion more sensitive. Poor sleep from nighttime histamine dumps increases daytime stress. Social isolation from explaining your condition strains relationships. Even healthy movement can trigger reactions. But there's hope in understanding these connections. Simple techniques like extended exhale breathing, mindful eating environments, and gentle movement can help regulate your nervous system and reduce histamine reactions. Perhaps most powerful is reframing stress itself—not as an enemy to eliminate, but as your body's signal to slow down and practice self-care.Have you noticed stress triggering your symptoms? You're not alone on this journey. Subscribe for more insights as we continue exploring histamine intolerance together, including our next episode on histamine and brain fog. Ready to break free from the fear and take control of your health? Let's walk this path together, one mindful breath at a time.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  29. 6

    Episode 1 - My Story

    Send us Fan MailWhat happens when your body becomes a battleground of mysterious symptoms that medications can't fix? For decades, I struggled with histamine intolerance that started as a simple rash but evolved into something that threatened to consume my entire life.My journey began in the mid-90s with a diagnosis of urticaria pigmentosa, followed by years of escalating symptoms—migraines, extreme fatigue, brain fog, and eventually anaphylaxis. The medical solution? More medications. At the height of my struggle, I was taking seven different antihistamines daily while my symptoms continued to worsen.The connection between histamine and hormones revealed itself dramatically after my hysterectomy when I experienced a blissful three-month period completely symptom-free, only to have everything come rushing back once menopause hit. Food became my enemy, social outings turned into anxiety-inducing gambles, and my world grew smaller as fear limited where I could go and what I could do.Everything changed when I stepped away from conventional medicine and embraced a functional approach. Rather than treating symptoms, I learned to identify triggers, support my body's natural healing processes, and implement lifestyle changes that transformed my health. Today, I manage my histamine intolerance without medications, focusing instead on nurturing my body based on its unique needs.Whether you're dealing with unexplained rashes, digestive issues, headaches, fatigue, or anxiety that conventional doctors can't explain, this podcast offers practical strategies for recognizing triggers, calming symptoms, and reclaiming your life. You don't have to live in fear of your next reaction or resign yourself to a life of limitations. Real healing is possible—I'm living proof.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  30. 5

    Episode 9 - Fasting and Histamine Intolerance

    Send us Fan MailEver notice you feel better before your first meal of the day? You're not alone. For those of us navigating histamine intolerance, that peaceful morning state before eating happens for a reason. Fasting has been my go-to reset button for over a decade. While weight management initially drew me to intermittent fasting, I discovered something far more valuable: when I'm not actively digesting food, my body gets precious time to repair itself. During fasting periods, a process called autophagy kicks in – think of it as your body's natural housekeeping system, clearing out damaged cells and calming inflammation that drives those frustrating histamine symptoms.My approach has evolved over the years, from the structured 5:2 method to my current six-hour eating window (usually 12:30-6:30 PM). But the beauty of fasting lies in its flexibility. Some days call for adjustments, and that's perfectly okay. Whether you're considering clean fasting (just water, black coffee, or plain tea) or exploring circadian rhythm eating (finishing dinner before dark), the key is finding what genuinely supports your unique body.Remember the HALT principle when fasting – are you truly Hungry, or perhaps Angry, Lonely, or Tired? Sometimes what we need isn't food at all. Fasting isn't about restriction; it's about creating space for healing. Always prioritize hydration, gentle movement, and nutrient-dense meals during your eating windows.Ready to explore if fasting might help your histamine intolerance? Visit histaminehealthcoach.com/intermittent-fasting for a free guide created by the Institute of Functional Medicine. While you're there, sign up for my weekly emails for more practical strategies to break free from unpredictable symptoms and take control of your health journey.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

  31. 4

    Episode 10 - When It’s Not the Food: Understanding HNMT & Internal Histamine

    Send us Fan MailHNMT is the overlooked enzyme that handles internally-produced histamine in your brain, liver, and nervous system while DAO manages dietary histamine. Many histamine intolerance sufferers experience symptoms despite following a low-histamine diet because their HNMT enzyme is overwhelmed by stress, hormones, or environmental triggers.• HNMT and DAO work differently – DAO breaks down external histamine from foods while HNMT processes internal histamine• Internal histamine comes from stress, hormones, immune responses, and environmental triggers• HNMT symptoms include extreme fatigue, sensitivity to fragrances, paradoxical reactions to relaxing activities, hormonal migraines, and anxiety• Supporting HNMT requires healing your gut, eating methylation-supporting foods (B12, folate, magnesium, choline)• Lowering chronic stress load through breath work, therapy, and nervous system regulation is crucial• Avoiding fragrances and toxins reduces the burden on your HNMT enzyme• Histamine metabolism improves when addressing the whole picture: gut health, inflammation, stress, nourishment and restVisit histaminehealthcoach.com to subscribe to my weekly emails, learn more or schedule a free chat. Let's get your body working with you again, one layer at a time.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 11 - Flying with Histamine Intolerance – Foods, Fragrances, and Flight Anxiety

    Send us Fan MailDreading your next flight because of unpredictable histamine reactions? You're not alone. Join me as I share my recent anniversary trip to Las Vegas and the rollercoaster of managing histamine intolerance at 30,000 feet.For years, I've navigated the unique challenges of air travel with histamine sensitivity—from the recycled cabin air that triggers mast cell responses to the unavoidable fragrances from sanitizing wipes that spark migraines. My relationship with flying has transformed from weekly business trips with anti-anxiety medication and comfort foods to a more mindful approach that honors my body's needs while still allowing me to see the world.The cabin environment creates a perfect storm for those with histamine issues: pressure changes stress your body, fragrances are inescapable, food options are limited, and the loss of control can spike anxiety levels. But through trial and error, I've discovered practical strategies that have helped me reclaim the joy of travel. From the 4-8 breathing technique during turbulence to requesting ice chips to reset my nervous system, these small interventions make a significant difference in symptom management.What I've learned matters most isn't perfection—it's preparedness and self-compassion. Sometimes having the ginger ale despite knowing it's not the healthiest choice is exactly what your anxiety needs. Successful travel with histamine intolerance isn't about avoiding all symptoms; it's about knowing you can handle whatever comes your way. Because the truth is, you're stronger than your symptoms, and you deserve to live a full life despite the challenges of histamine intolerance.Ready to make your next flight more comfortable? Subscribe for weekly insights on navigating life with histamine intolerance, or share your own travel tips in the comments. Together, we're creating a community that understands the unique challenges of histamine sensitivity and supports each other through the journey.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 12 - Insect Bites and Histamine? What you need to know about MCAS and Itching

    Send us Fan MailInsect bites can trigger dangerous reactions in those with histamine intolerance or MCAS, as Teresa shares from personal experience with both minor and life-threatening episodes.• Insect venom can cause local reactions or trigger full-body immune responses• Teresa's severe reaction in Charlotte included leg weakness, vomiting, and loss of consciousness requiring emergency services• Warning signs to never ignore: sudden leg weakness, nausea/vomiting, extreme fatigue with chills, spreading swelling• Always carry prescribed EpiPens and don't hesitate to use them when needed• Protective measures include wearing gloves and shoes outdoors, using bug spray, and keeping phone accessible• Prolonged itching occurs because bodies with histamine intolerance clear histamine more slowly• The HNMT enzyme affects how quickly your body processes histamine from bug bites• Severe reactions to bites aren't failures in diet management but natural immune responses to venomIf you haven't grabbed my free low histamine diet starter plan, you'll find it at histaminehealthcoach.com. Email me at [email protected] with topics you'd like covered in future episodes.I’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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    Episode 3 - Clearing the Fog: Why Histamine Intolerance Can Cause Brain Fog & How to Find Clarity

    Send us Fan MailEver walked into a room and completely forgotten why you’re there? Struggled to find the right words mid-sentence? Or sat at your desk, unable to focus no matter how hard you try? Brain fog is one of the most frustrating symptoms of histamine intolerance, and it’s more than just forgetfulness—it’s a sign that your body is overwhelmed.In today’s episode, I share a personal story about how brain fog hit me at the worst possible time. Plus, we’ll dive into four reasons histamine intolerance contributes to brain fog and, more importantly, simple ways to clear it.🌿 What You’ll Learn in This Episode:✔️ Why histamine buildup leads to brain fog✔️ The connection between stress and histamine intolerance✔️ How sleep disruptions and circulation issues make symptoms worse✔️ Four strategies to reduce brain fog and think clearly again✅ Easy Strategies to Reduce Brain Fog:1️⃣ Balance blood sugar – Avoid energy crashes that make brain fog worse.2️⃣ Stay hydrated – Electrolytes help your body absorb water effectively.3️⃣ Breathe & move – Gentle movement and deep breathing help clear excess histamine.4️⃣ Reduce stress load – Stress directly triggers histamine release, making brain fog even worse.🌟 If this episode resonates with you, share it with a friend who might need it! 🌟💌 Want more strategies for managing histamine intolerance? Head to HistamineHealthCoach.com to sign up for my emails—I’ll send you exclusive tips and resources to help you feel your best!📌 Stay Connected:🔔 Don’t forget to subscribe to the podcast so you never miss an episode!🔗 Follow me on Instagram and Facebook @histaminehealthcoach#HistamineIntolerance #BrainFog #HistamineHealth #NaturalHealth #WomensHealthI’m currently looking for five women who are ready to stop just managing histamine intolerance and start living well with it over the next 12 weeks. This is for women who feel like their bodies dictate their lives — women who are tired of reacting, restricting, and second-guessing. Women looking for relief, steadier routines, and the kind of confidence that leads to actually living well with histamine intolerance. If that’s you, email me at [email protected] with the word READY, and I’ll personally follow up so we can talk about what support might look like for you.Follow me on InstagramFollow me on FacebookEmail: [email protected]: https://histaminehealthcoach.com

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Welcome to Histamine Health Coach, the podcast for women ready to take control of their histamine intolerance, calm unpredictable symptoms, and feel like themselves again—without fear, overwhelm, or extreme restrictions.I’m Teresa, a Functional Medicine Certified Health Coach who’s been there—living with mast cell issues, hives, and the daily uncertainty that comes with histamine-related conditions. Here, we go beyond just lists of “yes” and “no” foods. You’ll get real talk on how to support your body through nutrition, stress management, movement, and mindset—plus practical tips to help you enjoy life again.Whether you’re navigating MCAS, mastocytosis, or just curious if histamine is behind your symptoms, you’ll find education, encouragement, and simple tools to help you feel more resilient, more energetic, and more at ease in your own skin.Ready to feel better? Let’s get started.

HOSTED BY

Teresa Christensen

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