If you feel stuck in cycles with ultra-processed food, cravings, weight struggles, and a loss of control, you are not broken, and you are not alone. Hosted by Paige Alexander, this podcast goes beyond diets, calorie counting, and quick fixes to uncover what’s really driving your relationship with food.
You’ll learn how to:
• Break free from ultra-processed food dependency
• Rebuild trust with real, whole, single-ingredient foods
• Understand the science behind cravings and habits
• Heal the emotional patterns tied to food
• Create sustainable weight loss without obsession
This isn’t about restriction, it’s about restoration. In this new chapter of Real Food Recovery, Paige brings a deeper, more personal approach to what it truly takes to find freedom with food. If food isn’t the answer…let’s start asking better questions.
Imagine this: you wake up in the morning already exhausted.
You reach for caffeine before your feet even hit the floor. By
mid-morning, you're craving sugar. By afternoon, you're tired,
foggy, and wondering why you can't stay focused. So you
grab something quick, something processed, something
engineered to taste good. And for a moment, you feel better.
But an hour later, you're crashing again. Does any of this sound familiar?
Somewhere deep inside you, you start thinking, what is wrong with
me? But what if the real question isn't what is wrong with
you? What if the real question is what has been done to
your nervous system? Why does it feel like my body is betraying me?
Welcome to the Real Food Recovery Podcast. I'm Paige Alexander, creator
and host of the Real Food Recovery Podcast. This is a space for anyone
who has struggled with sugar or ultra-processed food, whether it comes from
lifelong habits, grief, trauma, or patterns picked up along the
way. Here we explore what's really driving those behaviors and
how real food, self-talk, movement, sleep, stress management, and
nervous system awareness can help you shift habits in a way that actually
sticks. I'm really glad you're here.
This podcast exists to help people understand
one powerful truth. When we reconnect with real
food, we don't just change our diet, we change our brain,
we change our nervous system, and often we change the entire
trajectory of our lives. And I know this because it was
me. For many years, I lived what I called the
dessert diet only. Well into my 40s, I was basically
living off sugar. Surviving from one sugar binge to the next,
crafting my days around getting my next hit of my drug
of choice. Then menopause started knocking on the door, and I
realized something had to change. I knew that if I didn't
shift course, I wasn't going to fit into my pants anymore, and I
certainly wasn't going to keep up the fitness life I once enjoyed.
But here was the problem: I wanted to change so
badly, but at the same time it terrified me.
Because when the sugar binges started, it felt like monsters coming
out of the closet. I never knew how long they would stay.
I never knew how many calories I would consume before it stopped. And I
never knew how sick I would feel afterwards. Meanwhile,
I was shoveling in more while mentally calculating how much
exercise it would take to undo what I had just done.
And how many days I would have to restrict to compensate.
It was exhausting. And when I say I
couldn't stop, I mean I literally
couldn't stop. I had no idea why it was
happening and no one to tell. How could I even explain it when
I couldn't even explain it to myself? On the outside, I looked
perfectly normal and fit, but on the inside, I was a bundle of
nerves thinking I just had a willpower problem and a big appetite.
I didn't see anyone else doing what I was doing, so I assumed
I must just be broken. Honestly, I thought of myself as a pig
who couldn't stop eating. Very embarrassing.
Nothing glamorous about that. And I had absolutely no
clue what to do about it. I didn't even discover the concept of
ultra-processed food use disorder until my mid-50s. But when I
did, everything started to change.
Because suddenly I understood the science of what was happening inside
my body. My brain was responding to
hyperpalatable foods exactly the way it was designed to respond.
The processed food industry had me in its grips, and at the
same time I wanted out, I also wanted to hold
on. I was fighting for freedom while clinging to my drug at
the same time. If I gave up sugar, where would I go for
comfort? How would I cope with the nervous energy that lived in my
body, and especially with my ADD brain? And
honestly, I didn't even believe people who said they had given up
sugar completely. I really— I thought they were lying.
No one in their right mind would give up sugar. It was my greatest comfort,
my closest companion, the place I turned when I needed
relief. But eventually I had to ask myself a
very uncomfortable question. What if the thing I believed was
bringing me the most comfort was actually the thing causing me
the most misery? What if the thing I depended on
most was the very thing standing between me and peace?
That question changed everything, because when I began looking honestly at
what sugar was doing to my brain and nervous system, I realized
something powerful. My brain was constantly scanning the
environment for dopamine And no effort was too big
to get the next hit, regardless of the cost. And the
cost was often very high. But the addiction wasn't the
only thing affecting my nervous system. There was also the constant food
noise, the constant food anxiety. When would I eat next? What
would I eat? Would there be enough? And strangely enough, that
anxiety didn't just apply to me. Sometimes it extended to other
people too. Let me tell you a story. Every year for my
birthday, I climb Pikes Peak, a 14,000-foot mountain in
Colorado. It's about an 8-hour, 13-mile uphill
trek. Friends join me every year, and I
make sure everything is well planned so we can have a safe and
successful climb. Part of that planning always
included food. I would pack enough ingredients to make 2 sandwiches
per climber, along with baggies and lunch sacks for everyone's
backpack. One year, my friend Trish told me she only needed one
sandwich. She said she knew she wouldn't eat the second one. Now, if you've
ever done backpacking, you know every ounce matters. Space
matters. Weight matters. But the thought of her only having one
sandwich made my anxiety spike. What if she got
hungry halfway up the mountain? So I told her, "I'll carry
your second sandwich for you, just in case." It actually helped calm
my own nerves. About partway up the climb, I ran into
another hiker. That isn't unusual, but this young man
looked disheveled and completely unprepared for the hike. He
approached me and asked me if I had any food. My heart broke for him,
so I dug through my pack and handed him a sandwich. He thanked me
profusely. A few miles later, Trish caught up to me and said, "Hey,
I saw you give that young man a sandwich. I'm really glad you did that."
And I said, "Thank you. I'm so glad you said that
because, well, it was your sandwich."
Now ironically, I had a similar situation happen another year on the
Manitou Incline. A young man had run out of water and was
clearly dehydrated. He asked if I had any water to spare.
I had a choice. I could let him drink from my CamelBak and risk
germs or tell him no and possibly end up doing
CPR on him. I chose the germs. But here's the point:
when you struggle with Ultra-Processed Food Use Disorder, planning and
preparation become powerful tools. Before I go to
bed at night, I know exactly what the next day will look
like and what my food plan is. My meals are prepared, my
environment is ready, and there are few things that bring my nervous
system more peace than knowing I'm prepared. You would not
believe how many problems disappear when those simple
steps are in place. Planning creates
calm. Now, on a side
note, karma did catch up with me once. While
climbing the Grand Canyon on the South Kaibab Trail, I ran out of
water on the ascent. It felt like 100 degrees and the sun
was brutal. I had planned my water carefully, but
we had inaccurate information about the water stations being open.
So suddenly I was the one in trouble. A kind man
at one of the stops saw what was happening and shared a bottle of Gatorade
with me. I can tell you right now, liquid has never
tasted so good. And that moment reminded me of something
important. Sometimes we are the helpers, sometimes we are
the ones who need help. But either way, preparation and
awareness make an enormous difference. And this is why
conversations about food matter so much. Right now in the
United States, nearly 70% of calories people consume come
from ultra-processed foods, foods designed in
laboratories, foods engineered to hit what
scientists call the bliss point, the perfect combination of sugar,
fat, and salt that keeps the brain wanting more. The problem is
this: our brains evolved to survive famines. They were
never designed to fight a multi-billion-dollar food
engineering industry. So millions of people blame
themselves for something that is actually biological.
Because ultra-processed foods don't just affect body weight,
they affect the nervous system. Blood sugar
spikes trigger stress hormones. Inflammation
disrupts brain signaling. Artificial additives
interfere with appetite regulation. Over time, the
body begins living in a low-grade state of survival
mode. And the brain keeps asking one question: am
I safe? When the nervous system doesn't feel safe,
it starts searching for quick energy and quick comfort, and
ultra-processed foods deliver both. So the cycle
repeats. But recovery is possible. I once
spoke with a woman who told me that every night after work, she would sit
in her car in the grocery store parking lot and eat an entire
package of cookies before going home. She said she didn't even want the
cookies, she just felt an overwhelming pull towards them. And
afterwards she would sit there feeling ashamed, wondering why she couldn't stop.
What changed everything for her was learning that her brain wasn't broken.
Her nervous system was overwhelmed. She was sleeping
5 hours a night, working under constant stress, living
on convenience foods. Her brain was simply trying to survive the
fastest way it knew how. So instead of starting with
punishment or restriction, she started with regulation.
She began eating simple, real foods: eggs in the morning,
protein and vegetables during the day, foods that stabilize blood
sugar and reduce inflammation. Within weeks, something
remarkable happened. The cravings didn't vanish overnight, but
the volume of them started dropping. Her nervous system began
settling down, and eventually the cookies stopped calling her name from
the parking lot. I have another friend who once described her brain as
feeling like static on a radio station. She couldn't focus.
She felt anxious all the time. Her energy was constantly
crashing. She thought it was simply part of getting older. But
when she removed most ultra-processed foods and replaced them with
real single-ingredient foods, something unexpected happened.
Within a few months, she said it felt like someone had turned the static down
in her brain. The anxiety softened, the fog lifted, and
she realized something surprising: her personality hadn't changed.
Her biology had. And that is why this conversation
matters. Ultra-processed foods don't just affect our waistlines.
They affect our energy, mood, focus, sleep,
hormones, stress resilience. They influence how we show up in
relationships, how patient we are with our families, how how
clearly we think at work, even how hopeful we feel about
life. But when people begin nourishing their bodies with real food
again, something powerful begins to happen. The nervous
system shifts. Fight or flight slowly gives way to
rest and restore. Digestion improves, sleep improves,
energy stabilizes, and the brain begins remembering what calm
actually feels like. That is what this podcast is
about. Not perfection, not rigid rules, but
understanding how biology works and how real food can restore
balance. On this podcast, you'll hear powerful
stories from people who transform their health and their lives.
You'll hear conversations with experts in nutrition,
neuroscience, behavior change, and recovery, and you'll learn
practical strategies that help calm the nervous system so
real healing can begin. Because once the nervous system
stabilizes, something remarkable happens.
Cravings lose their grip, brain fog lifts, motivation
returns, and many people realize they were never lacking discipline.
They were lacking biological support. Your body is
incredibly intelligent. It knows the difference between real
nourishment and synthetic stimulation. And when you give it
what it truly needs, it begins working with you again.
If you're listening today and you've felt stuck, exhausted, or
frustrated with your relationship with food, I want you to hear
this clearly: you are not broken.
Your nervous system may simply be asking for a different environment.
And sometimes the first step towards changing your life
is changing what's on your plate. Thank you for being here for the very
first episode of the Real Food Recovery podcast. If this message
resonates with you, share it with someone who might need it. And
if you'd like to learn more about how real food supports recovery,
resilience, and nervous system healing, visit
realfoodrecovery4u.com. Because when we begin
nourishing the body the way it was designed, something powerful happens.
We don't just recover our health, we recover ourselves.
Thank you for spending this time with me on the Real Food Recovery Podcast. Here
we explore the deeper roots behind our habits, whether that's grief,
trauma, or lifelong patterns, while looking at the full picture of health,
sleep, movement, stress, spirituality, and self-care. Take what
resonates, leave the rest, and be gentle with yourself as you explore new ways
forward. Until next time, take care of your body, your mind, and your
heart. For more resources and support, visit realfoodrecovery4u.com.
The Real Food Recovery Podcast is created and hosted by Paige Alexander.