Has your January Momentum turned into May fatigue? You’re not alone—and you’re not the problem.
Every January, we’re invited to change ourselves.
Lose weight. Eat better. Start over.
And yet, despite more nutrition information, tracking tools, and wellness advice than ever before, most Americans are still struggling with their health.
As a registered dietitian, I don’t see a lack of effort.
I see something very different.
I see people who care—but are overwhelmed.
I see people who want to feel better—but don’t know where to begin.
I see people trying to take care of themselves in a world that makes that surprisingly difficult.
So the real question isn’t:
Why don’t people care about their health?
A more honest question might be:
What’s getting in the way of people caring for themselves consistently?
When we step back and look at the big picture, it becomes clear that human biology hasn’t caught up to modern life.
Our bodies were designed for:
Today, we live in an environment filled with highly palatable foods, constant stimulation, and ongoing stress. In that setting, relying on willpower alone was never a fair expectation.
The human body isn’t a single problem to solve; it’s a coordinated system.
In fact, the body is made up of multiple interconnected systems, all working together toward a common purpose: survival, function, and adaptation. Each system operates within measurable parameters—ranges that allow it to function optimally while staying in balance with the others.
A helpful way to think about this is like a flight envelope in aviation—the range of conditions where an aircraft can safely operate. The body has its own version of this: ranges for blood sugar, cholesterol, blood pressure, hormones, and more.
When these markers stay within a supportive range, the body functions more efficiently:
One of the clearest ways we see this is through lab work.
Those “reference ranges” are not just numbers—they are indicators of how well each system is functioning and how well the body is working as a whole.
Health, then, is not about perfection.
It’s about keeping the body within a range where it can do its job well.
For years, weight loss has been positioned as the primary path to health.
But when nearly 70% of the population is told their body is the problem, that message stops motivating—and starts disconnecting.
Weight-focused messaging often:
… and physiologically, that matters.
Stress responses—driven by shame, pressure, and restriction—can disrupt appetite regulation, sleep, metabolism, and decision-making.
People don’t change when they feel judged.
They shut down, avoid, or disengage.
So it’s not that people don’t care.
It’s that the message they’ve received makes caring feel difficult, uncomfortable, or even defeating.
In today’s world, food plays many roles beyond nutrition.
For many people, food represents:
When life feels overwhelming, asking someone to “just eat less” can feel like asking them to give up one of the only things that helps them cope.
That’s not a lack of discipline.
That’s a human response to stress and environment.
What if people aren’t failing at health…
What if they’ve just been taught to relate to their bodies in a way that doesn’t work?
Instead of asking:
“How do I fix my body?”
What if we asked:
“How do I care for the body I live in?”
That shift changes everything.
Because health becomes less about control—and more about relationship.
When we move away from perfection and toward care, health becomes more practical—and more sustainable.
It starts to look like:
Longevity isn’t just about living longer.
It’s about maintaining the ability to:
Sustainable change rarely begins with a dramatic overhaul.
It begins quietly.
“It’s often the small steps, not the giant leaps, that bring about the most lasting change.”
That’s not just encouraging—it’s consistent with how biology works.
Adaptation happens gradually.
Systems adjust over time.
Consistency builds trust within the body.
In many ways, that’s how evolution works too.
Instead of asking what kind of changes do I want to make: Lose weight, do more exercise, eat healthier etc.
It can be about asking better questions:
Because in the end, we get one body per lifetime.
Not a project to perfect—
but a place to live.
And caring for it, even imperfectly, is one of the most meaningful investments we can make.
Susan Peacock MSRDN