The Ancestral Microbiome We Have Nearly Lost
Our bodies evolved over hundreds of thousands of years eating diverse plants, wild game, and fermented foods that supported a rich ancestral microbiome. This internal ecosystem of trillions of bacteria regulated digestion, immunity, and even mood. Today, the standard Western diet—loaded with burgers, fries, seed oils, and ultra-processed snacks—has wiped out key species like Prevotella and Faecalibacterium while allowing inflammatory strains to dominate. Studies show that within days of switching to this modern diet, microbial diversity drops by up to 40%, directly impacting metabolic health.
How Burgers, Fries, and Processed Foods Trigger Chronic Stress
The high sugar, refined carbs, and unhealthy fats in typical fast food meals spike blood glucose and insulin, forcing the body into repeated stress cycles. This activates the HPA axis, flooding the system with cortisol and other stress hormones. Elevated cortisol promotes visceral fat storage—especially around the midsection—while breaking down muscle and slowing thyroid function. For women in their late 40s and 50s, this compounds perimenopausal estrogen decline, making weight loss feel impossible. My book, Reset Your Weight, details how these repeated cortisol surges create a vicious cycle of cravings and fatigue that no calorie-counting diet can fix.
The Link Between a Damaged Microbiome, Cortisol, and Midlife Weight Gain
When your gut bacteria are out of balance, they produce inflammatory compounds that travel through the bloodstream and further stimulate cortisol release. This explains why so many people managing diabetes and high blood pressure also struggle with stubborn weight. Joint pain often worsens because inflammation from a disrupted microbiome sensitizes joints, making movement painful and exercise seem impossible. The Western diet also reduces production of short-chain fatty acids like butyrate, which normally calm the nervous system and improve insulin sensitivity. Without them, blood sugar swings intensify, cravings increase, and hormonal weight gain accelerates.
Practical Steps to Rebuild Your Ancestral Microbiome and Lower Cortisol
Start by replacing at least one processed meal daily with a fiber-rich plate: leafy greens, colorful vegetables, fermented foods like sauerkraut or kefir, and healthy fats from olive oil or avocado. Aim for 30 different plant foods per week to feed beneficial bacteria—this is more effective than any single probiotic. Practice gentle stress reduction like a 10-minute daily walk in nature or box breathing to lower cortisol without adding joint stress. In my method, we use a simple 14-day reset that improves microbial diversity while stabilizing blood sugar, often leading to 5–12 pounds lost in the first month without complex meal plans. Focus on consistency rather than perfection. Many in their 50s see blood pressure and A1C improve within weeks once the gut begins to heal. Small, sustainable swaps rebuild what the Western diet has destroyed and restore the metabolic flexibility our ancestors took for granted.