The Library

Topic

Hormones

5 teachings on hormones from Sarah's library — root-cause healing where faith meets function.

Is It My Hormones or Is It My Gut? How to Tell What's Actually Driving Your Symptoms

Hormones

Is It My Hormones or Is It My Gut? How to Tell What's Actually Driving Your Symptoms

You don't have to choose between a hormone problem and a gut problem — they're the same loop. Here's how to read your symptoms, find the upstream driver, and stop bouncing between protocols.

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The Estrobolome, Bile Flow & Why Estrogen Clearance Starts in the Gut

Gut Health

The Estrobolome, Bile Flow & Why Estrogen Clearance Starts in the Gut

Estrogen does not just disappear after your body uses it. It has to be packaged, escorted, and eliminated — and almost every step of that happens in your gut. Here is what the estrobolome and bile flow actually do, and why a constipated woman is almost always a hormonal woman.

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What Your Cycle Is Trying to Tell You: Estrogen, Progesterone & Perimenopause

Hormones

What Your Cycle Is Trying to Tell You: Estrogen, Progesterone & Perimenopause

Your cycle is a monthly report card on your whole body. Here is what estrogen, progesterone, and the perimenopause years are actually trying to tell you — and why "balance your hormones" is rarely the real answer.

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Your HPA Axis, Cortisol & Burnout: Why Stress Is Making You Sick (and How to Build Real Resilience)

Nervous System

Your HPA Axis, Cortisol & Burnout: Why Stress Is Making You Sick (and How to Build Real Resilience)

If you are exhausted but wired, gaining weight without changing your diet, or waking at 3 a.m. with your heart racing, your HPA axis is trying to get your attention. Here is what cortisol is actually doing, why chronic stress leads to burnout, and how to rebuild resilience from the inside out.

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Your Thyroid Is Not Broken: The Upstream Story Behind Hashimoto's and a Slow Metabolism

Autoimmunity

Your Thyroid Is Not Broken: The Upstream Story Behind Hashimoto's and a Slow Metabolism

If you've been told your thyroid is fine but you still feel exhausted, cold, foggy, and heavy — the gland is rarely the problem. Here's the upstream story most women are never told.

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