You’ve probably heard the saying, “Heal your gut, heal your life.” And it’s true—your gut lining is central to your health, influencing immunity, inflammation, nutrient absorption, and even your mood.
The good news? The gut lining can heal quickly—but only if we stop the things that keep damaging it. The trouble is, many of those things are hiding in plain sight.
In this post, we’ll walk through the most common—and surprising—obstacles to gut healing that I cover in my video series. Understanding these categories is your first step toward restoring your gut health.
1. Anything That Harms the Microbiome
Your gut microbiome is your inner ecosystem. It feeds your gut lining, stimulates it to repair, regulates pH, supports immune function, produces protective mucus, creates vitamins, and even generates amino acids that impact mood and energy.
But modern life isn’t kind to this ecosystem. What harms it?
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Antibiotics
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Glyphosate and pesticides from non-organic food
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Chemicals in processed foods
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Diets lacking fresh, whole plant foods
When you disrupt the microbiome, you weaken your gut’s defenses. But when you nourish it, it protects and heals your gut lining in return.
2. Anything That Damages the Mucus Lining
The mucus lining is your gut’s first line of defense, coating the intestinal wall and guarding it from toxins and pathogens.
But this protective layer is more fragile than you think.
Common disruptors include:
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NSAIDs (like aspirin, ibuprofen, naproxen) – even occasional use can eat away at the mucus lining.
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Alcohol – even moderate intake creates acetaldehyde, which:
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Kills epithelial cells
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Loosens tight junctions
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Generates oxidative stress
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Promotes inflammation
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Your body wants to repair this lining—but it can’t do it while being repeatedly exposed to these irritants.
3. Anything That Promotes Chronic Inflammation
Chronic inflammation isn’t random—it’s a reaction to imbalance. And it’s a major player in gut lining breakdown.
Common hidden causes of gut inflammation include:
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Food sensitivities that overstimulate the immune system
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Candida or yeast overgrowth, often due to diet or antibiotics
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Parasite infections
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Refined sugars and processed non-organic foods
Inflammation looks different in everyone. But healing always begins the same way—by identifying and removing the root cause. Stool testing may be helpful for this.
4. Anything That Interferes With Digestion
Good digestion is foundational to gut health. But many common habits suppress our digestive capacity.
A few surprising disruptors:
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Antacids and PPIs – These block stomach acid, essentially removing the “key in the ignition” for digestion.
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Stress – It tells your body it’s not time to “rest and digest,” reducing stomach acid and restricting blood flow to the intestines. This weakens tight junctions and impairs the gut barrier.
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Processed foods – These can spike blood sugar, slow motility, and interfere with digestive enzymes.
All of this leads to poor digestion, fermentation, and ultimately damage to the gut lining.
5. Anything That Disrupts Your Internal Environment—Like EMFs
Here’s the most surprising one: your gut lining is sensitive to energy—not just food.
Chronic EMF exposure from cell phones, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth has been shown to:
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Disrupt tight junction proteins ➡️ leaky gut
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Break down EZ water (a gel-like, negatively charged form of water that supports the mucus lining)
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Increase oxidative stress
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Impair mitochondrial function, which is essential for cellular repair
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Reduce microbiome diversity, tipping the balance toward dysbiosis and inflammation
To reduce EMF-related gut damage:
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Turn off Wi-Fi at night
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Use airplane mode when possible
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Carry your phone in a Faraday pouch (not in your pocket)
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Ground daily by standing barefoot on natural surfaces
Bonus: EZ Water and Gut Repair
Your mucus lining relies on something called EZ (Exclusion Zone) water—a structured form of water that forms a gel layer in your gut.
EZ water is harmed by:
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Lack of grounding
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High EMF exposure
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Mineral-poor water
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Low intake of chlorophyll-rich foods (like leafy greens)
Supporting EZ water formation supports the mucus layer and the gut lining itself.
The gut lining wants to heal. It regenerates quickly—but only if you remove the daily hits and give it the support it needs.
Healing begins with awareness. The more you know about what’s harming your gut, the more empowered you are to protect it.