Why food exposures, inflammation, and stress can leave autoimmune bodies completely depleted

By Jennifer Whitmire, MS, MEd, MH, CHES, NEP
There’s a kind of tired that comes from doing too much, staying up too late, or traveling for a few days. And then there’s autoimmune tired. If you know, you know. Autoimmune fatigue is one of the most misunderstood symptoms of autoimmune disease.
After getting glutened and corned twice on vacation with my oldest, I woke up on Christmas morning to my Oura ring lighting up with alerts. My body already knew what was happening, before my mind caught up. My resting heart rate was elevated, my readiness score had tanked, and I felt so deeply exhausted that even holding my phone felt like too much.
This wasn’t the kind of fatigue that improves with a nap or a good night’s sleep. It was the kind that settles into your bones, slows your thoughts, and makes the simplest tasks feel heavy and difficult. That is autoimmune fatigue. And it’s very different from being “just tired.”
Most people don’t understand this kind of exhaustion, which makes it easy to dismiss or push through. But when you live with an autoimmune condition, fatigue is usually the first sign that your immune system, nervous system, and gut are all working overtime.
Autoimmune Fatigue Is a Whole-Body Response
Have you ever been so overwhelmed that you had to yell, “Wait a minute! I need a second to regroup and focus!” That’s what the body does when it is overwhelmed.
Autoimmune fatigue doesn’t have anything to do with motivation or mindset. It’s not laziness. It’s not a character flaw. It’s a shutdown that happens when the immune system has been activated for too long.
When you’re exposed to a trigger like gluten (that and corn, for me), your immune system releases inflammatory messengers called cytokines. These chemicals are supposed to protect you, but they also affect how your brain, muscles, hormones, and mitochondria function. Energy production slows. Muscle strength drops. Cognitive clarity fades. Your body redirects its resources toward defense and repair.
That’s why autoimmune fatigue feels so heavy and all-encompassing. You’re not just low on energy. It’s the body saying, “I need to stop everything else, so I can handle this.”
Why Certain Food Exposures Hit So Hard
For people without autoimmune conditions, a food exposure might cause mild digestive discomfort and pass quickly. For autoimmune bodies, the response is amplified and prolonged. AND, it is probably not even a digestive discomfort. For me? It starts with a headache, maybe headache and dizziness.
Gluten and corn are common triggers, because they can increase intestinal permeability, activate immune pathways, and fuel inflammation. Once the gut barrier is compromised, immune cells are exposed to proteins they don’t recognize, and the immune system stays on high alert.
That inflammatory response doesn’t just stay in the gut. It affects the nervous system, thyroid signaling, adrenal function, and mitochondrial energy production. This is why symptoms don’t resolve in a few days. Recovery can take weeks, sometimes months, especially if the body was already depleted.
This is why protecting the gut matters so much, especially for autoimmune conditions.

Why Rest Alone Isn’t Enough
When autoimmune fatigue hits, rest is necessary, but it’s rarely sufficient on its own. Sleep helps, but it doesn’t rebuild depleted minerals, stabilize blood sugar, repair the gut lining, or calm immune activation.
Many people try to rest their way out of autoimmune fatigue while continuing to eat foods that swing blood sugar, stimulate the nervous system, or burden digestion. That creates a mismatch. The body is trying to repair, but it doesn’t have the raw materials it needs to do so.
Recovery requires nutrients that support repair at every level, not just rest.
What the Body Is Asking for After an Exposure
After an immune-triggering exposure, the body needs conditions that signal safety and stability. That means reducing stimulation and increasing support.
Food plays a central role here.
The body is asking for comfort and warmth, because warm foods are easier to digest and less taxing on the nervous system. It’s asking for steady blood sugar, because glucose swings increase inflammation and stress hormone output. It’s asking for minerals, because immune activation burns through magnesium, potassium, and sodium rapidly. It’s asking for simplicity, because complex meals require more digestive effort at a time when resources are already stretched.
This is not the time for raw salads, fasting, detoxes, or dietary experiments. It’s the moment for gentle, grounding nutrient-dense meals.

Foods That Support Recovery from Autoimmune Fatigue
When someone comes to me exhausted after an exposure or flare, these are the foods I focus on first.
Warm broths. Vegetable broths, mushroom broths, potassium-rich broths, and simple miso soups provide hydration, minerals, and amino acids that support immune repair gently without taxing digestion. Even one mug a day can make a noticeable difference.
Root vegetables are another key. Sweet potatoes, carrots, and parsnips, and even winter squashes provide slow, steady energy that stabilizes blood sugar and supports the nervous system. They’re grounding in a way few foods are.
Cooked greens matter more than people realize. Spinach, kale, chard, and collards provide magnesium, potassium, and phytonutrients that support immune regulation and energy production. Cooking them makes them easier to absorb when digestion is compromised.
Simple, easy-to-digest proteins help prevent muscle breakdown and support tissue repair. Lentils, well-cooked beans, tofu, tempeh, or nuts and seeds, if tolerated can be incorporated without overwhelming the system.
Anti-inflammatory fats like avocado, flax, chia, hemp, and walnuts support cellular repair and hormone balance. These should be included thoughtfully and not overdone.
Herbs and spices like ginger, turmeric, cinnamon, and rosemary help reduce inflammation and support circulation without overstimulating the adrenals. And my 5 Key Herbs for Stress.
These foods work together to rebuild energy slowly and steadily, which is exactly what the autoimmune body needs.
And bitter foods! Don’t forget those!
I wrote more about the foods that help restore energy after holiday overload here.

Why Pushing Makes Everything Worse
One of the hardest lessons for people with autoimmune conditions is learning when not to push. When fatigue sets in, the instinct is often to override it, especially if you’re used to being capable and reliable.
I have a very long history with migraines (I didn’t know gluten could cause migraines until I gave it up). I remember someone walking into my office and telling me that I didn’t look like I felt well. I said, “I woke up with a migraine.” They told me they couldn’t believe I was at work and was even able to work. Sometimes, you don’t have a choice. We get used to pushing through and ignoring our body and pain.
But pushing through autoimmune fatigue increases cortisol output. Elevated cortisol suppresses thyroid conversion, weakens the gut lining, and prolongs immune activation. What feels like “getting through the day” can extend recovery by weeks or even months.
Recognizing fatigue and actually resting is not giving up. It’s responding appropriately to a body that is asking for care.
Autoimmune Fatigue Is Feedback
Autoimmune fatigue often carries a layer of shame, because it’s invisible. Other people can’t see the immune activity, the inflammation, or the energy drain happening internally. “You look fine to me?!” That makes it easy to doubt yourself.
But fatigue is feedback. It’s the body saying something has crossed a threshold. When you listen early and respond with nutrients and rest, recovery is gentler and shorter.
When you ignore it or fight it, the body finds ways to force the pause. You’re going to slow down one way or the other.
If you’re navigating autoimmune fatigue and want support that actually makes sense for your body, I would love to welcome you inside The Culinary Healing Circle.
Inside the Circle, we focus on using food and herbs to support immune regulation, gut repair, blood sugar balance, and nervous system stability. We don’t push. We don’t restrict. We nourish. Together, we create rhythms that help the body recover instead of constantly bracing for the next flare.
If you’re ready to feel supported instead of exhausted, this is your space.
Join The Culinary Healing Circle at www.culinaryhealingcircle.com
Your body is is talking. Are you listening and giving it what it needs?



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