GUT CHECK
The big idea · Gut-brain axis
June 21, 2026

Your gut is talking to your brain, and most of the traffic runs uphill

For centuries medicine treated the brain as the body's command center. The newer picture flips it: the gut is a sensor, the brain is mostly listening, and the cable between them runs busiest from the bottom up.

BRAIN VAGUS NERVE GUT MICROBES
Fiber-fed, diverse
Calm
Many kinds of microbe, well fed on plants and fiber.
Fiber-fedThinningUltra-processed
Drag to change the diet, watch what the gut sends up

The gut is not just a tube that digests food. Its lining is wrapped in a mesh of neurons so large that researchers call it a second brain, roughly the size of a cat's brain, and it connects to the head along the vagus nerve like a fast cable. For most of medical history the assumption was that the brain told the gut what to do. The newer picture is blunt: most of the signal travels the other way. The gut senses what arrives, the chemicals its microbes make, the state of its lining, and reports upward. The brain, sealed inside the skull, leans on that report to decide how you feel.

That reframing matters because it changes where you look when mood, energy, or focus slip. If the brain is partly downstream of the gut, then what you feed the trillions of microbes in your colon is not a wellness footnote, it is an input to how your head works. The rest of this issue walks through the specific claims, and checks each one against the evidence rather than the marketing.

This is not one scientist's pet theory. The gut-brain connection was mapped by independent groups, the APC Microbiome Institute in Cork, gut-brain researchers at UCLA, the Human Microbiome Project, well before anyone built a product around it. Every claim in Gut Check is checked against that wider literature, and where a piece of advice comes attached to something for sale, that gets its own honest look in When advice is also a sales pitch.

Established the vagus nerve and enteric nervous system Emerging how much it shapes mood
Sources: Cryan & Dinan, "Mind-altering microorganisms," Nat Rev Neurosci 2012 · Mayer, "Gut feelings," Nat Rev Neurosci 2011 · the enteric nervous system has roughly 500 million neurons (Furness, 2012). The anatomy is settled; the size of its effect on everyday mood is still being mapped.

The big idea · The virtual organ
June 21, 2026

You have an organ you were never told about

One way researchers put it: discovering the gut microbiome was "like discovering we had a liver." Not a passenger, not a side effect of digestion, but a working organ made of trillions of microbes that does chemistry your own cells cannot. Here is what that organ actually is, and what it makes.

SolidFact check

The claimThe gut microbiome is a newly recognized organ with more genes than your own cells.

The hard numbers hold up across independent labs. "Organ" is a useful metaphor rather than a formal reclassification, and one popular figure beside it, the old "ten times more microbes than human cells," has since been corrected to roughly one to one.

Think of it as a rainforest you carry in your colon. Not one creature but a thousand species, bacteria, fungi, viruses, each evolved to a narrow niche: one bug that only really wakes up for coffee, another that lives on a single fiber in cabbage, another that eats the leftovers of the first two. The healthier that ecosystem, the more of your food gets used and the more useful chemicals come out. Here is the organ by the numbers.

~38 tn
Microbes
Roughly 38 trillion. The famous "ten times more than your own cells" was overstated; careful counts put it closer to one to one.
~200x
More genes
Millions of microbial genes against your ~20,000. That gene library is what lets the organ run chemistry your body can't.
~1,000
Species
A jungle of specialists, each with its own diet and job, not one uniform slime.
~20%
Shared with others
The rest of your mix is yours alone. Even identical twins share little more, which is why one-size diet advice keeps failing.

What makes it an organ: it produces

A liver does not just sit there, it manufactures. So does this one. Each microbe works like a tiny pharmacy, converting what you eat into hundreds of different chemicals your body then uses. Feed it different inputs and watch what comes out.

That output list is the whole reason any of the rest matters. Short-chain fatty acids fuel and calm the gut lining, polyphenol metabolites feed the microbes and act as antioxidants, serotonin precursors tie the gut to mood, and the community even makes vitamins for you. Starve the organ of variety and the factory narrows to a few products, many of them inflammatory. Feed it a wide range of plants and it runs the full catalog.

Why "organ" is the right mental model. You would not skip feeding your liver and expect to feel fine. Treating the microbiome as an organ reframes diet from willpower and calories into maintenance of a living system, which is exactly where the next articles go.

Established gene count, chemical output, individuality Emerging the "organ" label as formal status
Sources: Qin et al., "A human gut microbial gene catalogue," Nature 2010, ~3.3 million microbial genes · Sender, Fuchs & Milo, "Revised estimates for the number of human and bacterial cells," PLoS Biol 2016, the 10:1 ratio corrected to ~1:1 · Human Microbiome Project Consortium, Nature 2012 · cross-referenced against independent gut-brain work at the APC Microbiome Institute (Cork) and UCLA. Numbers solid; "organ" is an apt metaphor.

Mind and gut · Inflammation
June 21, 2026

A bad gut and a low mood tend to travel together

Nearly every mental-health condition that has been studied shows two things alongside it: higher inflammation in the blood, and an altered set of gut microbes. The leading hypothesis is that the first may help drive the second. The evidence is real, and softer than the confidence suggests.

PromisingFact check

The claimPoor gut health and inflammation cause depression and other mental illness.

The association is solid and the mechanism is plausible. Proof that the gut causes the mood, rather than tracking alongside it, is still mostly in mice.

Start with what is genuinely well-established. Inflammation is the body's threat response: send white cells to a problem, clear it, stand down. The modern trouble is chronic inflammation, the alarm that never switches off, kept running by a bad diet, stress, pollution, or poor sleep. And a large body of work now links that low-grade, always-on inflammation to depression. People with depression have, on average, higher inflammatory markers than people without it, and giving healthy people an inflammatory agent can produce temporary depressive symptoms.

Where the gut comes in

The proposed chain runs like this: the gut lining is a major gatekeeper for inflammation, and a poorly fed microbiome inflames it. The bugs that thrive on an ultra-processed diet produce chemicals that irritate the lining and raise immune activity, and that signal travels to the brain. The brain reads sustained alarm the way it reads an infection, and dials down mood, energy, and sociability. That is the "sickness behavior" model, and it is a clean story.

What is solid

Depression and many psychiatric conditions show elevated inflammation. People with these conditions also show altered gut microbiomes. Both findings replicate across many studies.

What is not settled

Whether the gut drives the mood or merely moves with it. Causal proof in humans is thin, most mechanism work is in mice, and depression also independently changes diet, sleep, and activity, which change the gut.

This is the honest shape of it: a strong, repeated correlation plus a believable mechanism, which is exactly the stage where science is most easily oversold. The good news is that the things that calm gut inflammation, more plants and fiber, fewer ultra-processed foods, are low-risk and worth doing on their own merits, whatever the final verdict on causation. You are not gambling much by eating better while the researchers finish the job.

If your mood is genuinely low, this is not a substitute for care. Diet can support mental health; it does not replace a clinician, therapy, or medication. The gut angle is a lever, not a cure, and anyone selling it as a cure has left the evidence behind.

Established inflammation links to depression Emerging gut as a cause
Sources: Miller & Raison, "The role of inflammation in depression," Nat Rev Immunol 2016 · Valles-Colomer et al., microbiome and quality of life / depression, Nat Microbiol 2019 · meta-analyses of inflammatory markers in major depression (Howren 2009, Osimo 2020). Association strong; human causation unproven.

What to eat · Plant diversity
June 21, 2026

Thirty plants a week, not five a day

The single most useful number in the whole interview. Not five portions of the same handful of foods, but thirty different plants across a week. The more kinds you eat, the more kinds of microbe you feed, and variety is what the gut data rewards.

SolidFact check

The claimEating 30 different plants a week gives you a more diverse, healthier gut microbiome.

Well-supported, and worth one honest asterisk: the 30 number comes from observational data, so it shows a strong link, not a proven dose. As targets go, it is a good one.

Count what you actually ate this week. Most people guess high. The average American eats somewhere around 10 to 12 distinct plants a week, often the same ones on repeat. Tap everything below you have eaten in the last seven days, and remember the rule that makes 30 reachable: a plant is not just fruit and veg. Nuts, seeds, whole grains, beans, herbs, spices, even coffee and dark chocolate all count, because each one carries different fibers and chemicals for different microbes.

0 / 30
Tap what you ate this week.

Vegetables

BroccoliSpinachCarrotOnionPepperTomatoKaleMushroomBeetrootCabbage

Fruit

AppleBananaBerriesOrangeAvocadoGrapes

Whole grains

OatsBrown riceQuinoaRyeBuckwheat

Beans & pulses

LentilsChickpeasBlack beansPeasEdamame

Nuts & seeds

AlmondsWalnutsChiaPumpkin seedsFlax

Herbs & spices

GarlicGingerBasilTurmericCinnamonParsleyCumin

Counts too

CoffeeDark chocolateOlivesGreen teaExtra-virgin olive oil

The reframe that makes this easy: stop trying to exclude things and start trying to add them. A handful of mixed seeds on yogurt, a different bean in a soup, a spice blend instead of plain salt, each is a new entry. The target is breadth, not effort.

Where the number comes from. The American Gut Project and its UK counterpart looked at thousands of people's diets and stool samples. Those eating 30+ different plants a week had measurably more diverse microbiomes than those eating 10 or fewer. It is the rare round-number diet target that traces back to real data.
The world quietly agrees. When researchers lined up the official dietary guidelines of 114 countries, each written by that nation's own scientists, they converged on the same core: more plants, more whole grains and legumes, less red and processed meat. Different cultures, different politics, same answer. Plant variety is not a fad, it is one of the rare points of global scientific consensus.

The asterisk worth keeping: this was observational. People who eat 30 plants a week also tend to exercise, sleep, and smoke differently, so the study shows a strong association, not an airtight 30-is-the-magic-dose. The honest reading is "around 30," and probably a bit more is better. Treat it as a generous target, not a finish line.

Established diversity links to gut health Emerging the exact 30 figure
Sources: McDonald et al., "American Gut: an open platform for citizen-science microbiome research," mSystems 2018 · FAO repository of food-based dietary guidelines (114 countries) · free tracker Eating30. Strong association, reinforced by global guideline consensus.

What feeds your gut · Probiotics vs ferments
June 22, 2026

The probiotic paradox: the pill is the weakest version of the thing it promises

Probiotic supplements are a multi-billion-dollar promise to "restore your gut." The research keeps finding the opposite: for healthy people the pills are mostly untested, sometimes counterproductive, and the real benefit they borrow their name from lives in fermented foods and fiber.

Mostly hypeFact check

The claimProbiotic pills restore and improve your gut microbiome.

For most healthy people, no. The strains in a capsule are a rounding error of the microbiome, and in controlled studies they slowed recovery and even blunted other treatments. Fermented foods and fiber are the part with the evidence.

Start with the study that should have ended the hype. Researchers gave people antibiotics, then split them three ways to see whose gut recovered best. The result was the opposite of the marketing. Tap each group.

GUT DIVERSITY healthy level Antibiotics ~5 days ~3 months

The group that did nothing beat the group that took probiotics. The pills did not refill the garden, they paved over the patch where the native community was trying to regrow. And it was not a fluke of one study.

Why a capsule can backfire

The strains in nearly every probiotic, lactobacillus and bifidobacterium, make up around 0.01% of a real microbiome. Even a premium pill represents maybe a tenth of a percent of its diversity. Mega-dosing tens of billions of one or two families into an ecosystem of a thousand species is less like planting a garden and more like dumping one crop on a field. In cancer patients on immunotherapy, the effect turned dangerous: those taking over-the-counter probiotics were far less likely to respond to treatment, while those eating plenty of fiber responded far better.

The pill

A handful of strains, untested for your situation, delivered at a dose nothing in nature resembles. Sometimes harmless, sometimes a setback, rarely the fix on the label.

The food

A jar of kimchi, kefir or live yogurt carries a wide, changing mix of microbes, and more importantly the chemicals they make. That mix is what the trials reward.

The reframe: it was never the bug, it's what the bug makes

A controlled trial put fermented foods up against a high-fiber diet. The fermented-foods group saw something close to a universal win: more microbial diversity and lower inflammation. The follow-up work found the active ingredient was not the live organisms, which often pass through without setting up shop, but the metabolites they produce. That is the whole shift the field is making: stop counting which microbes are present and start measuring what they make. Live bugs in a pill are the crudest possible version of that. Fermented food delivers the chemistry; a capsule mostly delivers a number on a label.

The honest exceptions. This is about healthy people and supermarket probiotics. Specific strains do help specific conditions, and a stool transplant is a genuine, approved treatment for recurrent C. difficile infection. Those are narrow, supervised, evidence-backed uses, not a daily capsule for general "gut health." Educational, not medical advice.

The practical version is the cheap one: build to a couple of fermented foods a day and feed them fiber from a wide range of plants. The daily tracker counts your ferments, and the plant counter covers the fiber that does the real work.

Established ferments + fiber raise diversity Emerging postbiotic metabolite mechanism
Sources: Suez et al., "Post-antibiotic gut microbiome reconstitution is impaired by probiotics," Cell 2018 (Weizmann Institute) · Spencer et al., "Dietary fiber and probiotics influence the gut microbiome and melanoma immunotherapy response," Science 2021 (MD Anderson) · Wastyk et al., fermented-foods vs fiber trial, Cell 2021 (Stanford, Sonnenberg & Gardner labs). Pills oversold; food and fiber carry the evidence.

When to eat · Time-restricted eating
June 21, 2026

Give your gut the night shift off

This is the gut-health habit with the loudest fan base and the shakiest evidence: leave a 12-to-14-hour gap overnight with no food, so your gut can run its cleanup crew. Set your own window and see where you land.

MixedFact check

The claimA 12-to-14-hour overnight fast improves gut health, mood, and weight.

Low-risk and easy, and probably worth doing for the simplicity alone. But the headline benefits lean on uncontrolled app data, and tighter trials find small, uncertain effects.

The idea is intuitive. Your gut microbes have a daily rhythm; an overnight gap lets the lining repair and a maintenance crew tidy up, the way sleep restores the rest of you. Find your two times below, the last thing you eat at night and the first thing the next day, and the dial shows the gap and whether it clears the target.

12am6am12pm6pm12am
14 h overnight rest
Overnight restEating window

Notice what this is not: it is not calorie restriction. You eat the same food, just inside a tighter window. That is the genuinely appealing part, no counting, no hunger math, one simple rule. For a lot of people it also quietly cuts the late-night snacking that adds up to a real share of daily calories.

Why it gets a Mixed, not a green light

The most-cited evidence is a large community study (the Big IF study) in which 140,000 people tried time-restricted eating and those who stuck with it reported better mood and energy. The catch is in that sentence: it was an app-based study, self-selected and self-reported, with no control group. People who adhere to a health habit and then report feeling great are not proof the habit caused it. When researchers run tighter, controlled trials, the picture cools: a well-run randomized trial found time-restricted eating produced no meaningful weight or metabolic advantage over normal eating.

The honest read. A 12-to-14-hour overnight gap is safe, free, and easy, and if it helps you stop grazing at midnight, that alone is worth it. Just do not expect it to be a metabolic cheat code. The benefits beyond "I ate less junk at night" are not well established. Skip it entirely if you have a history of disordered eating, are pregnant, or take medication with food.

Established microbes have a circadian rhythm Emerging human health payoff
Sources: Lowe et al., "Effects of time-restricted eating on weight loss" (TREAT RCT), JAMA Intern Med 2020, no advantage over regular meals · ZOE Big IF community study, 2022, uncontrolled · Thaiss et al., microbiome circadian rhythms, Cell 2014. Mechanism real; human benefit modest and contested.

What to avoid · Ultra-processed food
June 21, 2026

The four tells of food built to be eaten too fast

"Ultra-processed" is a clumsy label, broad enough to sweep in plain yogurt and whole-grain bread. A more useful move is to name the four specific traits that make the worst offenders worth avoiding. Tap a food and see which it has.

MixedFact check

The claimUltra-processed foods are harmful and make up most of the modern diet.

The diets heaviest in ultra-processed food track with worse health, repeatedly. But "UPF" is a famously broad category, and the four traits below sort the genuine problems from the harmless processing better than the label does.

Processing itself is not the enemy. Tinned beans are processed and good for you. The problem is a specific design: cheap ingredients engineered to override your appetite and slide down before you notice. Four traits mark that design, and the foods to limit are the ones that stack all of them.

The pattern the tool makes visible: a whole apple and a tin of beans are processed in the loose sense, yet carry none of the four harms, while a cookie carries all four. That is why the blunt "avoid processed food" advice misfires. The target is not processing, it is the four-trait combination, and roughly a quarter of the typical American diet is made of foods that hit most or all of them.

The 80% rule. The goal is not to cut these to zero. Get it right about 80% of the time and stop worrying about the occasional treat. A monthly trip to a fast-food counter will not undo a week of plants. Perfectionism is its own failure mode.

Why this earns a Mixed rather than a clean Solid: the strongest data ties high ultra-processed intake to worse outcomes across dozens of conditions, but most of it is observational, and the official "UPF" definition is broad enough that critics fairly point out it lumps very different foods together. The four-tell filter is the honest, usable version of the advice.

Established high-UPF diets track worse health Emerging which traits do the damage
Sources: Lane et al., umbrella review of ultra-processed food and health, BMJ 2024 · Monteiro et al., NOVA classification, Public Health Nutr 2019 · Hall et al., ultra-processed diets and overeating (controlled feeding trial), Cell Metab 2019. Associations strong; the category is broad and debated.

What to eat · Protein
June 22, 2026

Diversify your protein: the complete-protein myth in one chart

Protein is the loudest word in food marketing, and most of the panic is manufactured. Almost everyone already gets enough, plant proteins are not "incomplete," and the gut wins when more of your protein arrives wrapped in fiber.

OverstatedFact check

The claimYou need far more protein than you get, and plant protein is incomplete.

Both halves are shaky. Most people already exceed the requirement, and every whole plant food contains all nine essential amino acids. The genuine differences are density and the package, not completeness.

First, the math nobody markets. The recommended intake is set deliberately high, about two standard deviations above the average person's actual need, so meeting it already covers the vast majority of people. Yet typical intake runs well above even that. In practice, protein deficiency is vanishingly rare outside of illness, which makes "are you getting enough protein?" the wrong question for almost everyone.

The "incomplete protein" myth

The old idea was that plants lack certain amino acids and must be carefully combined at each meal. It is outdated. Every whole plant food contains all nine essential amino acids. Some run proportionally lower in one, grains in lysine, beans in methionine, but the gap is small and your body pools amino acids across the whole day, so you never need to engineer a meal. Tap a food and watch all nine show up.

All nine essentials present

The one honest difference the chart also shows: animal foods are protein-dense, plants are more dilute. That matters at the extremes, a hard-training athlete or a frail older adult may want to concentrate intake, and they can, with more food or a simple scoop. For everyone else, normal portions across a day add up without thinking about it.

The gut bonus. When you shift protein toward beans, lentils and other plants, you are not just getting amino acids, you are getting fiber in the same bite, which is exactly what your microbes ferment into the chemicals that calm inflammation. Animal protein arrives with no fiber at all. That is the real reason to diversify, and it ties straight back to the 30-plants idea.

So where does the panic come from? The package. Once you isolate protein from food it tastes like chalk, so sugar and fat get added back, and the result is an ultra-processed bar wearing a health halo, the same trick as the low-fat era in reverse. The protein itself was never the issue. Read those products with the four-tells filter and most of the "high-protein" aisle lights up red.

Established plant proteins are complete; intake exceeds need Emerging plant-protein longevity edge
Sources: Gardner et al., protein intake vs requirement and environment, Am J Clin Nutr / 2019 (PMID 30726996) · 2024 systematic review finding no basis to raise the protein RDA across age groups (PMID 40610129) · SWAP-MEAT randomized crossover, plant vs animal protein and cardiovascular markers, 2020 (PMID 32780794) · Nurses' Health Study, midlife protein source and healthy aging, 2024 (PMID 38309825). Completeness settled; the package is the problem.

The pushback · Quality vs calories
June 21, 2026

Forget the calorie? Not so fast

This is the sharpest line in gut-health nutrition, and its loudest fight: the claim that you should ignore calories completely and focus only on food quality. The first half of that is good advice. The second half goes further than the science allows, and plenty of scientists have said so plainly.

OverstatedFact check

The claimCalories do not matter; ignore them completely and only quality counts.

Quality-first is genuinely good advice, and calorie-counting fails most people. But "calories don't matter at all" overshoots. Energy balance still governs weight; what is broken is the calorie as a tool, not the physics.

Take the strong version of the argument first, because it is right. For 40 years, public-health advice fixated on the calorie, and it coincided with the worst obesity trend in history. Calorie counting is nearly impossible to sustain: cut your intake and your body fights back, turning up hunger and turning down energy use until most people regain the weight. And the calorie number on a package tells you nothing about whether a food is whole or junk, a 100-calorie snack pack of refined starch is not health food. On all of this, the argument is on solid ground, and most nutrition scientists now agree the calorie was oversold.

Where it tips into overstatement

"Ignore calories completely" is a different claim from "calorie counting is a bad tool," and only the second is well-supported. Energy balance has not been repealed. In tightly controlled metabolic-ward studies, where every calorie is measured, intake still governs weight, and on the same calories a higher-protein or whole-food diet wins partly because it blunts appetite so you eat less, which is itself a calorie story. This is why some researchers publicly called the "calories don't count" framing irresponsible. The useful truth sits between the camps: quality is the lever most people should pull, because eating better food makes you eat less without trying, but that works through energy intake, not around it.

Where it holds

Calorie counting fails long-term, the body defends its weight, and a low-calorie label often marks a low-quality food. Focus on whole foods and the rest tends to follow.

Where it overshoots

"Calories simply do not matter" goes too far. They still set the ceiling. Quality wins largely by quietly lowering how much you eat, which is an energy effect, not a loophole around one.

Why this matters for you. If you are eating whole, varied food and feeling full, you almost certainly do not need to count anything, the practical advice lands. But if someone tells you a food is "free" because calories are a myth, that is the overstatement talking. You can out-eat a good diet; it is just much harder to.

Established energy balance governs weight Emerging best practical framing
Sources: Hall & Guo, controlled-feeding and energy balance, Gastroenterology 2017 · Rosenbaum & Leibel, adaptive thermogenesis after weight loss, Int J Obes 2010 · coverage of nutrition scientists' rebuttal to the "calories don't count" framing. Quality-first is sound; "calories don't matter" is overstated.

Reading the science · Skepticism
June 21, 2026

When the advice is also a sales pitch

A huge share of nutrition advice arrives attached to something for sale: a supplement, a test kit, a branded protocol, a book, a discount code. That does not make it wrong. It means you need a filter, and the filter is the same one scientists use. Here is how to read a claim when money is riding on it.

Use a filterFact check

The problemMost gut-health advice online is tied to a product. How do you know what to trust?

Trust the advice that still works if you buy nothing and that independent labs also found. Raise your guard exactly where a recommendation routes you toward a purchase. The commercial tie is a reason to verify, not to dismiss.

Skin in the game is everywhere in this field. Green powders promising to replace vegetables. Mail-in gut tests with a subscription attached. Personalized-nutrition apps. Diet books built around a single rule. Influencers with affiliate links. None of that automatically means the science is bad, some of these people are serious researchers, but a recommendation with a checkout button at the end of it has earned an extra look. Three questions sort it.

The three checks

1
Free test
Does the advice still work if you buy nothing? The strongest gut-health steps, more plants, a ferment, an overnight gap, cost zero. If the benefit only arrives with their product, be skeptical.
2
Independent evidence
Is it backed by research from people who do not profit, or only by the seller's own studies? Independent replication is the difference between a finding and a brochure.
3
Follow the money
Does this specific recommendation point at a purchase? That is the moment to slow down and look for a second source before paying.
The single-fix tell
The loudest red flag is one product that fixes a complex problem, a powder, a pill, a single test. Real nutrition is plural. Simple cures sell well and rarely hold up.

Run those on anything. The reason most of this issue passes is that its core costs nothing and traces back to independent labs: plant diversity from the American Gut Project, fermented foods from a Stanford trial, ultra-processed harms from reviews in the BMJ. The advice that sells you something, a test, a supplement, a subscription, is exactly where the evidence gets thinner and the bar should get higher.

The tell most people miss: total certainty

There is a second filter, and it is about how a claim sounds. Real science speaks in calibrated uncertainty, "we can infer this with reasonable confidence, but not prove it." The viral voice speaks in total assurance, because confidence reads as expertise to an audience. Flip it: 100% certainty about a complex biological question is a red flag, not a credential. The people who actually do this work, epidemiologists trained for years to separate cause from coincidence across millions of people, are the most careful to say what they do not yet know, and they are required to disclose who funds them. The confident voice in your feed usually is not.

The clinician
Treats the patient in front of them. Invaluable for care, but reasons from individual cases, which can mislead about what is true across a whole population.
The researcher
Compares millions of people over years and is trained to tell cause from coincidence. Speaks in probabilities, discloses funding, rarely goes viral.
The influencer
Optimizes for attention. Often runs on a single mechanism or anecdote, sounds completely sure, and need not tell you what they are paid to say.

None of the three is useless, and none is automatically right. But when they disagree about what is true for most people, the weight belongs with the population evidence, not the loudest certainty. Inferring cause from observational data is not a fudge, it is a mature field with its own methods, randomizing by nature, triangulating across study types, demanding a dose-response. The shortcut worth keeping: when a claim is good news about a bad habit, delivered with total confidence, with something for sale nearby, slow down.

The single-solution rule of thumb. Anyone offering one thing that fixes your gut, your mood, your weight, is probably selling it. The supplement aisle is built on this, and the trials keep finding that whole food beats the pill pulled out of it. When the pitch is "just take this," that is the sound of marketing, not science.

The empowering part: you almost never have to decide whether to trust a person. You can skip straight to the evidence. If the advice is free, independently supported, and not routed through a store, it stands on its own, no matter who is saying it or what they sell on the side.

Established whole food beats isolated supplements Emerging value of personalized testing
Sources: independent base for this issue, American Gut (mSystems 2018), Stanford fermented-foods trial (Cell 2021), BMJ ultra-processed umbrella review 2024 · supplement skepticism, multivitamin trials showing little benefit in well-nourished adults (Annals of Internal Medicine 2013) and calcium-supplement cardiovascular-risk signals (BMJ 2010) · on inferring cause from population data, Rothman & Lash, Modern Epidemiology; Pearl, The Book of Why; Mendelian randomization methods. Verify the claim, not the person.

The one tool · Daily check
June 21, 2026

Your week, checked

All eight guidelines come down to a few habits you can actually track. Not a diet, a rhythm: enough different plants, a ferment or two, and a real overnight gap. Tap your day in, watch the week build, and let the streak do the nagging.

0 d
Met-goal streak
0 / 7
Ferment days
0 / 7
12h+ rest days
Different plants today
Aim for 5 or more a day to reach about 30 a week
0
Fermented foods today
Kefir, kimchi, kraut, kombucha, live yogurt
0
Overnight rest
12 or more hours with no food
Lives only on this device, nothing leaves your phone. A day counts as met when you log 5+ different plants and at least one ferment.

The point is consistency, not perfection. The honest framing is the 80% rule: get it right most of the time and the occasional treat does not matter. This tool is built around that. A day turns green when you hit a simple bar, not a perfect one, and the streak rewards showing up rather than nailing it.

One honest note on the plant count: eating broccoli seven days running is one plant, not seven. The weekly goal is 30 different plants, so use the plant-diversity counter to tally variety across the week, and use this tracker to keep the daily habit going. Different jobs, same target.

And note it counts fermented foods, not probiotic pills. The probiotic paradox explains why the jar beats the capsule.

How it works: a local count on this device only. Nothing is uploaded, no account, no tracking. Clear it any time by clearing your browser data for this page. Educational, not medical advice.

Deep time · How we got a gut-brain axis
June 23, 2026

A 3.8-billion-year-old conversation

The gut-brain axis can sound like a modern wellness invention. It is the opposite: it is one of the oldest relationships in biology. Bacteria have been sensing the outside world and trading chemicals since before there were animals, and that single habit, scaled up over billions of years, became the line between your gut and your head. Drag through the whole story.

CellsMergerTeamsFirst gutGut to headYou
Drag through 3.8 billion years
SolidFact check

The claimThe gut-brain link is an ancient evolutionary feature, not a modern discovery.

Solid in its bones. Co-evolution with microbes, the cell-within-a-cell origin of mitochondria, and a nervous system that formed around the gut first are all well-established. The billion-year dates are best estimates, and "conversation" is a metaphor for chemical signaling.

Run the scrubber and one thread never breaks. At every stage, from a lone cell in the ancient ocean to you reading this, microbes are doing the same two things: sensing the world outside and trading chemicals across a border. Everything else, the gut, the nerves, the brain, is scaffolding that grew up around that conversation.

Why this makes sense of the rest

It reframes the whole publication. When the gut sends more signal to the brain than it receives, that is not a quirk, it is the older partner still doing its original job. When we call the microbiome a virtual organ, we are noticing something that was load-bearing before organs existed. And when a low-fiber, ultra-processed diet inflames the gut and dims the mood, it is a 3.8-billion-year-old sensor reporting that the environment has gone bad.

The single cell never left. The mitochondria powering every one of your cells were once free-living bacteria, swallowed and kept. You are not a body that happens to host microbes. You are, in a real sense, a very elaborate way for ancient microbial partnerships to keep sensing the world and trading with it.

So the practical advice in the rest of Gut Check, more plants, more fiber, fewer engineered foods, is not a lifestyle trend. It is feeding the oldest relationship you have, in the only language it has ever spoken: chemistry.

Established endosymbiosis, gut-first nervous system, co-evolution Emerging precise dating and detail
Sources: Margulis, endosymbiotic theory of mitochondria, 1967 · Gershon, The Second Brain (enteric nervous system) · Ley, Lozupone & Gordon, co-evolution of mammals and their gut microbiota, Nat Rev Microbiol 2008 · Furness, the enteric nervous system, on its early origin. Ancient and well-supported; deep-time dates approximate.

What to eat · Polyphenols
June 23, 2026

Take this bitter pill

We are trained from childhood to read sweet as good and bitter as bad. For your gut it runs the other way. Bitterness and deep color are a plant's defense chemistry, the polyphenols, and your microbes run on them. The bitter pill to swallow is that there is no pill, the bitterness is the point.

PromisingFact check

The claimBitter, brightly colored plants are good for you because of their polyphenols.

The mechanism is solid, color and bitterness flag polyphenols, and your microbes ferment and feed on them. The size of the clinical payoff is still emerging. The one firm "no": a polyphenol pill does not stand in for the food.

Color and bitterness are not decoration, they are information. A plant cannot run from the sun, insects, or drought, so it defends itself chemically. Those defense compounds are the polyphenols, and they happen to be exactly what our microbes evolved to use. The brighter and the more pleasantly bitter a plant, the more of them it carries. Tap a color.

This is why a peppery rocket leaf beats a pale iceberg one, why a good olive oil makes your throat catch, why dark chocolate over 70% and black coffee earn their place. The flavor you were taught to tolerate is the flavor of the active ingredient. Your microbes turn these compounds into anti-inflammatory metabolites and burn them as fuel, which makes the whole community more productive, the same pharmacy from the virtual organ, better stocked.

Now the actual bitter pill. You cannot shortcut this with a polyphenol capsule. Isolated extracts behave nothing like the food: they miss the fiber that carries them to the microbes, the dose is off, and absorption collapses without the rest of the plant around them. A resveratrol or curcumin pill is the polyphenol version of the probiotic paradox, and it lights up the mechanism trap checklist. The bitterness has to come on a plate.

So the move is simple and slightly uncomfortable: when two options sit side by side, pick the one with more color and more bite. The iceberg lettuce keeps in the fridge longer; the rocket actually feeds you. Eat the rainbow, and let it be a little bitter.

Established polyphenols feed and are transformed by gut microbes Emerging the size of clinical benefit
Sources: Cardona et al., "Benefits of polyphenols on gut microbiota," J Nutr Biochem 2013 · Beauchamp et al., oleocanthal in extra-virgin olive oil acts like ibuprofen, Nature 2005 · reviews on sulforaphane from cruciferous vegetables and the Nrf2 antioxidant pathway. Mechanism real; food beats the extract.

Reading the science · Cause and effect
June 23, 2026

Correlation, causation, and the con

The single most effective line in nutrition misinformation is "you can't prove causation from observational data." It sounds rigorous, even humble. It is backwards, and it is usually said by people who will then infer causation from a single anecdote.

BackwardsFact check

The claimObservational studies can't show cause, so nutrition science can be ignored.

Backwards. Inferring cause from observation is a mature science with real methods. It is how we know smoking and trans fats kill, neither of which was ever proven with a trial that fed people poison and waited.

Scientists rarely rest on a single study. They triangulate: they stack independent kinds of evidence until only one explanation survives. A lone correlation really is weak. But watch what happens as the other lines arrive. Tap each to add it.

Confidence it is causal
Start with one observational link. Now stack the rest:

This is the real story of trans fats. The first signal was a weak correlation, the kind influencers tell you to ignore. Then the dose-response showed up, then the cholesterol moved when trans fat was added and removed in feeding studies, then it replicated across populations. No single study was a knockout. Together they were decisive enough to ban an ingredient from the food supply.

Nature runs the trial for us. Mendelian randomization is the closest thing to magic in this field. The gene variants you inherited were shuffled at conception, randomly, decades before any lifestyle or drug could confound them. Comparing people by their inherited biology is a randomized trial baked in at birth, and it is how the cause behind heart disease and cholesterol was settled without waiting 40 years.

The three tells

"You can't prove cause"
Said while reasoning from a single patient or their own body. Triangulated observational data is exactly how cause is established when a trial would be unethical or impossible.
"Food surveys are useless"
The questionnaires are built to capture your habitual diet over a year, not what you ate Tuesday, and they have been validated against weighed food records for decades.
"You need a 2x effect"
An old rule from before modern tools. A small effect, triangulated against mechanism and dose-response, is credible, and across a population a small effect is still a lot of people.

None of these lines is science. They are rhetoric that happens to clear the ground for a book, a supplement, or a paid protocol, which is why they travel with the tells in when advice is also a sales pitch. The fix is not to trust every study. It is to ask whether the lines of evidence converge, and to be suspicious of anyone telling you to dismiss an entire field.

Established causal inference from observational data Emerging nothing here is fringe
Sources: Rothman & Lash, Modern Epidemiology · Pearl, The Book of Why · Bradford Hill, "The environment and disease: association or causation?" 1965 · Mendelian randomization methodology; the trans-fat evidence history. A mature science, not a loophole.

Reading the science · The pitch
June 23, 2026

The mechanism trap

The wellness aisle runs on explanation. A product tells you, in loving cellular detail, exactly how it works, and that feels like proof. It is not. In real clinical science, mechanism is one slide near the start; the entire rest of the talk is the only question that matters: does it actually work in people?

A tellFact check

The claimA detailed explanation of how a product works is evidence that it works.

Backwards. A plausible mechanism is the start of a question, not an answer. Heavy mechanism talk, especially with no trial behind it, is one of the most reliable signs you are being sold something.

Mechanism is cheap. Proof is expensive. You can tell a convincing cellular story for almost anything, that is why it sells. The discipline is to ask what happened when someone actually gave it to people and measured. Run a few products through the checklist and the pattern jumps out. Tap one.

The contrast is the lesson. A boring, decades-old generic medicine carries none of the flags, it has the trials, the listed side effects, the known doses, while the exciting new powder carries all five. The flags do not prove a product is useless, but each one is a place where evidence should be and is not.

"Natural" is not a safety rating. Concentrated botanical extracts send people to the hospital. Green tea extract, ashwagandha and turmeric supplements have all been linked to liver injury, and more than half of supplement ingredients have been found mislabeled, with some products containing things never listed at all. The plant on the label is not the dose in the bottle, and the bottle skipped the testing a drug must pass.

This is the same lesson as the probiotic paradox and the bitter pill, pulled into a rule: real benefits tend to come from food and proven treatments, not from the product with the best explanation. When the mechanism talk gets long and the trial never arrives, keep your hand on your wallet. It pairs with the certainty tell in when advice is also a sales pitch.

Established supplement mislabeling and botanical liver injury Emerging most novel-product mechanisms
Sources: Likhitsup et al., estimated exposure to hepatotoxic botanicals in US adults, JAMA Network Open 2024 · NIH/NIDDK LiverTox on green tea extract · analyses finding widespread mislabeling of supplement ingredients · the clinical-trial norm that mechanism is one slide and outcomes are the rest. Mechanism is the question, not the answer.