Tallis Rynn’s Gluten-Free Plan for Brain Fog Relief

Tallis Rynn remembers the day she walked into her kitchen, staring at the coffee machine, and completely forgetting how to use it.

It wasn’t just a one-time lapse—her mind had been foggy for months. “I thought it was just stress,” she recalls, “but then I started reading about how gluten could be affecting my brain.”

She decided to try a gluten-free plan for thirty days, not expecting much. But by the second week, she noticed she could think more clearly, recall details faster, and focus longer without the need for constant caffeine. Tallis’s new approach wasn’t about chasing a trend—it was about reclaiming her mental clarity.

Her mornings now start with warm lemon water and a breakfast of scrambled eggs with spinach, paired with a slice of almond-flour bread. Lunch is often a quinoa salad tossed with roasted vegetables and avocado. Dinner might be baked salmon with sweet potato mash. While the meals are simple, Tallis says they are “like a reset button” for her mind.

She also made sure to read labels carefully. Gluten can hide in sauces, dressings, and even some chocolates. “It’s sneaky,” she laughs. “You think you’re eating healthy, but gluten is there.” She replaced store-bought sauces with homemade ones, choosing olive oil, fresh herbs, and lemon juice to keep flavors bright and clean.

Now, Tallis not only feels mentally sharper but also experiences fewer afternoon slumps. “It’s like the fog lifted,” she says. “I didn’t realize how much food was influencing my brain until I changed it.”