Go You Nutrition Counseling

Go You Nutrition Counseling

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Go You! Nutrition Counseling offers one-on-one nutrition counseling for people managing anxiety, depression, ADHD, burnout, and chronic conditions across Texas.

Insurance Accepted. Cash Pay options available. Find me on Google! https://g.page/go-you-nutrition-counseling?gm

Caffeine + Anxiety (And How To Cut Back Without Becoming a Zombie) - 07/14/2026

Caffeine check-in. Which of these feels familiar?

✅ caffeine on an empty stomach makes you feel edgy
✅ you feel better for an hour, then worse later
✅ you’re “tired but wired”
✅ sleep is lighter (even if you fall asleep fine)

If you checked a few, you don’t need to panic or quit cold turkey.
You just need a plan.
Start with this: 3-day experiment (food + water, same caffeine).
Full instructions here:

Caffeine + Anxiety (And How To Cut Back Without Becoming a Zombie) - Caffeine is one of those things that stops feeling like a choice pretty quickly. It’s just there. All. The. Time. […]

07/10/2026

A lot of people assume that working with a dietitian means having a few appointments, receiving a plan, and then being sent off to follow it correctly.

That isn’t how I work.

Early sessions often include sorting through what’s going on, answering questions, choosing a starting point, and setting a few realistic goals.

Later sessions are usually less about collecting more instructions and more about figuring out how those ideas work in your actual life.

We might:

Review what helped and what didn’t.

Adjust a goal that looked reasonable on paper but became much less reasonable once the week started.

Sort through the nutrition claims social media has enthusiastically delivered to your phone.

Brainstorm easier meals, find recipes, or prepare for a particularly busy season.

Look more closely at food rules, body image, or beliefs that keep making eating harder than it needs to be.

You remain in control of your goals and decisions. My job is to help you step back from all the noise and see options that can be hard to notice when you’re hungry, tired, watching the grocery bill, and wondering who will complain about dinner.

Some clients only need a handful of sessions. Others benefit from meeting every couple of weeks for a while and then spreading visits farther apart as their routines become more established.

Nutrition counseling can support the work you’re doing with therapy, medication, and the rest of your healthcare. It doesn’t replace those things.

Support is available when you’re ready, and sessions are often covered by insurance.

07/08/2026

Most nutrition progress would make terrible before-and-after content.

Progress might look like:

You chose a snack without studying the label and then consulting Dr. Google.

You found three dinners your family will actually eat, so Wednesday nights require less negotiation.

You’ve been sleeping a little better.

You still have enough energy on Thursday evening to talk to your family instead of collapsing on the couch and hoping no one asks you a question.

You ate a vegetable most days this week. Nothing exotic. Nobody arranged it into a flower. 🪷

These changes may not feel especially dramatic while they’re happening. That’s often because they’re gradually becoming part of your regular life.

When I’m working with a client who feels like they aren’t making enough progress, I’ll sometimes ask, “What would you have done in this same situation three months ago?”

That question usually tells us more than comparing today to an imaginary version of perfect.

Slow progress gives you time to practice, adjust, and figure out what actually fits. Over several months, those small changes can add up to something fairly significant: less confusion about nutrition, fewer exhausting food decisions, and more brain space available for the rest of your life.

What’s something that feels ordinary now but would have been difficult for you a few months ago?

07/02/2026

Today is the last day to nominate local favorites for Best of Denton County.

If you know my work and would like to support Go You! Nutrition Counseling, I’d be honored by your nomination for Nutritionist / Dietitian - Certified in the category of Sports, Fitness, and Nutrition.
Every referral, share, recommendation, and kind word has helped this practice grow, and I’m deeply grateful for that support.

Here’s the nomination link:
https://bestofdentoncounty.com/sports-fitness-nutrition/

And one quick privacy note: if you’re a current or former client, please don’t include personal or health-related details in public comments.

Thank you for supporting local care. And remember to spread the love; nominate all your favorite Denton County small businesses

Sports, Fitness & Health Services - Best of Denton County 06/25/2026

Best of Denton County nominations are in the final stretch, so I wanted to share one more reminder.

If my work has helped you, your family, or someone you know, I’d be honored by your nomination for Go You! Nutrition Counseling in Nutritionist / Dietitian - Certified. This practice has grown through trust, referrals, and community support, and I’m grateful for every person who has helped my work reach someone who needed it.

If you’d like to nominate Go You! Nutrition Counseling, here’s the link:

https://bestofdentoncounty.com/sports-fitness-nutrition/

And don't forget nominate every business you love across the county!

If you’re a current or former client, please do not include personal or health-related information in public comment fields. Thank you for supporting local care in Denton County.

Sports, Fitness & Health Services - Best of Denton County Best of Denton County 2023 is open for nominations! Celebrate your favorite Sports & Fitness businesses inspiring health and wellness.

Types of Hunger: Physical, Practical, Emotional, and Sensory Hunger Explained 06/20/2026

Practical hunger is one of the most underrated concepts I talk about with clients.

It’s eating because you know something your body doesn’t know yet.

Like:

You’re not hungry now, but lunch is going to be late.
You need food with medication.
You have therapy, errands, school pickup, or a long commute up I-35 coming up.
Your appetite is low, but skipping breakfast makes the rest of the day harder.

This is where the advice to only eat when you’re hungry doesn't work.

While for some people, that advice feels peaceful, for others, especially when hunger cues are quiet, inconsistent, or tangled up with anxiety or depression, it can become another rule that leads to under-eating and future chaos.

Mindful eating can be future-focused.

Sometimes it means eating before the day falls apart, and before you're hungry.

More on practical hunger and the other types of hunger here:

Types of Hunger: Physical, Practical, Emotional, and Sensory Hunger Explained Hunger is not always just an empty stomach. Learn the 4 types of hunger, physical, practical, emotional, and sensory, plus how to understand hunger cues without turning food into another rule.

06/18/2026

A quick reminder that Best of Denton County nominations are still open.

Local businesses grow because local people share them. They grow through referrals, community support, kind words, and people remembering your name when someone needs help. That’s how Go You! Nutrition Counseling has grown, and I’m really grateful for that.

If you know my work and would like to support my practice, I’d be honored by your nomination for Nutritionist / Dietitian - Certified in the category Sports, Fitness, and Nutrition.

And if you’re a current or former client, please avoid including personal or health-related details in public comments.

06/16/2026

People sometimes assume nutrition counseling is a few sessions and then you’re “fixed.” Or that you'll just get handed a meal plan and told, "Good luck."

Real, lasting change doesn’t work like that.

In ongoing support, we’re not just talking about food. We’re building skills that hold up over time, even when your schedule changes, your stress changes, or your appetite/mood shifts.

Ongoing support can look like:

adjusting your plan when life gets busy (instead of abandoning it)
troubleshooting patterns and hurdles as they show up in real time
building a few dependable defaults so meals feel less exhausting
planning for hard weeks before they happen

The goal isn’t perfection. It’s learning how to keep caring for yourself even when things aren’t ideal.

If you’ve tried to do this alone and it keeps falling apart when life changes, you’re not failing. You’re missing support.

Types of Hunger: Physical, Practical, Emotional, and Sensory Hunger Explained 06/09/2026

Sometimes hunger is obvious.

Your stomach growls. Your energy drops. Lunch starts sounding less like a nice idea and more like a time-sensitive situation.

Other times, hunger is a lot harder to read.

Maybe you ate recently, but still want something crunchy.
Maybe you’re not hungry yet, but you know your afternoon is packed.
Maybe you want comfort food after a stressful day.
Maybe you feel shaky and anxious, but you’re not sure if you need food, water, a break, or to never open your email again.

This is why I don’t treat hunger like it should always be simple.

There are different types of hunger, including physical, practical, emotional, and sensory hunger. None of them are “wrong.” They just tell us different things.

I wrote more about the 4 types of hunger and how to understand what your body, mind, schedule, and emotions may be asking for.

Read it here:

Types of Hunger: Physical, Practical, Emotional, and Sensory Hunger Explained Hunger is not always just an empty stomach. Learn the 4 types of hunger, physical, practical, emotional, and sensory, plus how to understand hunger cues without turning food into another rule.

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Dallas, TX

Opening Hours

Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Friday 10am - 5pm
Saturday 10am - 3pm