All blog posts from Dr. Allott are provided for educational and informational purposes only. As Dr. Allott is also a licensed medical practitioner, we must make it clear that nothing on the blog is intended to constitute medical advice, consultation, recommendation, diagnosis, or treatment. If you are concerned about your health, please seek appropriate care in your area.


Getting enough protein as a vegetarian or vegan

This video talks about how vegetarians and vegans can get enough protein and be at their best.

  • 0:00 Intro

  • 0:21 How much protein do I need? (here’s a link to the Huberman Lab podcast referenced)

  • 1:39 Challenges with getting enough protein

  • 4:43 Sources of protein

  • 6:37 Protein powders

  • 7:10 Sample menu

  • 8:22 Glucose curves with different types of food

  • 9:16 Continuous Glucose Monitors as a tool

We're working on creating short educational videos this year and would love your feedback and topic suggestions!

Continuous Glucose Monitors and Mood

This video talks about how glucose levels impact mood, focus, and fatigue - and shows an example of what hypoglycemia looks like on a continuous glucose monitor. Learn more at KristenAllott.com

We're working on short videos this year and would love your feedback and suggestions for topics!

Jill’s Story: Filling Up the Hole

A young woman name Jill stuck her head through the clinic doorway.  Instantly, I thought: Lady, what big, brown eyes you have.  It wasn’t just the size of her eyes that struck me; it was also their intensity.  Those dark brown, doe-like eyes darted about taking in the details of the space and me, as if to check out whether she fit here or not.  Would it be a safe place for her?

Like many women from challenging childhoods, Jill had seen therapists off and on concerning depression and anxiety for quite a while.  After initially getting acquainted, she turned the conversation. “I’ve been diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder.  I had a pretty miserable childhood.  I was never quite perfect enough for my parents, whose parenting skills were limited to lots of criticism and hours of my being sent to my room alone.”   

I was impressed with the results of the work Jill had found in therapy.  It had not been an easy journey.  Yet, with the support of her therapist, she mostly lives a good life with a loving husband and several precious children.  It sounds as if she is a great mom!

Five years ago, her primary care physician started encouraging her to change her diet and lose weight.  She said that it was true that she had gained an additional five to ten pounds yearly. Three years later, her doctor informed her she was diabetic.  That diagnosis of diabetes spun her back to the cruelty and neglect of her childhood. The cycle of depression and anxiety kicked into gear once more.

“Suddenly, I am scared again!  My children are young.  My husband and I have plans!  And, there are so many things we still want and must do for each other and our children without having to deal with diabetes. I shared the diagnosis with my therapist and she referred me here to you.”  

Through lab work and analysis of her existing diet, Jill and I discovered that she had nutritional deficiencies that were resulting in her on-going feelings of fatigue and mental fogginess.  I reviewed how food and exercise contribute to her “feeling good“ daily.  These things seemed to motivate Jill to eat better and expand her exercise routine, which in turn meant Jill was thinking more clearly.

While I helped her feel better in the present by addressing her body’s needs, Jill and her therapist became aware that no one had ever taught her how to really care for her body. For example, Jill’s secret binge eating at night after everyone else in the home was asleep — although comforting to her in that moment — was one of her more dangerous behaviors.  She decided the bowl of chocolate ice cream and crunchy chips (her favorite late night fill up) had to change.  She tried numerous times unsuccessfully.

What we worked on together in this next phase was developing skills to eat in a way that resulted in her actually feeling better in the moment and the next day.  For example, rather than trying to stop the evening binge eating, we became determined to make the eating healthier.  In no time cottage cheese with pecans, scooped with corn chips became the nightly replacement.

Weeks later when Jill returned one evening to eating ice cream.  She could hardly function the next day.  Her body ached; her muscles stiffened; her head felt as if it were stuffed with cotton.  On the other side of that experience, the cottage cheese and pecan option seemed like self-care rather than a doctor allowing her permission to cheat.  Over time, with compassion and skill building, Jill made autonomous choices previously denied her in childhood.  She came up with her own ways of feeding herself that were helpful rather than harmful.  Her current choices became hers because of what her experiences taught her and how her body responded.

A year has passed since Jill first stood in my sun-filled doorway.  Her diabetes markers are vastly improved.  She understands diabetes and obesity are in part a result of an abused childhood.  Additionally, a poorly nourished body played an important part in her depression and anxiety cycle.  Her own self-inflicted coping methods, such as the binge eating, compounded an already poor situation. She now takes pride in how she cares for herself and her family, instilling the importance of honoring ourselves through the expression of our emotions, real food choices, and exercise.

Once in a while and as her body’s needs change, Jill and I check-in with each other, concerning her diet.  She and her therapist continue to explore her past and re-create a life-giving story for her.  These various threads of care come together now and support her, as Jill embraces totally the fullness of her days.  She thrives.

Washington’s state flower

Washington’s state flower

ACEs contributes to the physical causes of mental health challenges

In a recent speaking event about the physical causes of mental health, a participant asked an insightful question: How does a background of ACEs (Adverse Childhood Events) impact or contribute to the physical causes of mental health challenges?

 The research around ACES show that the hormonal system, specifically the hypothalamic pituitary axis, can become over activated. This effects everything from the immune system to glucose control to brain development, and especially a person’s baseline response to stress. Despite knowing this, our front-line therapy for trauma is psychotherapy or prescribed psychotherapeutic medications.

While building the scaffolding of life skills, therapy typically provided often misses the most basic skills of self care for the body:

  • Sleep: 8-9 hours at regular and consistent times

  • Feeding oneself: eating regular meals at consistent times and the skills that support this (menu planning, shopping, cooking, understanding the importance of nutrient balanced meals)

  • Movement: How to physically play

  • Healthy breathing: practicing breathing through the nose

Practicing these skills provides a pathway for resetting the hormonal system, which provides a new set point for stress, entrains the pre-frontal cortex to being the primary driver for decision making, and supports the brain for wiring in new behaviors.

The ACES pyramid is useful image to capture the possible steps that contribute to mental health and addiction challenges. When we’re born into a family that has overwhelming challenges, such as poverty, community disruption, lack of economic and social capital, addictions and mental illness, we likely miss roll modeling of the tools needed to optimize our brains and bodies

Here are some of the things that might have been missed during a complex childhood, which may mean that the related skills were never learned:

  • Having enough sleep. For an infant to get 12 to 15 hours of sleep, there needs to be an adult around to protect and care for them. Getting enough sleep is critical for the development of a child’s body, and the child learns what it feels like to have the neurological and physiological resources to learn and respond to their world.

  • Having predictable meals, with enough nutrients, to build brains and bodies. It’s important for our circadian clocks, which are imbedded in our cells throughout our bodies, to be able to predict when we’ll get nutrients as well as sleep. This supports the natural rhythm of the hypothalamic pituitary axis, which helps the brain and hormonal system recover from trauma and reset itself.

  • Opportunities for physical play, indoors or outdoors. Play is the building block for using movement to help prevent mental health and physical health problems. It’s physical action that tells our whole body that we survived a threat and can move by our own choices. Additionally, there is increasing evidence that movement and emotional control reinforce each other.

  • Having access to nutrient dense foods with complex flavors. Experiencing food insecurity often means focusing on getting calories, or eating to survive, which means that nutrient-dense may be a luxury. This wires the pallets of children to expect foods high in sugar, fat and salt. If the sweet-bitter tastes of greens or the sweet crunch of carrots are foreign flavors and textures, they become rejected by the nervous system as not safe and limit the brain-body from the nutrients it needs to heal and thrive.

  • Breathing to support health, and not just survival. Neglect and abuse teach us to breath shallowly and through mouths. Shallow mouth-breathing becomes habitual, reducing the amount of oxygen available to our bodies and brains, and how we respond to carbon dioxide. Over the long term, this increases the risk of obesity, inflammation, glucose control issues, and reinforces the neurologically reactive patterns reinforced in childhood. Nasal breathing increases oxygen to our body and increase anxiety tolerance.

The research is clear that people can and do recover from challenging childhoods and traumas. Understanding that some of the basic self-care behaviors may be missing and intentionally addressing this issue supports recovery. Additionally, we – as a society – need to provide the resources such as food education, child care, mentoring, and financial support for families to learn how to care for their children as well as themselves.

The League of Extraordinary People: A Conversation with Alfred White, focused on BIPOC community Experiences

Using Whole Foods Nutrition to Address the Anxieties that Arise from Trauma and Racism

For Mental Health Awareness Month, Psychotherapist Alfred White discusses how to heal from trauma, adversity and chronic stress with Dr. Kristen Allott, naturopathic physician, speaker and pioneering mental health advocate.

Watch the video on the The League of Extraordinary People Facebook page

What can be learned in therapy, with Dr. Jane Tornatore

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The Connectors Group
When I work with an individual on improving their energy and mental clarity while also addressing other mental and physical health challenges, I often ask if they have done therapy and, if so, what they learned from it.

Often the response is that they told someone their story of childhood, loss, challenges... This, of course, is important, but what did they learn?

For myself, I has seen several therapists over time. With each therapist, I was mostly unclear about what I was learning at the time; I just wanted to feel better. In retrospect, I can see that I was learning:

  • to tell my story and not edit out the uncomfortable moments

  • how to have an observational self that is not the internal critic

  • how to trust myself and trust others

  • how to set boundaries for myself and others

  • how to learn from my mistakes

  • how to talk small steps forward, rather than try to leap into what I have not experienced before

  • how to have hope

Recently, I was talking to my friend and colleague Dr. Jane Tornatore, who is one of the therapists that I refer out to when someone is struggling and is looking for more than “just talking” about what’s going on. I realized that part of why I enjoy referring to Jane is that she’s clear about what skills people need to learn to help their brains better integrate their experiences. Neuroscience supports that it’s this integration that helps people feel more stable and engaged in their lives.

This is a recording of the live webinar with Dr. Jane Tornatore, Dr. Kristen Allott, and Natasha Duarte..


Meet Dr. Jane Tornatore:

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Dr. Jane Tornatore is a therapist, speaker and author based in Seattle, WA. She has been in private practice for 15 years. Her style incorporates compassion, curiosity, deep listening, and heartfelt optimism, along with powerful shots of playfulness. Jane has dedicated her career and her life to helping people love themselves and have self-compassion. She received a Master’s degree at the University of Illinois, and a PhD at the University of Minnesota. Before going into private practice, she spent two decades working in the field of Alzheimer’s, including research and working for the Alzheimer’s Association. She has authored over 20 articles and just published a book—Everything is Perfect, Just Not ME! A Roadmap for Self-Acceptance. Learn more about Jane at: doctortornatore.com


The Connectors Group consists of a wide range of individuals who are in positions to help other people navigate their lives better: mental health therapists, executive coaches, psychiatric nurse practitioners, supervisors and project managers, lawyers, teachers, and community organizers.

Our Best Worksheets for Staying in Your Responsive Brain

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Maintaining our Power Supplies is especially important - and can be especially challenging - during stressful times. But staying in the smart responsive-cortex part of our brains helps us make responsive, proactive choices rather than reactive, fearful ones. It also helps us relate to ourselves and those around us with compassion, understanding that we each have different tolerance levels and abilities to cope with upheaval in our lives.

With this in mind, we want to share a collection of our best worksheets and tools to help you stay in your smart responsive-cortex brain:

  • Monitoring Power Supply

  • 3-Day Experiment for More Energy and Mental Clarity: Protein Every 3 Hours

  • Ideas for Increasing Protein

  • Increasing Protein in Vegetarian and Vegan Diets

  • Steps to Evaluating Food labels

  • 30 Days to More Energy and Mental Clarity

  • Supporting Employee Safety and Wellbeing During COVID-19

And here’s a link to a previous post with three other favorite worksheets.

If you would like to learn ways of using these handouts in story form, check out Mica’s story.

Recognizing and Addressing Addictions in the Time of COVID-19

Friday April 24th at 1:30pm Pacific Time

(2:30pm Mountain Time;3:30pm Central Time; 4:30pm Eastern Time)

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The Connectors Group
For some people, this COVID-19 moment can be a set-up for additions, which can lead to long-term physical, financial and relationship challenges. Dr. Kristen Allott and Natasha Duarte have brought together three experts who will share different approaches to addressing addictions:

  • Ambrosia Eberhardt – 12 step programs

  • Andrea St. Clair - Outpatient and inpatient recovery, and alternatives to 12-step programs

  • Alida Schuyler – Harm Reduction approaches

The below video is the recording of the webinar about Recognizing and Addressing Addictions in the Time of COVID.

Meet the panelists:

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Ambrosia Eberhardt, Program Manager, Parents for Parents Program, Rising Strong, Spokane, WA

For the last 4 years, Ambrosia has been supporting parents entering Child Protective Services in achieving the skills and sobriety needed to regain custody of their children. She supervises and trains Parent For Parent (peer support) programs, and educates professionals about the complexity of the child protective services system. She uses her voice and experience to influence policy and law changes that impact the population she serves. Ambrosia co-founded a local advocacy group called Spokane Parent Advocacy Network, is a member and prior facilitator of the Washington State Parent Ally Committee, and is currently involved in taking this work internationally to support the creation of the International Parent Advocacy Network. Ambrosia empowers people to walk through complex situations and navigate the child welfare system successfully, using her own story to inspire hope in others. She teaches HOPE classes and champions a Protein for All program. Learn more

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Andrea St. Clair, Client Care Coordinator, Counselor and Chemical Dependency Professional

Andrea began her work as a Chemical Dependency counselor in 1990 after completing the Addiction Studies Program at Seattle University. She has a BA in Holistic Psychology and Counseling from Antioch University and a MA in Mental Health Counseling from Argosy University. She draws from Person Centered and Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapies to support clients in achieving wellbeing and the quality of life they desire. Her dedication to respectful holistic treatment and her quest for better ways to meet client needs led Andrea to a Positive Alternative. She facilitates groups, provides individual therapy, and is often the first person individuals speak with when they call A.P.A. for information about our program. Her ability to connect, offer compassion, and present a thorough picture of what may best suit their needs is reassuring to callers who often feel vulnerable when seeking help. This initial contact opens the door to treatment and desired change. She has been providing group and individual counseling and working as resources coordinator at A Positive Alternative since 2009. Learn more

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Alida Schuyler, Recovery coach

Alida has been a professional life coach since 1997 and specializes in addiction recovery.  She works with clients who struggle with over drinking or over drugging, and supports goals of harm reduction, moderation, and abstinence. She developed one of the first trainings in professional recovery coaching, and is currently developing a nonprofit in Kentucky to provide housing, safety, and stability to women seeking recovery. Learn more


The Connectors Group consists of a wide range of individuals who are in positions to help other people navigate their lives better: mental health therapists, executive coaches, psychiatric nurse practitioners, supervisors and project managers, lawyers, teachers, and community organizers.

Hope Centered and Trauma Informed: Remembering Hope in a Time of Fear

Dr. Kristen Allott and Natasha Duarte interview Chan Hellman, PhD, co-author of the award-winning book “HOPE Rising: How the Science of Hope Can Change Your Life”. Chan introduces the language and science of Hope and shares his insights into how we can cultivate hope during these uncertain times.

This is a recording of a live webinar.

Chan M. Hellman is a professor of social work at the University of Oklahoma and Director of The Hope Research Center. He has written more than 150 scientific publications and has presented at numerous national and international conferences worldwide. Chan has also presented his work on hope with TEDx in the Spring of 2020. Chan’s research is focused on hope as a psychological strength helping children and adults overcome trauma and adversity. Chan is the co-author of the award-winning book “Hope Rising: How the Science of Hope Can Change Your Life” with his co-author Casey Gwinn, published by Morgan James.

Worksheets for Staying in Your Responsive Brain

As we all navigate these uncertain times, remembering that protein-rich food is a tool to help us manage stress is now more important than ever. This will allow us to take in the ever-changing information about COVID-19 and make responsive, proactive choices rather than reactive, fearful ones. It also helps us relate to ourselves and those around us with compassion, understanding that we each have different tolerance levels and abilities to cope with this upheaval in our lives.

With this in mind, we want to (re)share some worksheets and tools that help take the stress out of figuring out how to feed ourselves.

If your anxiety is rising - remember the Lizard Brain Treat: A Lizard Brain Treat is a snack of sugar (a quick fuel) and protein (a longer lasting fuel). You want the quick fuel to get to your brain almost immediately, which will start to reduce the adrenalin causing you to be in your reactive lizard brain. Following this with protein extends the amount of time you’re in your responsive cortex brain, before needing to re-fuel. Our handout has suggestions for Lizard Brain Treats.

Optimizing Your Brain Food Log: We know that what we eat plays a large part in your level of energy and mental clarity, and can help us each be at our best. This worksheet will help you stay focused on managing your anxiety, anger, and depression by tracking your nutrient intake and helping ensure that you are getting protein, carbs, fiber and fat with each meal.

Go-To Meals Worksheet: Having a plan in place so you don’t have to think about what meals to prepare in the moment can be helpful. Having 3 ideas for each meal can help you stay on track with getting enough protein, balanced with carbs, fiber and fat. Use the Go-To Meals handout to list meal ideas that are simple to throw together or ones that you really enjoy preparing. Remember, there are no rules against eating dinner for breakfast and breakfast for dinner! The goal is to have some ideas that you don’t have to think too much about. Pin the completed handout on your fridge for easy access.

For more suggestions and tools, check out the Education Page and subscribe to our Optimizing Brains & Bodies podcast.

Lizard Brain Treats Help You Feel Better Quickly!

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A Lizard Brain Treat is a key intervention to help you feel better now.

When you’re feeling on the edge and having a hard time with acute anxiety and worry, it’s hard to remember what you can do in the moment to help yourself.

If you are experiencing any of the below, try a Lizard Brain Treat! Even though you may not feel hungry, fueling your brain will help you reduce your anxiety and symptoms.

  1. Are you having a panic attack?

  2. Are you uncomfortably anxious or irritated?

  3. Are you waking at 3am in the morning, with your mind racing?

  4. Are you overly or underly emotional for the situation?

  5. Have you not eaten for more than 3 hours?

  6. Do you want to feel better in 10-15 minutes?

Lizard Brain Treats

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A Lizard Brain Treat is a snack of sugar (a quick fuel) and protein (a longer lasting fuel). You want the quick fuel to get to your brain almost immediately, which will start to reduce the adrenalin causing you to be in your reactive lizard brain. Following this with protein extends the amount of time you’re in your responsive cortex brain, before needing to re-fuel. Choose one quick fuel and one protein from the lists below – or from your favorite foods.

Ideas for Quick Fuels:

  • ¼ cup of juice

  • 1 piece of hard candy

  • ¼ cup of soda

  • Honey stick

  • 1 tbl of jelly

Ideas for Protein:

  • ¼ cup of nuts

  • ¼ cup of nuts

  • A stick of jerky

  • ¼ cup of cottage cheese

  • 2 tbl of peanut (or other nut) butter

Combined sources work too (as long as they aren’t sugar-free)!

  • ½ cup of a protein shake

  • Protein bar

  • ½ a PB&J sandwich

Generally speaking, your anxiety will drop by 10-20% within 10-15 minutes.

Download this information as a handout and post it on your fridge or keep it near your desk.

Short Cuts: Ways to keep your mind in charge of your brain

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We all need routine to make our busy lives efficient. We need to put things on autopilot to function. But sometimes we become too efficient. Part of what governs what the brain does is “what happens together wires together”. As the behavior happens hundreds to thousands of times, it becomes a brain-habit and we feel uncomfortable if we deviate from it.

Examples of this are: We eat the same thing for breakfast every day, we always watch a show at 7pm, we have alcohol with every dinner, we do only one form of exercise… However, if we maintain three options for any given activity, we are more likely to vary our choices and not get bored and stop or consistently turn to addictive foods, screens, or substance.

So what are your three go-to options for breakfast, lunch, snacks, dinner, before bed activities, and ways of moving your body?

To help you with the meal and snack options, we have handouts for omnivores and for vegetarians.

Fuel for Thoughts: Preventing Night Terrors

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For years, I had a consistent dream of a bear chasing me. I would wake with my heart racing. I didn’t want to go back to sleep for fear of the bear returning.

How do I fix a problem when I am not even conscious for the event? I started to look for patterns.

I noticed that when I went out with friends and had a drink with dinner, the bear would predictably visit. I noticed that when I had a late dinner with lots of protein and no alcohol, the bear was absent. I moved into a new apartment in the summer and it was hot, so I left the bedroom door open for a cross breeze. No bear. It cooled down and I closed the bedroom door while I slept…bear. Open door, less likely bear. I started a list of what seemed to make a difference. Open door, protein at night, limit alcohol at night: the bear dream was more manageable.

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I started seeing a therapist to address some anxiety about being dyslexic and in medical school. When my therapist showed me how turn into my anxiety instead of trying to ignore it or avoid it, my dream changed. One night, instead of running from the bear, I turned to face it and said “What?!” The bear just stopped and sat down in front of me. I had a sense that I had found a new best friend. Now, I can trust my anxiety to tell me when something is off, and I can look with curiosity until I understand my discomfort.

Later as I started to study the physiology of mental health and how the brain works, I could see why my observations helped. Not getting random hits of adrenaline due to dropping blood glucose from alcohol or not eating protein is helpful.

We all have ancient brains that will scan our environment for safety and make sure we are not being approach by lions (or bears). We all need to figure out what our bodies and brains need to feel safe., especially while asleep.  Nightmares and night waking are a chance to listen deeply for what we need, observe our patterns, and do experiments to learn more about what the body and brain need. Please read the Short Cuts post for more ideas about how to improve sleep. 

Short Cuts: Experiments to feeling better

We often think that feeling better takes a lot of time and energy. This idea is certainly supported and promoted by the weight loss industry! But there is a difference between feeling better today, next week, and weight loss. It’s also important to understand that sustained weight loss is very complicated. However, what if our goal is just to have 10 to 15% more energy and mental clarity? This is very possible right now, with a little experimentation.

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I like doing experiments for my health. It allows me to evaluate if a new behavior is worth continuing and also when to use it most effectively. There are lots of little experiments that can improve how you feel, in as little as 10 minutes or just a few days. And this means you might then have the energy to do more to feel even better.

For example, years ago I discovered that if I exercised in the morning my dyslexic brain worked better. With more experiments I discovered that it takes about 20 minutes of walking or 15 minutes of stretching, weight lifting and balance exercises to see a benefit at the end of the day. When it is beautiful out, I go for a walk; when it is raining I work out in my living room.

Every experiment has to have a definable benefit. Not just “because I should”. For me, when I work out in the morning, I can get my clinical notes done with the patient in the room or in the time before my next patient. When I don’t exercise, I spend 45-60 minutes charting at the end of the day. On my non-clinical days, I spend less time wondering around the internet looking for heartwarming videos and more time on my own passions. It took a month of morning work outs for me to see the correlation. Now that I see it, I can see that the benefit is immediate.

Here is a pdf that outlines some short cuts to feeling better. I invite you to choose one to experiment with. Let me know how it goes, or share your own short cuts, by commenting below.