Best Health Wellness
Best Health Wellness helps women transform their health through personalized nutrition, strength training, and lifestyle coaching. Founded by Heather Watkins, a Nutrition and Fitness Consultant with over 30 years of experience, we specialize in fat loss, muscle building, women's health, healthy aging, and GLP-1 nutrition support. Our programs are overseen by a licensed Physician, combining medical
07/14/2026
Protein bars are not a meal.
Here's how to actually use them.
I get asked about "the best protein bar" constantly β so let's clear something up first: even the cleanest bar on the market is a snack, not a substitute for real food.
It's there for the airport, the back-to-back meetings, the workout-to-carpool sprint.
It is not there to replace a lunch built from actual protein, fiber, and produce.
Why does that matter?
Because whole food gives your body things a bar simply can't replicate β the volume and water content that trigger fullness signals, the micronutrient diversity, the way protein and fiber digest together to keep blood sugar steady for hours instead of just until the next craving hits.
A bar can hit a protein number on paper. It can't fully do what a plate of real food does for your hormones and your hunger.
So when you do reach for one, choose wisely. Here's what to actually check:
π Flip it over β ignore the front of the package
"Clean protein," "high protein," "low sugar" β none of that is regulated. Anyone can print it. The ingredient list is the only thing that matters.
π« Scan for seed oils
Canola, soybean, sunflower oil, safflower, palm kernel β these show up in most mainstream bars even when the marketing screams "healthy." (Small amounts of sunflower lecithin, used as an emulsifier, is different β that's not the same red flag.)
π« Watch for the sugar alcohol sleight of hand
"Only 1g sugar!" usually means sucralose, erythritol, or maltitol did the work instead. That's not a win β for a lot of women it means GI distress and cravings later.
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Look for real protein sources
Grass-fed whey, egg whites, collagen + a plant blend, or a whole-food plant protein β not a cheap isolate propped up with fillers.
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Count the ingredients
4-8 recognizable ingredients is the benchmark. Once you hit double digits with words you can't pronounce, it's processed food wearing a health halo.
Bottom line: a clean bar is a good backup plan. It is never the plan.
Here is a list of my top picks- and again, I do NOT look for the highest protein- I look for the cleanest ingredients!!
Again, just my personal preference as SO MANY BARS are loaded with unrecognizable ingredients.
07/11/2026
Drank last night? Here's what actually matters today.
One night out doesn't undo your progress β but what you do in the next 24-48 hours makes a real difference in how fast you bounce back.
Alcohol temporarily shifts how your body handles fuel, blood sugar, and recovery. This isn't about punishment or extreme restriction (that actually backfires and slows things down more).
It's about a few simple, strategic steps:
-Rehydrate before your coffee
-Protein at your first meal
-Don't skip meals to "make up for it"
-Low-intensity movement over punishing workouts
-Prioritize sleep that night
-Get back to your normal plan β not a restrictive one
Living your life and staying on track aren't mutually exclusive. This is how you do both!
07/09/2026
The Right Fitness Formula Isn't One-Size-Fits-All
A good fitness plan doesn't pick a side between cardio and strength β it blends them in the right ratio for where you are in life right now.
Because the formula that worked for you at 25 isn't the same one your body needs at 40, 50, or beyond.
In your 20s and early 30s:
Your body recovers fast and hormones are on your side. More cardio volume works well here, and strength training builds the muscle foundation you'll rely on for decades.
In your late 30s and 40s:
This is when strength training needs to take the lead. Muscle mass starts declining, metabolism shifts, and hormonal changes begin. Heavy cardio without enough strength work can actually accelerate muscle loss. The formula flips β strength first, cardio as support.
In perimenopause and menopause:
Your body needs strength training more than ever to protect bone density, preserve muscle, and support a metabolism that's already working against you. Cardio still matters for heart health, but it should never come at the expense of lifting.
Postpartum:
Rebuilding core and pelvic floor strength comes first. Cardio gets layered back in gradually, once your foundation is solid again.
The bottom line:
There's no universal ratio. The right formula depends on your hormones, your age, your goals, and what your body actually needs to stay strong and functional for the next decade β not just the next 6 weeks.
Your plan should evolve as you do. If it hasn't changed in years, it's probably time to reassess.
Building muscle isn't about doing a few random workouts or lifting weights once in a while.
It's the result of consistent, progressive strength training over monthsβnot days.
Research suggests that most people need 10β20 challenging sets per muscle group each week to maximize muscle growth.
That means showing up consistently, pushing yourself close to muscle fatigue, progressively increasing the weight or reps over time, eating enough protein, and prioritizing recovery.
The good news? Keeping muscle is much easier than building it.
Once you've earned it, most people can maintain their muscle with as little as 4β6 hard sets per muscle group per week, as long as they're training with enough intensity and eating adequate protein.
So if life gets busy, don't fall into the "all-or-nothing" mindset. You don't have to stop just because you can't train at full volume.
Do enough to maintain your progress until you're ready to ramp things back up.
Remember, muscle isn't just about looking toned. It supports your metabolism, improves insulin sensitivity, protects your bones, helps you age stronger, and is one of the best predictors of long-term health and independence.
Build it when you can. Protect it when life gets busy. Your future self will thank you.
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