Where Should You Start Your AIP Healing Journey?

Where Should You Start on Your Autoimmune Healing Journey - Using the AIP Gently

Starting the Autoimmune Protocol doesn’t have to be overwhelming. This post will show you where to begin and in a way that:

  • Reinforces nourishment over restriction
  • Supports nervous system regulation without making it another project
  • Doesn’t require expensive upgrades or complicated protocols
  • Follows a foundational-before-fancy philosophy

If that already feels like a relief, you’re in the right place. Think of this as a gentle, evidence-based roadmap — one that lets you take small, meaningful steps toward healing without pressure, fear, or complexity.

Note: This post is meant to be a companion to my “Start Here” Series, and my article When Should You Start Your AIP Healing Journey? and a reminder that healing works best when we zoom out and look at the bigger picture (just like in that beautiful hot air balloon above). If you haven’t already read that post, circle back after this — especially if you haven’t started yet.

When people start thinking about AIP, the first question is often what to eat — or what to remove. But a more helpful place to begin is asking where to begin. Where is support needed most right now. In a previous post, we explored when to start your AIP healing journey and why big, pressure-filled resets don’t always lead to sustainable healing. Timing matters — but so does how safe and supported your body feels when you begin.

This is where the nervous system comes into the conversation — but is it the silver bullet some seem to be portraying it to be?

Trends, Buzzwords, and the Pressure to ‘Do More’ … or Less!

If you’ve been anywhere in the wellness space lately, you’ve probably noticed a shift in how people talk about autoimmune healing, the AIP diet, and the latest buzz words “somatic healing” and “nervous system regulation.”

“Don’t change your diet yet.”
“Focus on nervous system healing first.”
“Restriction will stress your body more.”

Honestly… I get it. We’re all looking for fast and easy results — what ever the path of least resistance is that will make life feel normal again… that time before our autoimmune system went a little rogue.

I want to say this right up front. I’m not bashing the information out there about nervous system regulation — I just think it’s the latest “sexy” answer that everyone wants… because doing the hard, consistent work of healing on the Autoimmune Protocol can truly be boring, unsexy and yes, downright hard!

I love that some people are able to turn their autoimmune story around with the simplest of changes. That absolutely happens — and it’s wonderful when it does.

But for many people, especially those with more complex health challenges, digestive disorders, long-standing inflammation, or multiple autoimmune diagnoses, healing is rarely that straightforward. And, if that’s the case for you, it doesn’t mean you failed or started in the wrong place. It means your body needs a different level of care.

As someone who has been utilizing the Autoimmune Protocol (AIP) for many years, I agree with the heart of the “nervous-system-first” conversation that we’re seeing everywhere. Healing using the autoimmune protocol should never have been about white-knuckling your way through restriction and food rules. And the AIP was never meant just to be about dietary change.

However, I also don’t believe the AIP deserves to be painted as the villain in this story, and over the past year or so, it feels like it has.

So let’s talk about where to actually get started on your healing journey in a way that’s grounded, evidence-based, and kind to your nervous system — while still honoring the very real (and medically researched) value of the AIP.

First, a reframe: AIP was never meant just to be about food

The Autoimmune Protocol was designed as a systems-based approach to autoimmune healing. Food matters — often a lot — but it was never intended to work in isolation.

At its core, AIP is built around several interconnected pillars:

  • Sleep
  • Stress management (aka nervous system support)
  • Appropriate movement (often slow and gentle)
  • Connection to others and to nature
  • Diet focused on nutrient density, not restriction
  • Reducing toxic load

Food is simply the most visible piece out there… which is why it tends to get the most attention (especially since mainstream medicine and GPs are starting to recommend the “AIP Diet” to patients).

It’s also why many people assume the elimination phase is the starting line — instead of it being one tool among many.

About the AIP diet itself (and why nutrient density is the goal)

The AIP elimination phase exists for a reason. Temporarily removing common inflammatory triggers can give the immune system and digestive tract a much-needed break, allowing space for symptom clarity and healing.

Often times, eliminating these inflammatory food groups brings fast results, which in itself is fantastic — until it’s not.

The goal of the AIP diet is not restriction.

The goal is nutrient density.

From the very beginning, AIP has emphasized adding supportive foods — colorful vegetables, quality proteins, healthy fats, and micronutrient-rich ingredients — while temporarily setting aside foods that may not support the body during active autoimmune disease and flares.

In other words, it’s about crowding your plate with what helps… and removing what doesn’t… for now.

It’s also important to say this clearly: AIP is not a rigid, one-size-fits-all plan, and it has been adapted along the way as research supports the idea that sometimes less restriction is more!

Today, we recognize:

  • Core AIP elimination, the most researched and structured version
  • Modified elimination approaches, used thoughtfully when the full elimination phase isn’t accessible or appropriate

Neither approach is “better.” The best version is the one that supports healing without overwhelming your body or your nervous system.

Research has shown that the full core elimination stage is not always required for every individual to see benefit — which is why modified elimination options exist. This isn’t trend-driven. It’s evidence-informed.

And this is where nervous system health naturally enters the conversation.

Why nervous system health matters (and why this isn’t an either/or conversation)

Before we go further, I want to be clear.

If you decide to start with somatic healing/nervous system work before you work on any of the other pillars of the autoimmune protocol, this conversation is not meant to suggest you’ve gone down the wrong path. I’m certainly not bashing anyone who promotes nervous system work, I just don’t think any one aspect of the protocol deserves to be considered the crown jewel of autoimmune healing.

Do I think addressing stress and the nervous system should be tackled last on the list? Absolutely not.

Your nervous system is constantly scanning for safety. When it perceives threat — physical, emotional, or environmental — it prioritizes survival, which means digestion, immune balance, and repair take a back seat.

Chronic stress, poor sleep, under-eating, over-exercising, or overly restrictive approaches used in isolation can all keep the body stuck in that survival mode.

But here’s what often gets missed:

Reducing inflammation, supporting gut integrity, correcting nutrient deficiencies, and calming immune activation all reduce physiological stress on the nervous system.

In other words… addressing food and lifestyle through the AIP is not a detour from nervous system healing — it is part of it.

A calmer, better-supported nervous system improves:

  • Digestion and nutrient absorption
  • Blood sugar regulation
  • Immune signaling
  • Hormonal balance

Which means the dietary work you do actually has a better chance of working.

So… where do you start your autoimmune healing journey?

If you’re feeling overwhelmed, burned out, or unsure whether you’re “ready” for AIP, I suggest starting with the lowest-stress, highest-return basics — the parts of the protocol that support healing without asking your nervous system to do backflips.

Think of your healing journey like building a sturdy foundation or slowly inflating a hot air balloon. Start with a little of each key pillar — sleep, stress and nervous system support, gentle movement, connection, nourishing foods, hydration, and reducing toxins. It might feel like a lot at first, but by layering your efforts consistently and focusing on progress over speed, the cumulative effect creates a strong, supportive base that lifts your health without overwhelming you or your nervous system.

  1. Sleep

Consistent sleep supports immune regulation, gut repair, hormone balance, and nervous system health.

Simple steps:

  • Aim for a consistent bedtime and wake time
  • Dim lights in the evening
  • Reduce screen exposure before bed
  • Create a wind-down routine your body recognizes

No perfection required… just rhythm.

  1. Gentle movement

Movement is a core AIP pillar — not intense workouts, but supportive movement.

For many people with autoimmune disease, less really is more.

Helpful options include:

  • Gentle walking
  • Stretching
  • Restorative or “rest and restore” yoga

Yoga, in particular, supports parasympathetic activity and vagal tone. Restorative styles are not physically demanding and can be deeply regulating — especially when fatigue, pain, or digestive symptoms are present. The bonus? Restorative yoga crosses over many of the core pillars — movement, stress/nervous system regulation, and community.

  1. Nervous system support and stress regulation

This doesn’t need to be complicated. Evidence-supported practices include:

  • Slow, nasal breathing
  • Longer exhales than inhales
  • Consistent daily routines
  • Short pauses throughout the day

These practices send signals of safety to the body — and safety is where healing begins.

  1. Connection (to Others & to Nature)

Humans heal better in connection. Even for those who enjoy solitude, prolonged isolation is a physiological stressor.

Connection doesn’t mean forcing social energy you don’t have. It’s about safe, supportive interaction that reminds your body you’re not doing this alone.

Ways to support connection with others:

  • Spending time with people who feel safe and supportive
  • Participating in online or in-person communities where you feel understood (with discernment — some spaces can increase stress – Hello Facebook “support” groups that are endless streams of people complaining about their illnesses or suggesting their approach is better than what you’re doing)
  • Attending a yoga or gentle movement class

Connection with nature plays a similar role in regulation and healing. Time outdoors affects stress hormones, nervous system balance, and immune function — without needing to be elaborate.

Ways to build this layer:

  • Gentle walks outside
  • Morning light exposure
  • Sitting outdoors without stimulation
  • Gardening, or even opening windows for fresh air

Nature provides sensory cues of safety — light, sound, rhythm — that quietly support regulation and healing. Read more about this in my post, Nature’s Prescription – Forest Bathing.

  1. Diet — focused on nourishment, not pressure (AIP Diet Basics)

Rather than flipping your entire diet overnight, start gently:

  • Add one or two AIP elimination-stage compliant meals each week
  • Focus on nutrient density and nourishment, not perfection
  • Choose foods and recipes that feel comforting and familiar
  • Include hydration — one of the lowest-stress ways to support digestion, circulation, detoxification, and nervous system health

Over time, these meals naturally crowd out foods that may not serve you — without force.

Hydration basics:

  • Drink water consistently throughout the day
  • Add electrolytes or a pinch of mineral salt if tolerated
  • Notice how hydration affects energy, digestion, and cravings

Adequate hydration ensures nutrients get where they need to go and supports waste removal — enhancing the effect of dietary changes.

  1. Reducing toxic load on the AIP (start small)

Toxins are a legitimate and often overlooked aspect that I consider an AIP pillar. Ongoing low-level exposure adds to the body’s stress load, which can influence inflammation, hormone balance, and immune signaling.

This does not mean everything must be organic or that your home needs an overnight overhaul. For most people, that level of pressure creates more stress — and stress never supports healing. Do the best you can, where you can. Adding more fruits and vegetables — whether organic, non-GMO, or conventional — is always more supportive than avoiding them altogether.

A realistic approach: replace personal care and household products as they run out. One clear exception is artificial air fresheners — known endocrine disruptors strongly associated with hormone disruption and inflammation. Removing these right away is a simple, high-impact step.

A note on changing conversations in the AIP space

Many in the autoimmune healing space are currently promoting nervous-system-only approaches as the bees-knees that will fix all of your problems. Previously these same influencers and nutritionists used the AIP diet and they saw huge improvements — often during periods when symptoms were most severe. Those dietary changes reduced inflammation and immune activation, even if the full protocol — which includes ALL of the pillars —  wasn’t followed or maintained long-term.

It’s not that the AIP diet suddenly stopped working. It’s that food is just one layer — not the only one. And it’s that the entire protocol was not being followed … which includes reintroductions and all of the other lifestyle pieces.

If you follow Dr. Sarah Ballantyne, one of the pioneers of the AIP, you’ll know that she’s spoken out about concerns around long-term restriction and food fear when the diet isn’t used as intended. Her newer work reflects those concerns — but it does not negate the evidence supporting AIP when applied as a short-term elimination paired with reintroductions and implementation of healing lifestyle foundations.

The protocol itself hasn’t changed. Our understanding of how to support people using it has.

Healing is layered, not linear

No single layer — not diet, not nervous system work, not supplements, not mindset — carries the full weight of healing. Programs suggesting one shift will fix everything can unintentionally recreate the same pressure and self-blame many experienced with food-focused approaches, or worse yet, lead to disappointment and set-backs.

The AIP works best when:

  • The nervous system feels supported
  • Nutrient density is prioritized
  • Expectations are realistic
  • Progress is measured in capacity, not perfection — meaning you focus on what your body and nervous system can handle right now, taking small, sustainable steps that add up over time

You don’t need to rush. Your body isn’t behind. We’re playing the long game… and that’s where real healing lives.

So, when should you start?

If you’re wondering when is the best time to lean into the AIP — without the pressure of things like New Year’s resolutions — I encourage you to read my post:
When Should You Start Your AIP Healing Journey? – Timing Your Autoimmune Protocol Start