Updated On: 08 October, 2023 07:05 AM IST | Mumbai | Mitali Parekh
Our second brain’s health is dependent on what we eat, but also what social media we consume. And how well it feels can either make or break us

Sharel Bernadine changed her entire lifestyle—a slower-paced professional role, self-cooked fresh meals of millets, rice, vegetables and diluted pulses and lentils—to stabalise gut health over six months
To be able to plan what she eats through the day, Sharel Bernadine needs to pay attention to her poo. “If it’s solid and once a day, I might dare eat fast food,” says the Andheri-resident. “If I get cramps have to go to the loo a few times, I know the gut biome has changed.”
And then she goes back to her careful food preparation: Millets and rice, and not roti; gluten is harder for her to digest. Dals watered down so that they are broken down easily by her system. Seasonal vegetables. Everything is fresh, and she cooks it herself, having learned through experience how much spice and oil her gut can withstand. “After all, your energy goes into your food,” says the independent talent manager.