Gut Health · Digestion · Root Cause Medicine

Why Am I Bloated
Even When I Eat Healthy?

5 root causes most people completely miss — and what to do about each one.

By Escarlette Robert-Gilbey, PhD  ·  Naturally Reset

You’ve cleaned up your diet. You’re choosing whole foods, skipping the processed stuff, making meals you actually feel good about — and yet the bloating is still there.

Maybe it sets in before you’re even done eating. Maybe it builds throughout the day regardless of what was on your plate. Either way, there’s a particular kind of frustration that comes with doing all the right things and still feeling terrible — and it’s one of the most common experiences I see in my integrative practice.

Here’s what most conventional advice gets wrong: it focuses entirely on what you eat and almost nothing on how your body is actually functioning. The food on your plate is only half the equation. What your body does with it is the other half — and that’s the piece almost no one talks about.

Bloating is not about how “healthy” your food is. It’s about how well your body can break it down, absorb it, and move it through. That’s the piece most people are missing.

The root causes

5 reasons you’re still bloated
even when you eat clean

Each of these can cause bloating independently — and many people are dealing with more than one at once.

Cause 01

Low Stomach Acid

We’re conditioned to think digestive issues come from too much acid. In reality, the opposite is far more common. When stomach acid is low, even the cleanest meal sits too long, fermentation begins, and gas builds — creating that heavy, uncomfortable pressure shortly after eating. Stress, mineral deficiency, and chronic dieting are all common drivers.

Signs: bloating shortly after meals, feeling full quickly, frequent burping, heaviness under the ribcage, history of stress or antacid use.

Cause 02

Poor Bile Flow

If you’re eating healthy fats — avocado, olive oil, nuts — and still bloated, sluggish bile may be the culprit. Bile is essential for breaking down fat and keeping things moving. When it’s not flowing, fat digestion stalls, food moves slowly, and that heavy fullness sets in. Most common in those with a history of low-fat dieting, liver congestion, or high toxic burden.

Signs: worse bloating after fatty meals, light or inconsistent stools, right-side abdominal discomfort, feeling generally sluggish or congested.

Cause 03

Gut Microbial Imbalance

Even vegetables and fiber-rich foods can cause significant bloating when your gut bacteria are off. An imbalanced microbiome ferments food improperly and produces excess gas — which is exactly why “eating more fiber” can sometimes make things worse, not better. This is called dysbiosis, and it’s more common than most people realize.

Signs: bloating that builds throughout the day, gas after vegetables or fiber, shifting food sensitivities, history of antibiotics or frequent illness.

Cause 04

Sluggish Lymphatic System

This is the cause most people never consider — and the one that explains why some bloating feels less like gas and more like constant puffiness. Your lymphatic system is your body’s drainage network. When it slows down due to inactivity, inflammation, or toxic burden, fluid accumulates in tissues and your abdomen feels heavy and swollen regardless of what you ate.

Signs: bloating that feels like fluid fullness, facial or lower-body puffiness, symptoms worse after sitting all day, improves with movement.

Cause 05

Nervous System Dysregulation

You can eat the perfect meal — but if your body is in stress mode, digestion shuts down. Stomach acid decreases, digestive enzymes drop, and motility slows. For many people living high-demand modern lives, sympathetic overdrive isn’t occasional — it’s the baseline. Eating while stressed is one of the most overlooked drivers of chronic bloating.

Signs: bloating that fluctuates with stress, eating quickly or while distracted, gut symptoms that worsen during demanding life periods.

The real problem

Why “eating healthy” alone isn’t fixing it

Most advice focuses entirely on what to eat and what to avoid. Very little of it focuses on how your body is actually functioning. That’s why you can eat clean, eliminate trigger foods, follow every piece of dietary guidance you’ve ever been given — and still feel bloated every day.

The gap between what you’re eating and how you feel is almost always a functional gap — not a dietary one. Until you address the underlying mechanisms, the bloating will keep showing up no matter how clean your plate is.

What most advice addresses

  • ×What to eat
  • ×What to avoid
  • ×Elimination diets
  • ×Food quality

What actually needs addressing

  • How your body breaks food down
  • Liver and bile function
  • Your gut microbiome
  • Lymphatic drainage
  • Your nervous system baseline

What actually works

The five systems you need to support

Real, lasting relief from bloating means restoring how your body functions — not just changing what you eat. Here’s what a complete, root-cause approach actually targets.

1

Restore stomach acid and enzyme activity

Without adequate stomach acid, even the most nutrient-dense meal can’t be properly broken down. Supporting this foundation — through stress reduction, targeted nutrients, and digestive support — is often the single most impactful first step for anyone dealing with chronic bloating.

2

Support bile flow and liver function

The liver and gallbladder are deeply underrated in digestive health. Supporting bile production and flow — especially with a history of low-fat dieting or high toxic burden — allows fat to be metabolized properly and keeps elimination moving consistently.

3

Rebalance the gut microbiome

Addressing dysbiosis means more than adding a probiotic. It requires identifying what’s driving the imbalance, reducing the overgrowth, and rebuilding a diverse, resilient microbial community — so that even fiber-rich, nutrient-dense foods can be tolerated again.

4

Activate lymphatic drainage

Unlike the cardiovascular system, the lymph has no pump — it depends entirely on movement, breath, and deliberate support. Regular movement, hydration, dry brushing, and targeted bodywork can make a meaningful difference in how fluid and metabolic waste move through your body.

5

Regulate your nervous system

Digestion is a parasympathetic function — it only happens fully when your body feels safe. Building habits that shift you out of chronic sympathetic overdrive — slower eating, intentional rest, nervous system-supportive practices — is not optional. It’s foundational to everything else.

“You can eat clean, avoid every trigger food, and follow every piece of dietary advice you’ve ever been given — and still feel bloated every day. Because the issue was never just the food. It’s the system the food has to move through.”

— Escarlette Robert-Gilbey, PhD  ·  Naturally Reset

Start here

Identify your triggers.
Calm your digestion fast.

The Bloating & Gut Relief Guide walks you through a targeted process to pinpoint what’s driving your bloating and which systems need the most support — so you stop guessing and start seeing results.

Get the Bloating & Gut Relief Guide →

Instant digital access  ·  $17

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The Gut Healing Protocol

If you’ve already cleaned up your diet and still feel stuck, this is the deeper work. A complete step-by-step system to repair digestion, reduce inflammation, and restore balance from the root — the protocol that moves the needle when everything else has plateaued.

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A final thought

Bloating is not your body failing you. It’s your body communicating with you — and once you understand what it’s trying to say, the path forward becomes much clearer.

You don’t need to keep eliminating foods, white-knuckling every meal, or resigning yourself to feeling this way. You need a system that supports how your body actually works — one that addresses the function beneath the food.

That’s what we’re here for.

Your body already knows how to heal. Sometimes it just needs the right support to begin.

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