AIP in Real Life: Eating Differently Without Making it a Big Deal (Ep 076)
Eating differently can feel like a much bigger deal than it actually is.
Not because of the food itself—but because of the social dynamics around it. Dinner parties. Work lunches. Family holidays. First dates. Travel. The subtle pressure to explain. The awkwardness of declining. The internal negotiation about how much to share and how much to keep private.
In Episode 76 of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott begins a new Small Bite series called AIP in Real Life—conversations about what it actually looks like to live this way long-term. Not just the food lists or the science, but the social navigation, mindset shifts, and emotional maturity that develop over time.
Drawing on 15 years of personal experience living with AIP, Mickey shares practical strategies for eating differently without turning every gathering into a conversation about your health. This episode is about learning how to communicate clearly, hold boundaries calmly, and participate fully—without overexplaining, apologizing, or making your food choices the headline of the room. AIP in Real Life_ Eating Differ…
In this episode, you’ll learn:- Why eating differently feels relational—not just logistical
- How to reduce social stress by deciding before you arrive
- Practical strategies for restaurants, dinner parties, holidays, and travel
- Why short explanations build more confidence than long ones
- The difference between gratitude and apology
- How to participate socially without compromising your health
- What to say when someone pressures you to “just have a little”
- Why consistency speaks louder than debate
- How identity shifts over time when living with AIP
- How to integrate dietary boundaries without making them your identity
Resources
Episode Timeline
00:00 – Why eating differently feels bigger than it is
02:34 – Why this feels so hard (belonging & communication)
04:01 – Decide before you arrive
08:57 – Keep explanations short
11:04 – Gratitude is not the same as apology
12:36 – Participation over perfection
15:25 – Accept that not everyone will understand
17:19 – Identity shifts & long-term integration
18:57 – Wrap-up & book mention