What does life actually look like after you complete the Autoimmune Protocol?
Once you’ve moved through Transition, Elimination, and Reintroduction, it’s natural to ask: Now what? Are you supposed to eat this way forever? What happens if your health shifts? And how do you apply what you’ve learned to real-life situations like stress, travel, celebrations, or aging?
In this Deep Dive episode, Mickey explains what it really means to “finish” AIP and how to build a long-term maintenance plan that is flexible, sustainable, and personalized. Rather than viewing AIP as something you complete and leave behind, this episode reframes it as a framework you carry forward—one that helps you move up and down the spectrum of structure and flexibility as your health evolves.
Mickey shares how to think about post-AIP eating, what a return to AIP can look like during a flare, how to use AIP principles beyond food, and why combining medical care with dietary strategy is essential for long-term autoimmune management.
Referenced Episodes:
AIP Foundation Series – Free 5-day email course with printable food lists, meal plans, reintroduction charts, and beginner tools.
The New Autoimmune Protocol (Book) – The updated, flexible, and realistic guide to implementing AIP in real life.
00:00 – What does life after AIP look like?
03:18 – What does it mean to “finish” AIP?
06:58 – A post-AIP dietary philosophy (personalized eating)
10:33 – What a return to AIP can look like
13:11 – Batten down the hatches vs. unfurl the sails
17:41 – Using AIP principles beyond food
20:11 – Combining medical care with AIP (both-and approach)
22:36 – Building a sustainable long-term life
24:23 – Life after AIP, 15 years in
26:18 – Wrap-up & encouragement
What does life actually look like after you complete
Mickey:the Autoimmune Protocol?
Mickey:This is something that comes up a lot once people move through the Elimination
Mickey:and the Reintroduction Phases.
Mickey:You've completed the hard work, you've learned so much about your
Mickey:body, and then there's this natural question of, okay, now what?
Mickey:Are you supposed to eat this way forever?
Mickey:What happens if your health changes or you experience a new autoimmune flare?
Mickey:And how do you apply what you've learned to real life situations?
Mickey:Things like travel, stress, celebrations, or just simply the passage of time.
Mickey:In today's episode, I want to talk through what AIP is really meant to lead to:
Mickey:a long-term, personalized approach to living with autoimmune disease that is
Mickey:flexible, sustainable, and realistic.
Mickey:And this is not about staying in an unnecessarily strict Phase indefinitely.
Mickey:It's about using AIP as a framework that you can return to, adapt and rely
Mickey:on as your needs change over time.
Mickey:Welcome back to the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast.
Mickey:I'm Mickey Trescott, and this episode is part of our ongoing AIP Deep Dive series.
Mickey:So far in this series, we have covered the Transition Phase, the Elimination
Mickey:Phase, and the Reintroduction Phase, the core pieces of how to prepare
Mickey:your body, reduce inflammation, and systematically identify which foods
Mickey:and habits support your best health.
Mickey:If you want to go deeper into the details of the Autoimmune Protocol
Mickey:itself, episode 51 is a full overview.
Mickey:Episodes 52 through 54 walk, step-by-step through Transition,
Mickey:Elimination and Reintroduction.
Mickey:Episode 55 is about nutrient density and lifestyle foundations.
Mickey:And episode 69 covers how to decide which Elimination option, Core or
Mickey:Modified is the best fit for you.
Mickey:And together they are a full masterclass on how to implement
Mickey:the Autoimmune Protocol.
Mickey:Today's episode builds on all of that and focuses on what comes after those
phases:how to take what you've learned and apply it over the long term.
phases:Because completing AIP doesn't mean that you are "done", and it doesn't
phases:mean that you've failed if you need to make adjustments down the road.
phases:What it does mean is that you now have all of this information,
phases:experience, and tools that can guide your decisions moving forward.
phases:In this episode, I'll walk you through what it means to finish AIP, how I think
phases:of a post-AIP way of eating, and how to move up and down the spectrum of structure
phases:and flexibility as your health allows.
phases:We'll also talk about using principles of AIP beyond food, and
phases:how this framework fits alongside medical care over the long term.
phases:The goal here is absolutely not rigidity or perfection.
phases:It's building an approach to health that you can truly live with, one
phases:that feels confident, adaptable, and supportive of your whole life.
phases:And as always, what I share here is for education and
phases:inspiration, not medical advice.
phases:Make sure to make any health decisions in partnership with your healthcare team.
phases:Let's get started.
phases:What does it mean to finish AIP?
phases:When people think about this, they're often imagining an endpoint, like
phases:you reach the end of reintroductions, you check the box, you're done.
phases:I'm sorry to be the one to say it, but that's not really how
phases:the Autoimmune Protocol works.
phases:AIP isn't something you complete and leave behind.
phases:It's a process you move through learn from, and then
phases:you carry it forward with you.
phases:Essentially, it changes you.
phases:The value isn't in reaching that endpoint.
phases:It's in what you understand about your body once you have gone through it.
phases:So when I think about what it means to finish AIP.
phases:I don't think of it as being "done".
phases:I think about having gathered enough information to start making
phases:confident decisions going forward.
phases:And in general, finishing AIP usually means a few key things.
phases:First, you've spent enough time in the Elimination Phase to
phases:establish that clear baseline.
phases:You've seen a measurable improvement from where you started, and that improvement
phases:doesn't have to be perfect, it rarely is, but you've seen enough change to know that
phases:the protocol made a difference for you.
phases:Second, you've moved into Reintroductions and you've used that process to learn
phases:something very real about your body.
phases:You've identified those foods that feel supportive, the foods that clearly
phases:don't, and probably many foods that are in that weird gray area between.
phases:And just as important, you learned how to observe your body's responses without
phases:immediately jumping to conclusions.
phases:And third, you've started to shift from following a set of clearly
phases:defined rules to applying a framework.
phases:This is a really important transition.
phases:Early in your time on AIP, the structure is external.
phases:You've got food lists, you've got guidelines.
phases:There is a very clear sense of what to do and what not to do.
phases:That structure is necessary and incredibly helpful when you're trying to reduce
phases:inflammation and just get your bearings.
phases:But over time, the goal for that structure is to become internal.
phases:Instead of asking, is this AIP compliant?
phases:You start asking, does this support how I feel right now?
phases:Instead of wondering what you're allowed to eat, you're thinking about patterns,
phases:how you feel, how you recover, and what helps you stay stable over time.
phases:And I hope that in describing this, so many of you are just
phases:having this "aha" moment.
phases:I know that I did when I first realized this.
phases:And this is also where it's really important to clear
phases:up a common misconception.
phases:Finishing AIP doesn't mean that you're never going to need these tools again.
phases:You already know that autoimmune disease is so dynamic.
phases:I mean, I know that we all wish we could make it less dynamic, right?
phases:On top of that, there are other health changes, life changes, hormones, stress
phases:levels, not to mention just aging.
phases:All of that affects how your body responds even years after you've
phases:had a long run of good health.
phases:So if you need to adjust your diet again in the future, or return to
phases:more structure for a period of time, it doesn't mean that AIP didn't work.
phases:It actually means that it did exactly what it was supposed to do.
phases:It gave you a way to respond when things change.
phases:Finishing AIP isn't about achieving this perfect permanent state of
phases:health, that is not a real thing.
phases:It's about understanding your body well enough to navigate change with more ease,
phases:less fear, and a lot more confidence.
phases:That's the foundation we're going to build on as we talk about what
phases:long-term maintenance really looks like.
phases:Let's talk about a post-AIP dietary philosophy, which is really
phases:just, hyper-personalized eating.
phases:Once you've worked through Elimination and Reintroduction, the big shift
phases:is that you're no longer following the structure, you're following
phases:your own personalized way of eating.
phases:This is something I want to be really clear about because its easy to think
phases:that there's this single right post-AIP diet that you're supposed to land on.
phases:Spoiler alert, it's not Paleo.
phases:But that's never been the goal of the protocol.
phases:For me, my post-AIP way of eating is something I discovered by
phases:using AIP as a tool, not something I decided on ahead of time.
phases:It's based on what I learned through that Reintroduction process, how my
phases:body responds over time, and what supports my best health overall.
phases:As a side note, if you want a more detailed look of how this shows up
phases:in my own life right now, including what I eat and the food triggers
phases:I still pay attention to, I talk all about this in episode 56, which
phases:is my most recent healing update.
phases:Here's something that often surprises people.
phases:Not all of the most valuable information you learn through
phases:AIP is about those food triggers.
phases:Yes, identifying foods that don't work for you is important.
phases:But just as important and sometimes even more impactful depending on
phases:your situation, is learning which foods actively support your health.
phases:For many people, AIP reveals that certain inclusions make a noticeable difference.
phases:Things like broth, fermented foods, lots of fibrous vegetables.
phases:These are foods that might not have been regular parts of your diet before,
phases:I know for me they weren't, but once you start to include them consistently,
phases:you realize they really work for you.
phases:They might support your digestion, your energy, your recovery, or
phases:your overall resilience, and that kind of information is just as
phases:valuable as knowing what to avoid.
phases:There are so many foods in my diet now that weren't a part
phases:of the Elimination Phase.
phases:They're foods that I tolerate well, that add variety and enjoyment, and
phases:they make my day-to-day life easier.
phases:And at the same time, there are foods that I know don't really support my
phases:health, and those are the foods that I generally choose not to include.
phases:That balance is really intentional.
phases:What's also important is that this way of eating is not fixed.
phases:It's not something that I figured out once and then locked in forever.
phases:My tolerance has really changed a lot over time.
phases:My needs have changed, my health has gone through different seasons, and my
phases:diet has adapted right along with that.
phases:So that's one of the biggest takeaways I hope that you get from AIP.
phases:Your best way of eating isn't static.
phases:Instead of thinking in terms of being "on" or "off" a protocol,
phases:I think in terms of support.
phases:Does this way of eating support my health right now?
phases:Does it help me feel stable, nourished, and resilient?
phases:And sometimes that means that my diet looks a lot more structured.
phases:Like last year when I was having a big autoimmune flare, I was getting
phases:diagnosed with a new condition, I was trying to figure out what was going on.
phases:And then other times it's much more expansive, when I'm feeling well.
phases:Both can be appropriate depending on what's going on in my body and in my life.
phases:And this is also where I encourage you to move away from labels.
phases:"I am AIP" or I can never eat this or that again.
phases:Those labels can be really helpful very early on in the process, but long term
phases:they can start to feel very limiting.
phases:AIP is the framework that helps you build your own approach.
phases:What you end up with is a personalized way of eating that reflects
phases:your tolerance, your needs, and what truly supports your health.
phases:Once you've settled into that personalized way of eating, it's common to wonder
phases:what happens if your health shifts again.
phases:And for many of us, it's going to shift.
phases:So I want to talk about what a return to AIP can look like because this is
phases:an area where people often get stuck in that all or nothing thinking.
phases:First, returning to AIP does not mean you're starting over and it doesn't
phases:mean that you failed at maintenance.
phases:Autoimmune disease isn't static.
phases:There are periods where things might feel stable and predictable, and there are
phases:periods where symptoms might increase or new challenges might show up.
phases:We are exposed to varying amounts of stress, we might have different
phases:illnesses, travel, disruptions to our sleep, hormonal changes.
phases:All of these are going to affect how our body responds, even if we've had
phases:a very long stretch of good health.
phases:And if you listen to my healing update episode back in January, you know that
phases:this has been very true for me recently.
phases:Over the past year, I was diagnosed with psoriatic arthritis after experiencing
phases:uveitis for the very first time.
phases:And I'm also navigating some health changes related to perimenopause.
phases:Those are significant shifts and they've required me to reassess what support
phases:looks like for my body right now.
phases:And this is where revisiting AIP principles becomes useful.
phases:When health changes like this happen, many people benefit from temporarily
phases:bringing back more structure.
phases:That doesn't have to look exactly like the Elimination Phase.
phases:For some people, a return to AIP might mean removing one or two foods that
phases:you already know don't support you.
phases:For others, it might mean simplifying your meals or leaning more intentionally
phases:into foods that you know are especially nourishing and stabilizing.
phases:It can also mean revisiting lifestyle foundations.
phases:So going back to prioritizing your sleep, adjusting your exercise routine, lowering
phases:your overall stress whenever possible, or just creating more consistency around
phases:your meals and your daily routines.
phases:It's also important to note that a return to AIP is often temporary.
phases:The goal isn't to stay in a tightened up phase indefinitely.
phases:The goal is to create enough stability that you can start expanding again.
phases:So over time, many people move in and out of these phases multiple times.
phases:It's not a sign of regression, it's simply a part of that
phases:long-term autoimmune management.
phases:Learning when to add structure and when to loosen it again is one of the
phases:most valuable skills that AIP teaches.
phases:The first time you do it, it's going to feel like, wow, this is a lot.
phases:But as you do it over and over, for myself, I've been doing this over
phases:10 years, it becomes so much easier.
phases:I like to use this metaphor that I call batten down the hatches and
phases:unfurl the sails to think about long-term autoimmune diet management.
phases:It's a way of understanding that life with autoimmune disease isn't about
phases:finding this perfect or permanent routine, it's about adjusting your level
phases:of structure based on what your body and your life need at any given time.
phases:So let's start with battening down the hatches.
phases:This is what it looks like when your body's under more strain.
phases:Maybe you're in an autoimmune flare.
phases:Maybe you have extreme stress from something outside that you can't control,
phases:maybe your sleep has been off, maybe you're dealing with an illness, travel,
phases:hormonal changes, or you have a new diagnosis, something that's cropped up.
phases:These are the times when your system just has less margin.
phases:When you batten down the hatches, you're moving towards that safer, more supportive
phases:baseline, and you guys are going to get sick of me saying this, but that baseline
phases:is going to be different for everyone.
phases:For some people it might mean returning very close to the Elimination Phase.
phases:An example, if you have IBD, you did AIP when you were in an active flare,
phases:you got that flare under control, you greatly expanded your diet.
phases:You notice a new flare coming on.
phases:You might go back to that Elimination Phase 'cause that's what
phases:worked great for you first time.
phases:That is totally fine.
phases:Now, for others and people like me, it might actually mean something
phases:much lighter, removing a few known trigger foods, simplifying your
phases:meals, or just being more consistent with the foods and routines that
phases:you know already work well for you.
phases:For me, battening down the hatches doesn't mean that full Elimination, it means
phases:leaning into foods I know feel deeply nourishing and stabilizing for my body.
phases:Practically, that looks like including a lot of cooked, brothy
phases:soups, sometimes even for breakfast.
phases:During these times, I'm focusing on meals that are warm, easy to digest.
phases:They have a good amount of protein and veggie rich, they are very consistent.
phases:I also include more liver pate because it's something that I know my body
phases:responds extremely well to nutritionally.
phases:I make a point to have fermented vegetables at least once a day, and
phases:I prioritize cold water fatty fish like sardines, salmon, and mackerel.
phases:Alongside that, when I'm battening down my hatches, I eat lots of roasted
phases:root vegetables, I eat lots of greens, mostly cooked sometimes during this
phases:time raw doesn't really work for me.
phases:These are foods that feel really grounding, steady and
phases:supportive to my system rather than stimulating or experimental.
phases:And just as important, battening down the hatches for me also
phases:means reducing experimentation.
phases:So I'm not testing new foods, I'm not pushing boundaries.
phases:Generally, I'm cooking at home.
phases:I'm not eating out.
phases:I'm creating that predictable stability with food, with routines, and with
phases:lifestyle factors like sleep and movement.
phases:Now, on the other end of the spectrum is unfurling the sails, and this is what it
phases:looks like when things are looking great.
phases:Things are going well, symptoms feel manageable, your body feels
phases:resilient, you have more capacity.
phases:These are the times when it makes sense to expand, to enjoy more variety, to travel,
phases:to celebrate, and to experiment a bit.
phases:This might be where you try new foods, you eat out more often,
phases:you loosen that structure in a way that supports your quality of life.
phases:Unfurling the sails doesn't mean abandoning everything you've learned.
phases:It means you're using that stability to explore.
phases:You're paying attention.
phases:But you're not overly cautious.
phases:You're asking, what can I get away with right now?
phases:And you're doing that from a place of curiosity, not fear.
phases:What's important here is that neither of these states is better than the other.
phases:Battening down the hatches isn't a failure.
phases:Unfurling the sails isn't reckless.
phases:They're simply different responses to different circumstances that
phases:you have in your health as a person who lives with autoimmune disease.
phases:And over time, you'll likely move back and forth along the spectrum again and again.
phases:That's completely normal and I have done it time and time again.
phases:The real skill is learning when to shift, when to add more structure, and
phases:when to allow more flexibility without judging yourself for either choice.
phases:And this is where I think AIP really shines as a long-term framework.
phases:It gives you reference points, it helps you recognize when your body
phases:is asking for more support, when it's capable of handling a little
phases:more flexibility and freedom.
phases:And I promise it gets easier with time and with practice.
phases:Now let's talk about using these AIP principles beyond food.
phases:And one of the things that I've seen over and over again, both in my own life
phases:and in working with this community is that once you've gone through AIP, it
phases:changes how you think far beyond food.
phases:Because what you're really learning through the AIP is a process.
phases:At its core, it's teaching you how to evaluate what's working for you
phases:and what isn't, and how to do that in a structured and thoughtful way.
phases:So the same process can be applied to many other areas of your life.
phases:The basic framework looks something like this: if something feels suspicious, or
phases:if you're noticing symptoms creeping in, you reduce or remove that variable when
phases:possible, and then you see what happens.
phases:If things get better or improve, you've got some information and if
phases:you choose to bring it back later, you do so intentionally and pay
phases:attention to how your body responds.
phases:This might sound familiar because it's exactly what you do with food
phases:Reintroductions, but food isn't the only variable in your life.
phases:You can apply this way of thinking to supplements, with your provider's
phases:blessing if they are prescribed.
phases:Adding or removing something and noticing whether it actually helps.
phases:You can apply it to your exercise routine, your work schedule, your sleep habits,
phases:or even how often you are socializing.
phases:Sometimes it's not about eliminating something entirely, but adjusting
phases:the dose or the frequency.
phases:Maybe a certain type of workout works well when your health is
phases:stable, but not during a flare.
phases:Maybe a supplement felt supportive at one point, but no longer feels necessary.
phases:Maybe certain commitments drain you more than you realize.
phases:So AIP really helps you develop that body awareness, the ability to notice
phases:patterns, subtle shifts, cause and effect relationships, and that's
phases:a skill you carry with you long after the protocol itself is over.
phases:Once you've learned how to listen to your body and trust the feedback
phases:that you're getting, you don't need rigid rules to tell you what to do.
phases:You have those internal signals and the confidence to respond to them.
phases:This absolutely doesn't mean that you're always going to get it right.
phases:It doesn't mean that every experiment is going to go perfectly, but it does
phases:mean that you're no longer guessing blindly or outsourcing every decision.
phases:You are engaged in an ongoing conversation with your body and that ability to
phases:assess, to adjust, to reevaluate that is one of the most valuable long-term
phases:outcomes of working through AIP.
phases:Another important part of long-term maintenance is understanding how
phases:AIP fits alongside medical care.
phases:And I want to be really clear about this.
phases:It is never either or, it is always both and.
phases:AIP powerful framework for understanding how food and lifestyle
phases:affect your health, but it's not meant to replace medical care.
phases:It's just one tool in a larger toolbox.
phases:And depending on where you are on your health journey, different tools may
phases:matter more or less at different times.
phases:For some people, dietary and lifestyle changes create this
phases:dramatic improvement early on.
phases:For others, those changes are supportive but not sufficient on their own.
phases:And for many of us, that balance shifts over time.
phases:New symptoms can emerge, conditions can evolve, hormones can change, and not
phases:every health issue is something that can or should be addressed with diet alone.
phases:Sometimes what your body needs isn't another food change.
phases:It might be a medication adjustment, it might be some imaging,
phases:lab work, or a new diagnosis.
phases:It might be a procedure, physical therapy, or a different type of specialist support.
phases:Using medical care doesn't mean that AIP stopped working.
phases:It means you're responding appropriately to what you're experiencing.
phases:And for me, this has been especially relevant over the past year.
phases:With a new diagnosis and the shift that comes with perimenopause, my
phases:needs are extremely different than they were earlier in my autoimmune journey.
phases:AIP principles still guide my foundation, how I eat, how I notice patterns,
phases:how I support my body, but they exist alongside changes with how I approach
phases:my medical care, not instead of it.
phases:This is where the flexibility of AIP really matters.
phases:Because when you start to see AIP as a framework rather than that rigid
phases:plan, there's no conflict between dietary support and medical treatment.
phases:You're simply using all of your available resources to support
phases:your health as it exists right now.
phases:Long-term autoimmune management often requires reassessment.
phases:Revisiting what's helping, revisiting what's no longer enough, and what new
phases:support might be needed right now.
phases:That's not a setback, that's you responding to changing circumstances and
phases:learning how to integrate your care rather than choosing sides is a big part of
phases:building a sustainable, realistic approach to living well with autoimmune disease.
phases:As we zoom out and think about long-term maintenance, one of the most important
phases:questions to ask is this: does my approach to health actually fit my life?
phases:Because the goal isn't just symptom management, it's creating something
phases:that is accessible, sustainable, and livable over the long haul.
phases:Your approach to health shouldn't feel like you're constantly on a
phases:diet or managing a rigid routine.
phases:It should feel confident and familiar, something that you can return to
phases:without a lot of mental effort.
phases:And yes, this might mean that there are things that you
phases:don't do that other people do.
phases:Maybe you don't eat gluten, maybe you don't drink alcohol,
phases:or you drink very selectively.
phases:Maybe you are careful about how much you commit to or how you structure your days.
phases:When those choices are connected to how you feel, to your health, your
phases:energy, and your ability to live well, they tend to feel less like
phases:deprivation and more like self-respect.
phases:It also becomes easier to set boundaries both internally and externally.
phases:Internally, you're not constantly debating or second guessing yourself.
phases:Externally, you're able to communicate your needs more clearly without
phases:feeling like you have to justify them.
phases:And at the same time, it's important to say this, if you choose to do
phases:something that you know might not support your health, that's okay too.
phases:This is your life.
phases:You get to do what you want.
phases:Long-term maintenance isn't about perfection, it's about informed choice.
phases:Sometimes you decide the trade off is worth it.
phases:Sometimes you decide it's not.
phases:What matters is that you are making those decisions consciously with
phases:awareness of how they affect you.
phases:When your approach is flexible and grounded in real information
phases:about your body, there's room for both care and enjoyment.
phases:Structure and freedom, and that balance is what makes a long-term approach
phases:not just possible, but sustainable.
phases:Before we wrap up, I want to share one last perspective because it really
phases:captures what life after AIP has looked like for me over the long term.
phases:When I was first diagnosed with autoimmune disease, I was 26 years old.
phases:That was about 15 years ago now.
phases:At that time, I was in a pretty intense health crisis, and I experienced the
phases:world almost entirely through my illness.
phases:Everything was filtered through how my body felt.
phases:My energy, my relationships, my work, my plans, even very
phases:small decisions in my life.
phases:They all ran through this question of: how is this going to affect my
phases:health or can my body even handle this?
phases:When you're in that place, it makes a lot of sense.
phases:Your body is asking for all of the attention, and what AIP
phases:gave me over time wasn't just this improvement in my symptoms.
phases:It helped clarify what my body needed, and once I had that clarity,
phases:something really important shifted.
phases:That health filter didn't completely disappear, but it stopped being the
phases:only lens that I was looking through.
phases:Because I understood my triggers, my supports, and how to respond when things
phases:shifted, my illness didn't have to dominate every single decision in my life.
phases:I wasn't constantly monitoring or second guessing myself.
phases:I had a baseline that I could rely on, and that made room for
phases:all of the rest of my life again.
phases:I could see myself as more than someone managing an autoimmune disease.
phases:I could put more energy into my relationships, meaningful
phases:work, creativity, and day-to-day living without everything being
phases:overshadowed by my health.
phases:So even now, even as my health shifts again with things like a
phases:new diagnosis and perimenopause, that foundation still matters.
phases:My health may move more into the foreground at times, like right now,
phases:but it doesn't take over the entire picture the way that it once did.
phases:And for me, that's what life after AIP really looks like.
phases:It's not this absence of autoimmune disease, but a more
phases:balanced relationship with it
phases:. So as we close out today, I want to briefly recap what we covered.
phases:Life after AIP isn't about being finished or leaving the protocol behind.
phases:It's about using what you learn to build a long-term maintenance approach that can
phases:adapt as your health and your life change.
phases:That includes understanding your personalized way of eating, paying
phases:attention to both exclusions and inclusions, knowing when to batten
phases:down the hatches and when to unfurl the sails, and using AIP as a
phases:framework that extends beyond food.
phases:It also means combining dietary and lifestyle support with medical
phases:care rather than treating them as separate or opposing things.
phases:If you're listening to this episode and you're earlier in the
phases:process, maybe you're just starting AIP or thinking about starting.
phases:Everything we talked about today is where the protocol is meant to lead.
phases:And if you'd like a clear current place to begin, consider
phases:pre-ordering a copy of my upcoming book, The New Autoimmune Protocol.
phases:It reflects the most up-to-date understanding of AIP, and walks you
phases:through how to get started in a way that is realistic, flexible and sustainable.
phases:You can find links and resources in the show notes.
phases:Thank you so much for spending this time with me and for
phases:being a part of this community.
phases:I'll see you next time.