Why “Mom Burnout” Might Actually Be Low Ferritin

If you’re dragging through the day, living on caffeine, and telling yourself it’s just “mom burnout,” there’s a good chance your iron stores—not just your schedule—are part of the story.

Low ferritin, the way we measure iron storage in the body, is one of the most overlooked drivers of fatigue, brain fog, hair shedding, and that wired‑tired feeling at night.

Iron deficiency affects a large share of women worldwide, especially those of reproductive age and those with heavy periods.


🎧 Prefer to Listen?

Reading’s great, but sometimes it’s nice to just listen in. So we turned today’s blog into a conversation. Our two AI sidekicks, Max and Chloe, break down today’s blog so you can listen on the go!


What Ferritin Is (And Why It Matters More Than You Think)

Ferritin is a protein that stores iron inside your cells and releases it when your body needs to make hemoglobin, thyroid hormones, neurotransmitters, and energy in your mitochondria.

When ferritin is low, you can feel terrible even if your hemoglobin is still in the “normal” range, which means you can have all the symptoms of iron deficiency without technically being anemic.

Recent work in women shows that iron deficiency symptoms are common even when anemia isn’t present, and that ferritin cutoffs used in routine primary care often miss “functional” low levels that still impact quality of life.

Why Low Ferritin Feels Like Everyday Burnout

The symptom list for iron deficiency in women reads like a “busy mom” checklist: fatigue, poor concentration, sleep disruption, feeling cold, hair loss, mood changes, and reduced ability to exercise.

Systematic reviews in women of childbearing age have found that low iron can be linked with worse cognitive performance, mental health scores, and higher self reported fatigue, and that improving iron status often improves these measures.

Because these symptoms overlap so closely with stress, sleep deprivation, and parenting demands, it’s easy to chalk them up to lifestyle instead of asking your provider to look carefully at ferritin and iron studies.

Why Your “Healthy” Diet Might Not Be Enough

You can be eating a generally healthy diet and still struggle to restore iron stores. Non heme iron from plant foods is absorbed at a much lower rate compared with heme iron from animal foods. Non heme iron absorption is also heavily influenced by other factors in a meal (like phytates, calcium, and polyphenols), while heme iron absorption is more stable and less affected by these inhibitors.

On top of that, women dealing with heavy menstrual bleeding, postpartum recovery, endurance exercise, or chronic low grade inflammation can lose or use iron faster than diet alone can replace it.

When Conventional Iron Backfires on Your Gut

Most first line iron prescriptions rely on high dose non heme forms like ferrous sulfate.

While these can be appropriate and effective in many cases, they commonly cause constipation, nausea, and other gastrointestinal side effects that make it hard for women to stay on them long enough to rebuild stores.

Emerging research comparing heme based iron interventions with non heme forms suggests that heme iron can raise iron status with fewer side effects, although the data set is still relatively small.

For women already dealing with bloating, IBS type symptoms, or histamine issues, that tolerability difference matters.

Food First, Gentle Support: Where Organ Nutrition Fits

This is where a food first, organ forward approach can help bridge the gap between “I eat pretty well” and “my ferritin is finally in a healthy range.”

Beef organs naturally package heme iron alongside supportive nutrients such as vitamin A, B vitamins, and trace minerals that help with red blood cell production, thyroid health, and mitochondrial energy.

Because heme iron is inherently more bioavailable and less influenced by meal inhibitors, even small amounts can meaningfully support total iron absorption and complement the iron you’re already getting from plants and fortified foods.

For many women, a freeze dried organ supplement can be a gentler, low tox option to layer alongside appropriate medical care, especially if you’re working with your provider to monitor ferritin, transferrin saturation, and symptoms over time.

If you’ve been blaming “mom burnout” while secretly wondering why your energy and focus haven’t bounced back, it may be time to ask your clinician to look beyond a basic CBC and check your iron stores, ferritin included.

If this sounds like you and you want gentler, food-first support for your iron stores, join the waitlist for Sarenova’s Formula No. 06 below.

💡 Key Takeaways

  • Low ferritin can cause significant fatigue and brain fog even when standard blood counts look normal.

  • Iron deficiency symptoms in women often mirror everyday “mom burnout,” which makes them easy to miss.

  • Iron from plant foods is absorbed less efficiently than iron from animal sources, especially heme iron.

  • High-dose conventional iron supplements frequently cause gut side effects that make long-term use difficult.

  • A food first organ approach can gently support iron status alongside medical care and lab monitoring.

  • (AI-generated conversation and transcript)

    Beyond Mom Burnout: A Deep Dive into Ferritin Health

     

    [00:00:00] Chloe: You know that feeling when you're just, um, completely dragging through the day. Like you wake up exhausted, you're practically living on cold coffee and you're just relying on sheer willpower to get through that afternoon slump.

    [00:00:12] Max: Oh yeah. The classic 3:00 PM crash.

    [00:00:14] Chloe: Exactly. And you know, you tell yourself the same story we all do, right?

    [00:00:18] You say, well, I'm just incredibly busy. You assume you're ex. Experiencing classic mom burnout or, uh, career fatigue. You look at your calendar and think, of course I'm exhausted. I mean, look at this schedule,

    [00:00:30] Max: right? It's just the modern condition.

    [00:00:31] Chloe: Yeah, but what if that profound bone deep exhaustion you're feeling isn't just a byproduct of your busy life?

    [00:00:38] What if your body is like desperately trying to signal a physical measurable deficiency? And the standard tests you rely on at your annual physical are just completely missing it?

    [00:00:48] Max: That is the exact tension driving our analysis today.

    [00:00:51] Chloe: Yeah.

    [00:00:51] Max: Because we're looking at a massive, um, systemic blind spot in standard primary care.

    [00:00:56] Chloe: Yeah.

    [00:00:56] Max: It's this gap where very real, very physical, [00:01:00] biological symptoms are routinely miscategorized as just, you know, mere lifestyle stress or anxiety, or just the inevitable burden of getting older.

    [00:01:07] Chloe: And fixing that blind spot is our mission for this deep dive. We're taking a hard look at a biomarker called ferritin.

    [00:01:15] We wanna uncover why this overlooked little protein might actually be the true culprit behind your brain fog, your crushing fatigue, and um, even that extra hair shedding you've noticed in the shower drain.

    [00:01:27] Max: Yeah, the hair shedding is a huge red flag for so many people.

    [00:01:30] Chloe: It really is. And more importantly, we're gonna explore why a quote unquote normal blood test at your doctor's office might actually be lying to you.

    [00:01:39] So to do this, we've brought in a serious stack of sources. Today. We are looking at a collection of recent medical studies, systematic reviews and clinical guidelines.

    [00:01:47] Max: Some really robust data.

    [00:01:48] Chloe: Absolutely. We've got data from JAMA Network Open, the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition and the Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

    [00:01:55] And they're all laser focused on women's health, iron deficiency and the ways [00:02:00] modern medicine is. Frankly dropping the ball.

    [00:02:02] Max: It's a critical conversation to have because, you know, iron deficiency affects a massive share of women worldwide.

    [00:02:08] Chloe: Mm-hmm.

    [00:02:08] Max: Particularly women of reproductive age endurance athletes and those who experience heavy periods.

    [00:02:13] Yet, despite the sheer statistical prevalence of this issue, the medical community's approach to diagnosing and treating it remains. Shockingly outdated. We are operating on paradigms that are decades old.

    [00:02:26] Chloe: Okay, let's unpack this because I think there's a huge misconception about how we measure iron in the first place.

    [00:02:31] Let's walk through a typical doctor's appointment. I go in, I sit on that crinkly paper and I say, Hey. I'm tired.

    [00:02:38] Max: Right, and they run the standard panel.

    [00:02:40] Chloe: Yeah, they usually run a standard complete blood count, A C, B, C. They look at my hemoglobin to check for anemia. So think of your blood's hemoglobin as your daily checking account.

    [00:02:50] It's the active circulating currency you need right now today to transport oxygen and just survive. And let's think of ferritin as your deep savings account.

    [00:02:59] Max: I love that [00:03:00] analogy. It fits perfectly.

    [00:03:01] Chloe: Thanks. So my doctor checks my CB. C sees my checking account. The hemoglobin is totally fine and says great news.

    [00:03:08] You're not anemic. You're perfectly healthy. But meanwhile, that savings account, the ferritin could be totally bankrupt.

    [00:03:15] Max: What's fascinating here is how perfectly that financial analogy maps onto the biological reality.

    [00:03:21] Chloe: Yeah.

    [00:03:22] Max: Especially when you look at the mechanism of triage. So, um, ferritin is a highly specialized hollow protein.

    [00:03:28] It's shaped almost like a tiny. Spherical cage.

    [00:03:31] Chloe: A cage, okay.

    [00:03:32] Max: Yeah. And it stores iron safely inside your cells. It locks that iron away and then slowly releases it precisely when your body needs to manufacture hemoglobin. But the critical piece most people miss is that making red blood cells isn't iron's only job,

    [00:03:45] Chloe: right?

    [00:03:46] Max: That's stored iron in the ferritin cage is also drawn upon to create thyroid hormones. To synthesize neurotransmitters in your brain and to generate mitochondrial energy.

    [00:03:54] Chloe: Wait, mitochondrial energy. So we're talking about the literal, microscopic power plants inside our cells. [00:04:00]

    [00:04:00] Max: Exactly. Your mitochondria physically cannot produce a TP, which is the basic unit of cellular energy without iron acting as a core component of the electron transport chain.

    [00:04:12] Chloe: Wow.

    [00:04:13] Max: And your brain cannot properly regulate neurotransmitters without iron acting as a chemical co-factor. So when your ferritin levels drop, when that savings account is drained, your body recognizes a crisis and goes into strict triage mode.

    [00:04:26] Chloe: It panics.

    [00:04:27] Max: It really does. It prioritizes keeping your hemoglobin levels normal because, well, you need that circulating oxygen to stay alive.

    [00:04:35] But to maintain that vital checking account, it forcefully stops funding everything else. Yeah. It starve your mitochondria. It downregulates your thyroid and it halts your neurotransmitter production,

    [00:04:45] Chloe: which perfectly explains why you feel absolutely terrible. Your body is literally shutting down the power grid to the suburbs just to keep the hospital lights on in the city center.

    [00:04:53] Max: That is exactly what's happening.

    [00:04:55] Chloe: But if that's happening, why isn't the doctor seeing it on the lab report?

    [00:04:58] Max: That brings us to the [00:05:00] scandal of the lab cutoffs. The recent research published in JMA network open addresses this directly. Most standard diagnostic labs will flag a ferritin level as normal as long as it sits above 15 nanograms per milliliter.

    [00:05:13] Chloe: Okay. 15,

    [00:05:14] Max: right? 15. But the clinical data shows that severe functional symptoms like profound fatigue, cognitive decline, and noticeable hair loss actually start occurring. Anytime a woman's ferritin drops below 50,

    [00:05:27] Chloe: hold on, let me make sure I'm getting this math right. The studies show symptoms start at 50, but the lab says you're fine all the way down to 15.

    [00:05:34] Max: Yeah.

    [00:05:34] Chloe: That means millions of women are walking around with a score of like 20 or 30, losing their hair and their energy while their doctor holds a piece of paper telling them they're perfectly healthy.

    [00:05:44] Max: That is the exact reality for millions of patients. You can have all the debilitating symptoms of cellular iron deficiency without technically being anemic on a CBC.

    [00:05:53] The lab report prints out with a comforting green normal next to the ferritin number, but the patient's lived experience is [00:06:00] a state of biological starvation.

    [00:06:01] Chloe: Here's where it gets really interesting, I think, because when you look at the actual symptom list for this non anemic iron deficiency, it reads exactly like a checklist for modern life.

    [00:06:12] Max: Oh, absolutely.

    [00:06:12] Chloe: We're talking about fatigue. Poor concentration, sleep disruption, feeling cold all the time, hair loss, mood changes, and suddenly struggling to get through a workout. That used to be a breeze, but, um, I have to push back a little here.

    [00:06:26] Max: Sure. Go ahead.

    [00:06:26] Chloe: Let's look at the lifestyle factors. Wired and tired at night.

    [00:06:30] Terrible concentration, mood swings. Isn't that just the literal definition of having a pod or you know, a high stress? Wait, hold on. Are you saying a biological iron intervention actually improves psychological states because women presenting with severe mood changes and brain fog postpartum, a routinely prescribed antidepressants?

    [00:06:48] Max: Hmm.

    [00:06:49] Chloe: Are these studies suggesting we are frequently prescribing SSRIs when we should be prescribing iron?

    [00:06:54] Max: The data strongly suggests. We are routinely misdiagnosing nutritional starvation as psychiatric or [00:07:00] lifestyle issues. We can look at the systematic reviews from publications like The Journal of Nutritional Science and BMC Women's Health.

    [00:07:07] They specifically study women of childbearing age experiencing those exact mood and cognitive issues.

    [00:07:13] Chloe: What did they find?

    [00:07:15] Max: Well, researchers objectively measured these women using standardized cognitive performance tests, clinical mental health scores, and self-reported fatigue scales. Then they actively improved their iron status.

    [00:07:28] The results weren't subtle. All of those metrics significantly improved.

    [00:07:32] Chloe: That is wild. It wasn't just that their kids suddenly started sleeping through the night or their jobs got easier, giving them iron fundamentally changed their psychological state.

    [00:07:40] Max: Yeah, and we have to remember the mechanism we discussed earlier about neurotransmitters.

    [00:07:45] Iron is a required biological co-factor for the enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase.

    [00:07:49] Chloe: Tyrosine hydroxylase, okay.

    [00:07:51] Max: Right. And that enzyme is the master switch for synthesizing dopamine. It's also required for serotonin production, so when your ferritin [00:08:00] savings account drops, your brain's ability to produce dopamine physically drops.

    [00:08:04] Oh, wow. You lose your drive, your focus fractures, and you experience mood swings that look identically to clinical depression or postpartum anxiety. Their cognitive function sharpened and their mood stabilized simply because the researchers handed their brains the raw materials needed to manufacture dopamine again.

    [00:08:21] Chloe: If we are misdiagnosing a lack of dopamine building blocks as clinical depression, that is a massive failure.

    [00:08:27] Max: It is. If we connect this to the bigger picture, it reveals a profound issue in how we handle women's healthcare specifically because these biological symptoms of low ferritin so perfectly mimic sleep deprivation, stress, and parenting demands.

    [00:08:41] Women are conditioned to just accept them.

    [00:08:43] Chloe: Yeah, you just power through.

    [00:08:44] Max: Exactly. They endure this exhaustion. Internalizing it as a moral failing or just the unavoidable price of being a busy mom instead of demanding their provider, look carefully at their iron panel. We have effectively medicalized [00:09:00] feeling terrible by writing it off as lifestyle.

    [00:09:02] Chloe: That is so incredibly frustrating, but also, you know, incredibly validating. For anyone listening who has been told your labs are normal, you're just stressed out.

    [00:09:10] Max: Very validating.

    [00:09:11] Chloe: Okay, so let's say you do finally advocate for yourself. You demand the ferritin test. You bypass the misleading cutoff of 15, and you realize your savings account is sitting at a 20.

    [00:09:22] It's basically bankrupt. The logical next thought is, okay, no problem. I'll just eat more spinach. I'll eat more lentils.

    [00:09:28] Max: Right? The food approach.

    [00:09:29] Chloe: Yeah. Like if I'm eating a super healthy plant heavy diet, shouldn't my ferritin naturally bounce back? Let me try another analogy here. I've read that non-union kind you get from plants is like a delivery package that requires a signature.

    [00:09:45] It's super finicky. You have to be at the door at the exact right time, and it gets bounced back to the post office really easily.

    [00:09:50] Max: That's a great way to think about it.

    [00:09:51] Chloe: But he iron the kind from animal sources is like having a VIP pass right into the body. It just walks past the bouncers. So what is the bouncer [00:10:00] actually doing at a chemical level to the plant iron?

    [00:10:02] Max: That bouncer analogy is spot on. But to take it a step further, think of what the bouncer is actually doing to that package in your digestive tract.

    [00:10:11] Chloe: Mm-hmm.

    [00:10:11] Max: The absorption mechanics between plant-based iron and animal-based iron are entirely different. This is heavily documented in literature from the proceedings of the nutrition society and the journal nutrients.

    [00:10:22] Chloe: Okay?

    [00:10:23] Max: So non-heme iron, which comes from plant foods, carries a free electrical charge. It acts like a powerful little magnet as it travels through your gut. Because it's magnetically charged, it accidentally gets stuck to other compounds in your food before your intestinal walls can even absorb it.

    [00:10:39] Chloe: Wait, so it's wandering through the digestive tract, getting stuck to random debris instead of entering the bloodstream?

    [00:10:44] Max: Exactly. We call that debris meal inhibitors. Non-heme iron absorption is heavily influenced by the other compounds you consume in that same meal. For instance, phytates, which are naturally occurring compounds found in beans, seeds, and whole grains. They tightly bind to that [00:11:00] magnetically charged non-heme iron and lock it up.

    [00:11:02] Chloe: Oh wow.

    [00:11:03] Max: Yeah. Preventing your body from absorbing it.

    [00:11:05] Chloe: Yeah.

    [00:11:05] Max: Calcium is another strong inhibitor that out competes iron for absorption. Then you have polyphenols, which are fantastic, healthy antioxidants found in coffee, black tea, and wine. But those polyphenols are notorious for magnetically locking onto non-heme.

    [00:11:20] Chloe: Oh no. So if I'm trying to be healthy and having a giant spinach salad topped with black beans, and I'm drinking my afternoon coffee or iced tea with it, I'm basically ensuring I get almost zero iron from that meal

    [00:11:32] Max: pretty much. The polyphenols in your tea and the phytates in your beans are signing for that package and sending it right back out of your system In your waist, you might absorb as little as two to 5% of the iron on that plate.

    [00:11:44] Chloe: That is so depressing.

    [00:11:45] Max: It is. Meanwhile, heme iron, the kind found in animal proteins, is structured completely differently. It doesn't have that free magnetic charge. The iron molecule is safely encased inside a protective protein shell called a porphyrin ring.

    [00:11:59] Chloe: A [00:12:00] porphyrin ring. Okay?

    [00:12:01] Max: Right. And that ring acts as the VIP bodyguard.

    [00:12:04] Chloe: So it hides the iron from the phytates and the coffee.

    [00:12:07] Max: It shields the iron entirely because of that porphyrin ring. Heme iron absorption is highly stable. It is not significantly affected by those inhibitors. That VIP pass means it enters your intestinal cells. Efficiently and intact regardless of whether you had a cup of coffee with your meal.

    [00:12:23] Chloe: Okay, so if my daily plant-based diet is getting aggressively blocked by these bouncers, like coffee, tea, and calcium, and my body is naturally losing iron every single month. I mean, it sounds like an impossible math problem.

    [00:12:35] Max: It is a physiological math problem where the outgoing expenses far exceed the incoming deposits.

    [00:12:41] Add in the specific biological realities of women.

    [00:12:43] Chloe: Yeah,

    [00:12:44] Max: heavy menstrual bleeding. The massive systemic iron depletion that happens during pregnancy, postpartum recovery.

    [00:12:50] Chloe: Right, where you're literally building another human's blood supply from your own stores.

    [00:12:54] Max: Exactly. Then factor in the demands of endurance exercise or even the presence of [00:13:00] chronic low grade inflammation, which blocks iron transport.

    [00:13:03] All of these factors mean women are losing or utilizing iron far faster than a standard absorption blocked plant-based diet can realistically replace it. Your body is making massive, unavoidable withdrawals from the savings account, and your plant-based deposits are just too small and too inconsistent to keep up.

    [00:13:21] Chloe: So what does this all mean? If the math is that bad and my doctor finally acknowledges my ferritin is sitting at a 20. Why don't they explain any of this? Like their first instinct isn't to talk to me about porphyrin rings, absorption rates, and meal inhibitors. They just grab their pad and write a prescription.

    [00:13:37] Max: Yeah, standard protocol.

    [00:13:38] Chloe: They hand you a script for a massive dose of standard synthetic non-heme iron. Usually something like ferrous sulfate. But here is my question. If standard high dose non-heme iron causes so much intense constipation, severe bloating and nausea, why is it still the absolute first line treatment?

    [00:13:57] Are we really just expecting women to [00:14:00] suffer through a gastrointestinal nightmare just to get their hair to stop falling out?

    [00:14:04] Max: The reliance on ferrous sulfate is a perfect example of medical inertia.

    [00:14:07] Chloe: Yeah,

    [00:14:08] Max: it's the default. Because it is incredibly cheap to manufacture. It has been used for over 50 years.

    [00:14:13] And you know, in fairness, if a patient can actually tolerate it, it'll eventually force hemoglobin levels up

    [00:14:19] Chloe: if they can tolerate it.

    [00:14:20] Max: Right. But you are highlighting the major flaw, the biological mechanism of those side effects. Remember how non-heme iron is magnetically charged and poorly absorbed? When you take a massive 325 milligram pill of synthetic ferrous sulfate, your body can only absorb a tiny fraction of it.

    [00:14:35] Chloe: So where does the rest of that massive pill go? If it's not going into my blood,

    [00:14:39] Max: the unabsorbed free iron travels all the way down into your lower intestine. And out in the Wild Iron is a primary food source for certain types of bacteria.

    [00:14:50] Chloe: Oh, gross.

    [00:14:51] Max: Yeah. So when that massive payload of unabsorbed synthetic iron hits your gut microbiome, it acts like a fertilizer for pathogenic gas producing [00:15:00] gut bacteria.

    [00:15:00] They just feast on it.

    [00:15:01] Chloe: Oh my gosh.

    [00:15:02] Max: That bacterial feeding frenzy creates massive amounts of inflammation, severe gas, bloating, and the intense constipation patients complain about.

    [00:15:11] Chloe: Well, that explains why everyone quits. I mean, if every time you take the pill you feel nauseous, your stomach blows up like a balloon and you are in physical pain, of course you're gonna throw the bottle in the trash.

    [00:15:20] You're trading profound fatigue for agonizing stomach issues.

    [00:15:24] Max: Exactly. This raises an important question, and it's one the clinical nutrition community is actively grappling with. The harsh reality is that those gastrointestinal side effects are so severe that up to 50% of women simply abandon the medication long before they have actually rebuilt their deep tissue ferritin stores,

    [00:15:41] Chloe: 50%.

    [00:15:42] That's huge.

    [00:15:43] Max: It's massive, and this is where the comparative data from our sources becomes really illuminating. A recent comprehensive analysis in the Cochrane database of systematic reviews looked directly at interventions using heme based iron versus traditional non-heme forms. The emerging clinical consensus [00:16:00] strongly suggests that utilizing heme iron can successfully raise iron status with a fraction of the gastrointestinal side effects

    [00:16:06] Chloe: because of the VIP bodyguard.

    [00:16:08] The porphyrin ring means the iron gets absorbed high up in the digestive tract so it never reaches the lower intestine to feed those pathogenic bacteria.

    [00:16:16] Max: You've got it. The absorption efficiency changes everything. For women who are already dealing with gut sensitivities, maybe they have baseline bloating IBS type symptoms or underlying gut inflammation.

    [00:16:26] That difference in tolerability isn't just a minor convenience. It is the critical deciding factor between actually resolving a years long deficiency and remaining chronically depleted.

    [00:16:36] Chloe: Okay, so the high dose synthetic pills feed bad bacteria and the he iron acts like a VIP. Let's talk about the food first solution that gets us that he iron, because the clinical guidelines and nutritional sources we're looking at point towards something that might make a lot of modern listeners squeamish.

    [00:16:52] But biologically, it's fascinating. We are talking about organ nutrition.

    [00:16:56] Max: We are, it forces us to look back at ancestral [00:17:00] human diets. This is where a food first organ forward approach really shines as a physiological bridge. We're talking specifically about bovine organs, most notably beef liver. Beef organs naturally package that highly bioavailable porphyrin ring heme iron alongside a perfect matrix of synergistic nutrients.

    [00:17:20] Chloe: Wait, synergistic nutrients, meaning the iron doesn't work in a vacuum. It needs helper molecules,

    [00:17:24] Max: exactly. Biological systems rely on teamwork. Beef organs don't just hand your body raw iron. They provide an incredibly dense source of preformed vitamin, a whole complex of B vitamins, including B12 and folate and essential trees, minerals like bioavailable copper.

    [00:17:40] Copper is a fantastic example. Your body physically requires copper to load iron onto the transport proteins that carry it through your blood. If you take a massive synthetic iron pill, but you are deficient in copper, that iron struggles to get to the tissues that need it. Beef liver naturally provides the iron and the copper in the [00:18:00] exact biological ratios your body recognizes.

    [00:18:02] Chloe: So taking a synthetic iron pill is basically like dropping off a giant pile of lumber at a construction site and just walking away. But eating beef liver is like dropping off the lumber along with the hammers, the nails, and the construction crew to actually build the house.

    [00:18:16] Max: I love that. That is the power of a whole food matrix.

    [00:18:19] It provides the exact tools needed to utilize the materials. They support the red blood cell production. They feed the thyroid and they directly fuel the mitochondrial energy recovery we discussed earlier. And because that he miron ignores the meal inhibitors like coffee and phytates, even relatively small, consistent amounts of it can meaningfully rebuild your ferritin stores over time.

    [00:18:39] Chloe: Okay, but let's be incredibly real for a second. The science makes perfect sense. Most people listening to this are not gonna head to the butcher, buy a bloody slab of beef liver, and fry it up with onions for dinner on a Tuesday night. I mean, it's just entirely divorced from modern culinary culture. The texture, the taste, [00:19:00] it's a huge barrier.

    [00:19:01] Max: Oh, completely. The modern palette has absolutely shifted away from nose to tail eating, which is a primary reason these functional deficiencies are so common now. And the literature acknowledges this compliance barrier. That's why pragmatic modern solutions are so important.

    [00:19:14] Chloe: So what's the workaround?

    [00:19:15] Max: For many women, utilizing a high quality freeze dried organ supplement provides a much gentler, low tox option.

    [00:19:22] It allows you to layer in that highly bioavailable heme, iron and those crucial synergistic nutrients like copper and vitamin A.

    [00:19:30] Chloe: Mm-hmm.

    [00:19:31] Max: Without having to drastically alter your diet or, you know, forced out of food you hate.

    [00:19:35] Chloe: I make so much sense. It acts as a strategic dietary supplement, completely bypassing the taste issue, but fundamentally it's just real ancestral food.

    [00:19:43] Max: It is a powerful tool, but with one vital caveat. This is a strategy to be used alongside appropriate medical monitoring. The goal here isn't to just blindly take supplements and guess at your health,

    [00:19:55] Chloe: right?

    [00:19:56] Max: The action plan for anyone listening is to take this [00:20:00] physiological understanding and work collaboratively with a clinic.

    [00:20:04] You need to demand they monitor not just your basic CBC checking account, but specifically request a check on your ferritin savings account. You also wanna look at your transfer and saturation, which tells us the percentage of transport proteins actually carrying iron right now. And most importantly, you need a doctor who treats your actual lived symptoms, not just a piece of paper.

    [00:20:26] Chloe: Okay, let's bring this all together because we have covered a massive amount of ground today. If you're listening to this and you've been dragging through your days, running on empty, losing your hair and chalking it all up to mom, burn out, or just a stressful modern life. We want you to realize that the burnout might actually be a completely drained ferritin savings account.

    [00:20:43] Your brain might literally be lacking the iron required to make dopamine. We've learned that standard conventional CDC tests often miss this functional deficiency entirely, and that a lab score of 16 might say normal while your body feels like it's shutting down. We've seen that relying solely [00:21:00] on a plant-based diet is an uphill biological math problem because of magnetic charges and meal inhibitors.

    [00:21:06] And finally, we've explored how bypassing those awful GI side effects with a gentle whole food matrix of heme iron, specifically through freeze dried organ nutrition might be the key to getting your cellular energy and your life back.

    [00:21:20] Max: It completely reframes our understanding of daily exhaustion. And you know, I'll leave you with this final thought to mull over.

    [00:21:27] If our standard medical cutoffs for something as fundamental as iron are set so low that they actively ignore the functional starvation, ruining our daily energy, our moods, and our cognitive function.

    [00:21:36] Chloe: Mm-hmm.

    [00:21:36] Max: It makes you wonder what other normal lab ranges in standard medicine are completely ignoring how we actually feel.

    [00:21:41] Hmm. Simply because we as a society have normalized feeling terrible.

    [00:21:44] Chloe: That is a chilling but incredibly empowering question. It really shifts the agency back to you. So take this knowledge. The next time you're sitting on that crinkly paper in the doctor's office and they tell you your exhaustion is just your busy schedule, or they try to hand you an antidepressant without [00:22:00] checking your nutrients.

    [00:22:01] Advocate for yourself. Demand that ferritin panel look closely at the actual numbers. And keep asking questions, because your exhaustion isn't just your schedule. It might just be your mitochondria begging for a deposit into that savings account. Thanks for joining us on this deep dive.

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From Flintstones to Gummies: Same Story, New Packaging