
At certain times of year, many people feel the same pressure:
To reset.
To be stricter.
To “get back on track.”
Whether it’s after a holiday, a busy work season, or simply feeling a little off in yourself, the instinct is often the same — start over.
Usually with something bigger.
Something stricter.
Something more dramatic.
But in reality, lasting health rarely comes from dramatic change.
It comes from small, repeatable actions.
And that’s where most people get stuck.
Not because they don’t care.
Not because they lack motivation.
But because most health advice is built around intensity instead of sustainability.
Why big plans often fail
In clinic, I often meet people who feel frustrated with themselves because they “know what to do” but struggle to stick with it.
The problem usually isn’t knowledge.
It’s the expectation that health should happen through:
- perfect meal plans
- strict routines
- cutting things out
- doing everything at once
This creates an all-or-nothing cycle.
You start strong.
Life gets busy.
The plan becomes impossible.
And suddenly it feels like failure.
But behaviour change research tells us something important:
The easier a habit is to repeat, the more likely it is to last.
That’s why small habits matter so much.
What microhabits actually look like
Microhabits are small, realistic actions that support your health without overwhelming your life.
They are simple enough to repeat consistently—and consistency is what creates results.
For example:
- Adding a protein source to breakfast
- Drinking water first thing, when you wake up
- Eating regular meals
- Taking a short walk after lunch
- Creating a better evening routine for sleep
These habits may not feel dramatic.
But they work because they fit real life.
And health is built in real life—not ideal conditions.
Why this matters for energy, digestion, mood and sleep
Small habits influence much more than weight or food choices.
They affect:
Blood sugar regulation
Protein, regular meals, and balanced nutrition support steadier energy and concentration.
Gut health
Consistent nourishment, fibre, hydration, and routine all support digestion and overall wellbeing.
Stress and nervous system regulation
Movement, sleep cues, and regular eating patterns help reduce the physiological stress load on the body.
Why I created 30 Days, 30 Ways
I created 30 Days, 30 Ways because I kept having the same conversation with clients:
“You do not need to change everything.”
You just need a realistic place to begin.
I wanted to create something that removed the overwhelm and gave people structure without pressure.
The result was a simple online programme:
one habit per day, for 30 days. Each habit is evidence-based, practical, and designed to support:
- energy
- digestion
- mood
- sleep
- overall wellbeing
No dieting.
No extremes.
No guilt.
Just sustainable habits that actually last.
A better way forward
If your health feels like something you keep restarting, this is your reminder:
You do not need another reset.
You do not need another strict plan.
You need habits you can actually live with.
That is what creates lasting change.
And often, it starts with something very small.
If you’d like support with that, you can learn more about 30 Days, 30 Ways here:
👉 https://healthbyorla.com/30-days-30-ways/
Because feeling better shouldn’t depend on perfection.
It should feel possible.
