Reset your body without going through an intense detox. To restore balance, focus on staying hydrated, eating regular meals, and getting restful sleep.
Festivals are a time when late nights, fancy meals, travel, and sugar can easily become a habit. Before you know it, the routine you’ve worked so hard to build will slip away. Extreme detox routines are often said to help reset your system, but they’re not always the best option. The nervous system, which tries to control everything by skipping meals, extreme dietary restrictions, intense training, lack of sleep, and being in tension with the body, will not reset as quickly when pressure is applied. A gentle, consistent signal will reset faster.
Luke Coutinho, an integrative lifestyle expert, tells Healthshot that resetting your body requires basics like healthy, nutritious food, gentle movement, deep sleep, and returning to a rhythm you can realistically maintain. “In our experience with patients, most patients don’t feel sick just because they eat one extra sweet after a festival. They feel sick because their rhythm has been disrupted,” Coutinho told Health Shots. Usually, the first changes are late night sleep, lack of sleep, and alertness of the nervous system. When this happens, the timing of meals becomes strange. Breakfast is late, lunch is rushed, dinner is late, and suddenly hunger cues come and you feel disoriented.
Add to this the dehydration, increased intake of sugar and refined carbohydrates, reduced movement, and increased stimulation from socializing, looking at screens, and constant scrolling, and you have the perfect recipe for feeling bloated, tired, cranky, and feeling hungry at the wrong times. “This is also why hard resets can backfire; if you overcorrect, your body perceives it as stress,” says Coutinho. Stress increases cravings, slows down digestion, makes you sleep poorly, and keeps cortisol high. No punishment necessary. Predictable signals are needed again.
What are the signs that your body needs a reset?
Think of this as a 3-day re-entry rather than a 21-day personality change.
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Moisturize and simplify
Start by prioritizing hydration. The first thing you should consume on an empty stomach is water. If it suits you, use lukewarm water, if not, use room temperature. “Whether it’s adding a pinch of Celtic sea salt or a squeeze of lemon, only add it if it works for you (never take it on an empty stomach) and not because someone online called it a detox hack,” says the expert. The point is simple. Hydration supports digestion, liver health (the body’s cleansing system), energy levels, bowel movements, and appetite cues. Hydration doesn’t have to be a cleansing ritual with complicated processes.

Eat an actual diet before restricting anything
- Your goals for the next 72 hours are not a limit. Its structure.
- Give preference to one systematic meal a day.
- Keep it simple, home style and balanced.
- There’s no need to skip meals to make up for a sumptuous celebratory meal.
Once your eating routine becomes regular, your cravings will begin to subside. Once your desires subside, your choices become easier.
2. Start eating right again
One gentle reset that works for many people is not changing what they eat, but changing how they move through their meals. “Eating in a calm order often calms cravings, makes portion control easier, and reduces digestive disruption,” experts say.
Here are the main meal sequences he recommends:
- Start with raw foods if that’s right for you. It can be a simple salad, or kachumba, cucumber, carrot or radish with soaked nuts and seeds. If raw veggies aren’t working for you, either because of your gut or the weather, switch to lightly cooked veggies. The same principle reduces stimulation.
- Next, make cooked vegetables such as sabzi, vegetables, soups, and steamed vegetables.
- Then protein: dal, paneer, free-range organic eggs, mercury-free fish, hormone-free chicken, tofu, curd (if that’s your preference).
- Limit the amount of starch in foods like roti, rice, and millet to make them last longer.
This is not a rule you should stick to. It’s the direction. It’s your body’s way of telling you it’s back to a stable signal. Remember to customize your diet based on your preferences, food tolerances, and doctor’s advice.
3. Movement as support
After indulging, most people think of exercise as burning off the extra calories they consumed. This approach begins with fear rather than motivation or gratitude. That mindset keeps your nervous system in a state of guilt, and guilt doesn’t improve your metabolism.
- A better approach is support. A simple 10-15 minute walk after lunch or dinner (as long as the air quality is within healthy parameters) is more effective than an intense workout under stress. It promotes digestion, improves the body’s glucose response, calms the mind, and improves the quality of your night’s sleep.
- We don’t walk to burn the food we eat. I walk in a way that allows my body to process it properly, so I don’t push myself too hard and feel lighter the next day.
4. Sleep, light, and stimulation
Most people try to reset with food, but still end up sleeping at odd hours, scrolling in the middle of the night, or waking up tired. That is true sabotage. Hunger cues, cravings, mood, and even digestion are all connected to sleep and circadian rhythms.
Keep the next few nights boring and consistent.
- Choose one fixed sleep window that you can actually hold. Even a 30-45 minute improvement is significant.
- Expose yourself to morning light for 5-10 minutes. Balcony is fine. This fixes your appetite signals and helps you fall asleep faster.
- Limit stimulation before bed: news, work chats, doomscrolling, intense shows, etc. Your nervous system doesn’t know that it’s just gratification. It reacts as if it were alive.
- If possible, eat dinner early (within an hour after sunset) and keep it lighter than lunch. Not as a punishment, but simply because your sleep quality improves when your digestion isn’t working overtime.
This is the part that people underestimate. A calm night will lead to a calmer next day, and you won’t feel like you’re fighting over your food choices.