• Creatine: Stronger Body, Clearer Mind
    Nov 19 2025

    This episode cuts through the noise and explains why creatine is one of the most effective, well-researched supplements for women, not just for building muscle, but for thinking sharper, recovering faster, and staying steady when life is heavy. We break down the physiology, the misconceptions, and the real-world benefits so you can use creatine with clarity and confidence.


    I used one main paper to research all the mechanistic stuff for this episode. It is free to access and it's AMAZING:


    Creatine Supplementation Beyond Athletics: Benefits of Different Types of Creatine for Women, Vegans, and Clinical Populations — A Narrative Review
    Gutiérrez-Hellín J., Del Coso J., Franco-Andrés A., Gamonales J.M., Espada M.C., González-García J., López-Moreno M., Varillas-Delgado D.
    Nutrients (2025).PMCID: PMC11723027 | DOI: 10.3390/nu17010095



    Then some of the other studies I mentioned can be found here:

    1. Single Dose Creatine Improves Cognitive Performance and Induces Changes in Cerebral High-Energy Phosphates During Sleep Deprivation
    Gordji-Nejad A., Matusch A., Kleedörfer S., Patel H.J., Drzezga A., Elmenhorst D., Binkofski F., Bauer A.
    Scientific Reports (2024).PMCID: PMC10902318 | DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-54249-9

    What it’s aboutA high single dose of creatine helped offset the cognitive decline and metabolic stress caused by sleep deprivation, temporarily boosting brain energy systems and mental performance.


    2. Creatine Promotes Endometriosis Progression by Inducing M2 Polarization of Peritoneal Macrophages
    Chen S.-M., Liu Y.-K., Ma X.-Q., Wei C.-Y., Li M.-Q., Zhu X.-Y.
    Reproduction (2024).
    DOI: 10.1530/REP-24-0278 | PMID: 39679878

    What it’s aboutThis study found that creatine can shift peritoneal macrophages into an M2, pro-growth state, which may accelerate inflammation, angiogenesis, and lesion development in endometriosis.


    3. Effects of Long-Term Low-Dose Dietary Creatine Supplementation in Older Women
    Lobo D.M., Tritto A.C., da Silva L.R., de Oliveira P.B., Benatti F.B., Roschel H., Nieß B., Gualano B., Pereira R.M.R.
    Experimental Gerontology (2015).
    DOI: 10.1016/j.exger.2015.07.012 | PMID: 26192975

    What it’s about
    A year of very low-dose creatine (1 g/day) was safe but too small a dose to produce measurable changes in bone health, lean mass, or muscle function in postmenopausal women.


    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • #BE - Guided Relaxation for Trippers 🍄 (just joking, but not really)
    Sep 22 2025

    Hi friends - this is a slightly different episode this week and it's designed to be used as a guided relaxation. If you're unsure of why a guided relaxation might be beneficial then please listen to episode #36 where I break down the science.


    I don't want to say much on this script, just that I hope you get what you need (and more) from it.


    Please let me know how it felt for you.


    xx

    Shona

    Show More Show Less
    14 mins
  • #37 - Back Pain and the Brain: Rethinking Chronic Discomfort
    Sep 14 2025

    Back pain is one of the most common health problems in the world — but also one of the most mysterious. Scans don’t always match symptoms, treatments don’t always provide relief, and many people feel stuck with ongoing discomfort.

    In this episode, I explore chronic, non-specific low back pain through a biopsychosocial lens. Basically, we’re looking beyond just the spine to understand how biology, psychology, and environment all shape the way pain is experienced.


    You’ll hear about:

    • What makes non-specific low back pain so puzzling
    • How pain perception actually works (pain ≠ tissue damage)
    • Why the biopsychosocial model is key to understanding pain
    • The role of self-regulation in shaping pain responses
    • What research says about meditation for back pain
    • How to reframe back pain when you feel like you’re hitting a wall
    • Journal prompts to reflect on your own experience

    By the end, you’ll have a new way to think about back pain, one that expands the options for healing beyond the body alone.



    • Engel, G. L. (1977). The need for a new medical model: a challenge for biomedicine. Science, 196(4286), 129–136. (Origin of the biopsychosocial model)
    • Study on self-regulation and pain: Wager, T. D., et al. (2013). An fMRI-based neurologic signature of physical pain. New England Journal of Medicine, 368(15), 1388–1397. (and related follow-up studies on cognitive self-regulation impacting autonomic markers — you summarised one in your notes)
    • Systematic review on meditation and back pain: Cramer, H., et al. (2022). Meditation for adults with non-specific low back pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis. (Included 8 RCTs, ~1,234 participants, moderate-certainty evidence of small benefits for disability and long-term pain


    Show More Show Less
    28 mins
  • #36 - Guided Progressive Muscle Relaxation for Recovery: Relaxation Beats Ice Baths.
    Aug 28 2025

    We programme strength, cardio, and mobility — but almost never relaxation. Yet research shows Progressive Muscle Relaxation lowers stress, calms anxiety, improves mood, and even deepens the most restorative stages of sleep.

    In this episode, I break down the evidence — from large systematic reviews to athlete studies — and then guide you through a full Progressive Muscle Relaxation session. You’ll finish not just knowing why relaxation matters, but experiencing its benefits in real time.


    Study 1: Muhammad Khir S, Wan Mohd Yunus WMA, Mahmud N, Wang R, Panatik SA, Mohd Sukor MS, Nordin NA. Efficacy of Progressive Muscle Relaxation in Adults for Stress, Anxiety, and Depression: A Systematic Review. Psychol Res Behav Manag. 2024 Feb 1;17:345-365. doi: 10.2147/PRBM.S437277. PMID: 38322293; PMCID: PMC10844009.


    Study 2: Simon KC, McDevitt EA, Ragano R, Mednick SC. Progressive muscle relaxation increases slow-wave sleep during a daytime nap. J Sleep Res. 2022 Oct;31(5):e13574. doi: 10.1111/jsr.13574. Epub 2022 Mar 30. PMID: 35355351; PMCID: PMC9786620.


    Study 3: Battaglini MP, Pessôa Filho DM, Calais SL, Miyazaki MCOS, Neiva CM, Espada MC, de Moraes MG, Verardi CEL. Analysis of Progressive Muscle Relaxation on Psychophysiological Variables in Basketball Athletes. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2022 Dec 19;19(24):17065. doi: 10.3390/ijerph192417065. PMID: 36554945; PMCID: PMC9778808.

    Show More Show Less
    20 mins
  • #35 - The Most Ignored Health Practice in Fitness: Why You Need to Start Training Relaxation
    Aug 23 2025

    In this episode I make the case for why relaxation should be treated as a trainable skill, not a luxury. We’ll explore what guided relaxation actually is, the science behind its benefits, and the fascinating mechanisms from nervous system regulation to dopamine release in the brain. You’ll learn why short daily practices are more powerful than the occasional long session, and how building relaxation into your routine can transform recovery, mood, and long-term performance. We’ll finish with a guided practice so you can experience it for yourself.

    Show More Show Less
    35 mins
  • #34 - How to START AGAIN: When You Don’t Recognise Yourself
    Aug 17 2025

    Starting again in fitness can feel overwhelming; like you’ve lost progress in both body and mind. But the truth is, you haven’t gone back to zero. With the right approach, you can rebuild faster, smarter, and with more self-compassion than before.

    In this episode, I unpack the two sides of starting again:

    🧠 The Psychology: why restarting feels harder than beginning, how shame and identity play into the “I used to be fit” mindset, and how the stages of change model helps you actually stick with it this time.

    💪 The Physiology: what really happens to your muscles, cardiovascular fitness, and flexibility during a break, why you don’t lose as much as you think, and how to safely recondition your body without burning out.

    You’ll also learn:

    • The a really important mindset shift to let go of guilt and rebuild momentum
    • A realistic framework for your first week back, without trying to “make up for lost time”
    • How to measure progress in a way that keeps you motivated


    If you’ve ever felt like you don’t recognise your body anymore or that you’ve failed too many times to start again, this episode will show you how to press reset, with both science and compassion on your side.


    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • #33 - Time Poor, Health Poor; Why Busy Isn’t Better
    Aug 8 2025

    We often think of time as something we manage, but what if our relationship with time is managing us?


    In this episode, we explore time poverty as more than a scheduling issue: it’s a psychological, cultural, and physiological phenomenon that shapes how we live, train, and recover.


    From the neuroscience of cognitive overload to the cultural obsession with busyness as a status symbol, we unpack why so many of us feel like we never have enough time and how that perception impacts our health, motivation, and sense of self.


    You’ll also learn evidence-based tools to reframe your relationship with time; including values-based scheduling, time blocking as a form of nervous system regulation, and a reflective exercise that helps you reconnect with the moments that matter.

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • #32 - Periodisation: Why Working Out Isn’t Working.
    Aug 1 2025

    If you’re working out consistently but not seeing real progress, this episode is for you.


    In today’s episode of The Vertue Podcast, we’re breaking down the difference between working out and training and why that gap could be the reason you’re plateauing, burning out, or feeling frustrated in your fitness journey.


    Whether you’re postpartum, perimenopausal, strength-focused, or just trying to feel good in your body again; this episode will help you train smarter, not just harder.


    🎧 Listen now ❤️ and don’t forget to follow, rate, and review if this helped you shift your mindset.

    Show More Show Less
    30 mins