5 minute read
Every spring, the cleanses arrive like clockwork. Seven-day resets, juice programs, the whole lineup promising that if you just restrict hard enough for a week, you’ll emerge on the other side feeling lighter, better, brand new.
I get it.
Something genuinely does shift this time of year. You feel a little restless, a little ready. The pull toward something fresher and different is real. And that pull is worth listening to. It’s just that the wellness industry has gotten very good at intercepting it and selling it back to you as a program that usually involves suffering.
Here’s what I want to offer instead: the spring reset feeling is valid. You just don’t need a detox to act on it.
The reason spring resets feel so appealing isn’t because your body spent winter falling apart. It’s because your body is ready.
More daylight means more serotonin production. Warmer temperatures naturally lower cortisol. Your circadian rhythm shifts, your Sleep quality often improves, and your appetite starts moving toward lighter, fresher foods, not because you’re following a meal plan, but because that’s what your body actually wants after months of heartier winter eating.
This is seasonal attunement. It’s the same reason you craved soup in January and now the idea of a big spring salad sounds genuinely good. Your body is not confused. It’s doing exactly what it’s supposed to do.
A detox doesn’t create this shift. The shift was already happening. The detox just takes the credit.
Your liver, kidneys, and lymphatic system are already running a remarkably efficient filtration operation. They do not need a five-day juice fast to catch up. That idea, that your body accumulates toxins over winter that require a special intervention to remove, is not supported by how the body actually works.
What spring cleanses often do instead is create a short period of restriction that feels productive, followed by a return to normal eating, followed by a quiet sense that you somehow failed to maintain the results. That cycle is familiar to a lot of us, and it tends to leave people feeling worse about their relationship with food, not better.
The urge to refresh in spring is a healthy instinct. The restrictive detox is just one (not great) way of acting on it.
A real spring reset works with the changes your body is already making, rather than imposing something on top of them.
It adds, rather than subtracts. Fresh spring produce is showing up right now: asparagus, snap peas, radishes, strawberries, fresh herbs. Your body is genuinely reaching for these things. Follow that instinct. Not because they’re “detox foods” but because they’re in season and they taste good and you actually want them.
It takes advantage of the light. Longer days are one of the most powerful natural mood and energy regulators we have access to. Getting outside, even briefly, is doing more for your wellbeing than most supplements on the market. A walk is not a training plan. It’s just using what spring is offering.
It gently releases what doesn’t fit anymore. This might be the most underrated part of a spring reset. Not a dietary overhaul, but a quiet look at the rules you’ve been carrying since January. The standards you set for yourself in a darker, colder season that just don’t fit the energy you have now. Putting something down without making an announcement is its own kind of reset.
It slows down before it speeds up. Before adding anything new, spring is actually a good time to pause and notice what’s already working. A short gratitude practice, even five minutes, can shift the mental noise more effectively than any cleanse. [Try this gratitude Meditation] if you want somewhere to start.
Not all spring programs are created equal. The ones worth doing are built around the energy you’re already feeling, not restriction you have to white-knuckle through.
I’ve been building something for exactly this season. A spring program rooted in the same permission-giving, feel-good approach I talk about every week in The Slice. More structure and support, same philosophy. If you want to be the first to know when it launches, [get on the list here].
One of the easiest and most enjoyable ways to lean into spring is simply to eat what’s in season.
Asparagus, snap peas, strawberries, fresh herbs, new potatoes: these are showing up at markets and grocery stores right now. They taste good because they are fresh, not because they are performing some cleansing function. Seasonal eating doesn’t require a philosophy. It just requires buying what looks good.
A simple spring meal that I keep coming back to this time of year is [SPRING RECIPE]. [Find the full recipe here.]
And if you’re already thinking about the holidays, Easter and Passover are right around the corner. My traditional brisket from [Love What’s On Your Plate] is the most requested recipe I have for a reason. It’s the kind of dish that holds the table together. [Find it here.]
If I had to pick one thing to genuinely reset this season, it wouldn’t be a Diet or a workout routine. It would be the inner voice.
The one that’s been keeping score since January. The one that labels foods good and bad and decides whether you’ve been “on track” or not. The one that makes eating feel like a test you can pass or fail.
Spring is a genuinely good time to quiet that voice down. Not through willpower, but through noticing what’s already good. What’s already working. What your body is already asking for.
That’s the refresh. Everything else, the movement, the food, the energy, tends to get a lot easier once that part shifts.