I coach ambitious women on how to shatter the shell of complicity and create impeccable health. It is my mission to help uncover root causes while contributing tools and support healing at the deepest level using food as medicine. I currently work with clients one-on-one and through group coaching to balance hormones, nourish thyroid function and revive metabolism. Together, we create a clear, customized plan based on the client’s body’s unique needs to renew health and get back to living the best season of life.
Meg Green, MS, RDN, LD IFNCP

PRESSING QUESTIONS
How I knew this was my passion
My family is full of dominant females who also had skills with food—either as great cooks or as growing produce to even having health food stores. I inherited skills from each one and paved my way of using food as medicine.
Biggest challenges in my career
Breaking stigmas around nutrition. Calories and weight are separate from self-worth. Try on providers like clothes— if it isn’t a good fit, move on. Investing in your health is priceless and it shouldn’t be placed on the back burner. Lastly, advocate!
My first job and what it taught me
I contacted a weight-loss camp CEO for a college project. He offered me a job on the spot to teach nutrition classes. Experiencing effects of weight bias taught me how to be part of the solution and not the problem.
What keeps me coming back to my job every day
My clients! I see and support them. I know what it’s like living with debilitating fatigue, severe brain fog and to hurt mentally and physically only to be told by a doctor, “It’s in your head. Just eat less and exercise more.”
Best career moment so far
After experiencing how functional nutrition completely changed my Hashimoto’s disease symptoms, I decided to learn more. I found the Integrative and Functional Nutrition Academy and in four months, I completed the 12-month program to become the only IFNCP in Arkansas.
A skill I never expected to need in this field
Helping people understand a banana is not “bad” food. Where did the bad rap come from?! Also, describing poop. I talk about poop all the time.
One practice I use to maintain my mental health
Meditation and mindfulness. Deep breathing with different hertz waves helps along with working with an amazing therapist.
Best advice I ever received
I felt pulled in different directions because I tend to say “Yes.” I had a professional tell me to “Stop taking 10 steps in 10 different directions. Focus on your goal and take 10 steps in that one direction.”
The one thing I wish people knew about my field
Taking an integrative approach to nutrition is knowing that when eating an apple, the fiber feeds gut bacteria and creates a chemical release which prevents inflammation and reduces cellular damage, as opposed to just being a single fruit serving for the day.
The first thing I do to course-correct when I hit a wall
Sleep and rest









