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💵 This week only: Receive $200 USD for becoming a Certified Nutrition Coach within 6 months!

Discount

💵 Receive $200 USD for becoming a Certified Nutrition Coach within 6 months!

THIS WEEK ONLY
Discount

💵 Receive $200 USD for becoming a Certified Nutrition Coach within 6 months!

  • Gain the world’s #1 nutrition coaching credential
  • Transform lives while getting paid to do what you love
  • Earn a $200 bonus for graduating by 11/30/25

Good stress, bad stress. [Infographic]
Here’s how to find your stress sweet spot.


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The same exact stressors — job pressure, kids, money, and, yes, an intense exercise and eating regimen — can energize and inspire you or sap your will and your mojo. Reaching your potential is about finding your stress sweet spot and using it to propel you to your goals. Here’s how.

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It’s a well-known fact: Being stressed out can make it really hard to reach your health and fitness goals.

But did you know: Not having enough stress can slow your progress too?

See, stress isn’t a “thing” that happens to you. Stress is your response to the challenges you face every day.

These stressors — like pressure at your job, raising kids, managing money, piles of dirty laundry, and, yes, nutrition and exercise — can make you either puff out your chest and get ‘er done like Super(wo)man, or crumble and sink into your couch like a dry, bland sugar cookie.

The key is to find your “stress sweet spot” — just enough stress, but not too much — so you can reach your potential without crashing and burning.

In this infographic, we explain the importance of balancing your allostatic (stress) load, and exactly how to do it so you can feel and perform your best.

Download the infographic for your printer or tablet so you can access these tips whenever you feel either under- or overwhelmed.

To put these stress-balancing strategies into regular practice, download a printable or tablet-friendly version of this infographic so it’s always handy.

And, if you’re a health and fitness coach, share this with your clients and watch for improvements in their motivation, dedication, and results.

For an even more comprehensive take on this topic, check out our accompanying article, Good stress, bad stress: Finding your sweet spot.

If you’re a health and fitness coach…

Learning how to help clients manage stress, build resilience, and optimize sleep and recovery can be deeply transformative—for both of you.

It helps clients get “unstuck” and makes everything else easier—whether they want to eat better, move more, lose weight, or reclaim their health.

And for coaches: It gives you a rarified skill that will set you apart as an elite change maker.

The brand-new PN Level 1 Sleep, Stress Management, and Recovery Coaching Certification will show you how.

Want to know more?

When life gets messy, most coaching plans fall apart.

Clients skip workouts. Their sleep tanks. Stress takes over.

And suddenly—nothing’s working. Not even your best strategies.

The Sleep, Stress Management, & Recovery (SSR) Certification teaches you to think differently: To adapt your coaching approach so clients can stay consistent—even when everything else goes sideways.

You’ll learn how to:

  • Coach with more empathy, confidence, and clarity (no more guesswork or pushing harder)
  • Decode the biology of stress, using tools like HRV, the HPA axis, and cognitive load
  • Improve client sleep through circadian rhythm alignment, light exposure, and sleep stage optimization
  • Use the Recovery Dial and 3R Framework to adjust plans based on real-time capacity

SSR enrollment opens again in June.

Be first in line to save big, start early, and see what sets top coaches apart.

Join the free Early Access List to get:

  • A downloadable info packet with SSR curriculum details, earning potential, and more
  • First chance to enroll—a full week early on June 10
  • Our biggest discount ever, plus exclusive bonuses
  • Zero pressure—no obligation to enroll, just perks

⚠️ Spots are limited. Once the Early Access List is full, you’ll have to wait until public registration opens June 17.

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