The Brain Development Podcast
That springtime "regression" you're seeing in your child might not be regression at all — it could be their body releasing toxicity, compounded by a histamine system tipped completely out of balance. In this conversation, host Lara Barnes is joined by Vicky Finlayson of The Happy Healthy Unicorn to unpack why seasonal allergies hit neurodiverse children so hard. They explore the immune "seesaw" between innate and acquired immunity, the role of depleted cortisol and exhausted adrenals, and why undermethylation — present in around 98% of autistic children — makes histamine so difficult to clear. You'll learn how dehydration, low stomach acid and gut pathogens like Blastocystis and Klebsiella ramp up histamine, plus practical, food-first interventions: natural antihistamines, high-histamine foods to reduce, clever hydration tricks for kids who don't feel thirst, and simple ways to support stomach acid and digestion. If allergy season turns your child's behaviour upside down, this episode offers a genuine pathway forward KEY TAKEAWAYS Recognise that springtime "regression" may be your child's body naturally releasing stored toxicity, with seasonal allergies compounding it on top — not necessarily a true loss of skills. Understand the immune seesaw: when innate immunity is suppressed, acquired immunity overreacts, which is why a child can show endless food sensitivities yet never shake a chronic yeast or parasitic infection. Prioritise hydration first — the body produces more histamine when dehydrated, so make water appealing with fruit, fun ice cubes, special straws, or a splash of juice for kids who can't feel thirst. Support stomach acid with zinc (critical for both acid production and methylation), bitter herbs, lemon water, apple cider vinegar, or betaine HCl and pepsin, since low acid also drives histamine up. Reduce histamine load during acute flares by cutting high-histamine foods (smoked meats and fish, bone broth, spinach, bananas, dark chocolate) and adding natural antihistamines like nettle, bromelain, mullein, pomegranate and holy basil. QUOTES "Sometimes we can see what looks like a regressive event during this time, but actually it is just the body releasing toxicity." "The greater the histamine load in a person, the more oppositional behaviour, the more anger, the more rigidity." "It's not a true allergy — it's just where the immune system has gone wild, and that's what happens with pollen in these children." "I think there's a misconception that if you're undermethylated, you're undermethylated forever — and that's just not the case." "She would run through a bed of stinging nettles and come out laughing — she could not feel her body." SOCIAL/IMPORTANT LINKS https://www.tiktok.com/@braindevelopmentuk [https://www.tiktok.com/@braindevelopmentuk] https://www.instagram.com/braindevelopmentuk/ [https://www.tiktok.com/@braindevelopmentuk] https://www.linkedin.com/in/larakelly/ [https://www.tiktok.com/@braindevelopmentuk] https:/www.braindevelopment.co.uk [https://www.tiktok.com/@braindevelopmentuk] HOST BIO Lara Barnes a successful woman in tech found herself managing behavioural, learning and speech difficulties with her son, she learn functional neurology and how to change the brain to correct his symptoms and build his left brain. The Building the Brain Podcast is for parents needing to understand how to help their children and show them what can be done to change little lives to allow them to shine and be their best version. This Podcast has been brought to you by Disruptive Media. https://disruptivemedia.co.uk/ [https://disruptivemedia.co.uk/]
52 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af The Brain Development Podcast-fællesskabet!