A Pre-Shift Meal With Purpose
By Linda Marks, LPN | LindaMarksWellness.com

Today’s pre-shift meal: protein, probiotics, fiber, and real food.
I’m a working nurse building a wellness business between shifts, and I’ve learned that what you eat before an 8-hour shift is the difference between finishing strong and crashing at hour four.
Today I’m prepping for a 3-11. Here’s exactly what’s on my plate — and why every ingredient earns its spot:
The Star: Homemade Lemon Yogurt Delight
I make my own because store-bought “lemon yogurt” is usually loaded with added sugar and artificial flavors. Mine takes 30 seconds:
- Organic lactose-free whole milk yogurt — whole milk, not low-fat. Your body needs the fat to absorb fat-soluble vitamins. Lactose-free means easier digestion before a shift where bathroom breaks are a luxury.
- Organic chia seeds — omega-3s, fiber, and a satisfying texture that keeps me full for hours.
- Bonne Maman lemon curd — a quality French preserve made with real lemons and eggs, not high-fructose syrup. A spoonful turns plain yogurt into something that tastes like dessert but works like medicine.
Stir it up. That’s it. Exceptional flavor without the junk.
Organic Gala Apples with Organic Lemon Juice
I cut my apples fresh and sprinkle them with organic lemon juice (Giancarlo Polenghi). Two reasons:
- No browning. Lemon juice’s vitamin C blocks the oxidation that turns cut apples brown — so my prepped fruit looks fresh hours later.
- Bonus nutrition. That same vitamin C boosts iron absorption from anything else I eat with the meal, supports immune function, and adds a bright, clean flavor that wakes up the apple.
Gala apples specifically because they’re naturally sweet, low-acid, and hold up beautifully without going mushy.
2 Hard-Boiled Eggs with Salt and Cayenne
Eggs are a complete protein — every essential amino acid your body needs to repair tissue and stabilize energy. Two eggs are about 12 grams of protein, which keeps me full for hours.
The salt: I work shifts in buildings that run hot. When you sweat, you lose sodium — and without enough sodium, all the water in the world won’t hydrate you efficiently. A pinch of quality salt on my eggs is preventive electrolyte support.
The cayenne: Capsaicin (the active compound in cayenne) supports circulation, has anti-inflammatory properties, and gives me a gentle metabolic boost. It also wakes up the palate so a simple boiled egg feels like a real meal.
Why This Plate Works for Working People
When you’re on your feet for 8+ hours — nursing, teaching, building a business, raising kids — your meal has three jobs:
- Sustained energy — protein and healthy fat over fast carbs
- Steady blood sugar — no crash at hour four
- Gut support — probiotics keep the nervous system steady (your gut and your brain talk to each other constantly)
This plate hits all three.
Why Lemons Belong on a Wellness Plate
You’ll notice lemons show up twice on this plate — once in the lemon curd and once on the apples. That’s intentional. Lemons aren’t just for flavor. They’re a small but powerful piece of the wellness puzzle, and most people underuse them.
Here’s what one lemon brings to your body:
- Vitamin C for immune function and stress recovery. A medium lemon delivers about 30-50% of your daily vitamin C. For working people under chronic physical and emotional stress (hello, nursing), vitamin C gets used up faster than usual. Replenishing it daily matters.
- Citric acid that supports digestion. Citric acid stimulates the production of stomach acid and bile, which helps your body break down protein and absorb nutrients. That’s why a squeeze of lemon at the start of a meal isn’t just garnish — it’s pre-game for your digestive system.
- Iron absorption boost. Vitamin C dramatically increases how much iron your body absorbs from plant foods. If you eat spinach, lentils, beans, or fortified cereals, adding lemon to the same meal can double or triple the iron you actually absorb. Important for women, especially Black women, who have higher rates of iron-deficiency anemia.
- Alkalizing effect on the body. Lemons are acidic on the tongue, but once metabolized, they have an alkaline effect on the body’s internal pH. Most modern Western diets are inflammatory and acid-forming. A daily lemon is a small but real counterweight.
- Liver and kidney support. Lemon water in the morning has been used for generations to gently support liver and kidney function. The science is still catching up to the tradition, but the long history of this practice is worth respecting.
- Natural preservation power. That same vitamin C that helps your body also keeps cut fruit from browning. It’s why I sprinkle it on apples — the fruit stays bright, fresh, and appealing to eat hours after I cut it.
One lemon is a clinical, culinary, and ancestral tool all at once. That’s why they earn permanent space on my wellness plate.
A Faith Note
Before I eat, I take a moment to thank Daddy for the food and ask Him to bless my body and my shift. The few seconds it takes to do that have changed how I show up for my work — and for myself.
Your Turn
Try the lemon yogurt delight this week. Tell me what you put in YOUR pre-shift meal. Let’s build a working woman’s wellness library together — one real meal at a time.
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Linda Marks, LPN
Linda Marks Wellness
Building wellness one shift at a time. Spirit. Mind. Body.

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