Katie Wells, founder of Wellness Mama, shares practical advice for transforming homes into calming environments that support the nervous system. Drawing from personal experience and research, she emphasizes simple changes in light, sound, and clutter to reduce stress. The guide, published on February 13, 2026, highlights how everyday home elements influence relaxation and health.
Katie Wells, a certified nutrition consultant and mother of six, has compiled strategies to make homes supportive of the nervous system, based on her years of experimentation. In her article, she explains that environments can either reinforce safety or trigger stress, particularly for women, citing a 2009 study linking clutter to elevated cortisol levels.
Light plays a central role, with Wells recommending exposure to unfiltered morning sunlight within an hour of sunrise to align hormonal rhythms—ideally outdoors, barefoot if possible. During the day, she advocates bright, full-spectrum lighting indoors and short outdoor breaks. Evenings shift to dim, warm bulbs at or below eye level, avoiding screens and LEDs to mimic natural sunset conditions; in bedrooms, blackout shades and red-spectrum lights promote rest.
Sound management involves minimizing household noises like constant TV or notifications—Wells keeps her phone on silent and uses white noise from devices such as air filters. Temperature control favors cooler nights around 60 degrees Fahrenheit for better sleep, using blankets rather than whole-house heating.
Addressing visual clutter, she notes its disproportionate impact on women, suggesting decluttering surfaces and prioritizing subtraction over organization. Incorporating nature through plants, natural materials like wood and linen, and minerals in water stations fosters grounding. Cozy nooks with weighted blankets and routines, especially in bedrooms free of screens and clutter, enhance emotional safety. Kitchens should prioritize easy access to healthy foods and hydration to reduce overwhelm.
Wells stresses that these adjustments, many cost-free like opening windows or reducing noise, create compounding benefits without needing aesthetic overhauls. A 2010 study she references correlates home environments with mood and cortisol patterns, underscoring the approach's foundation in science.