How Your Genes Add Context to Lab Test Results

A clearer way to understand bloodwork, hormones, and gut testing in midlife


What This Guide Helps You Understand

This guide explains how genomics provides background context for common health tests — including bloodwork, hormone panels, and gut testing — so results are easier to interpret and less fragmented.

Lab tests show what’s happening in the moment, while genes help explain why certain patterns tend to appear — especially over time.

This guide connects those layers, so test results make more sense within the bigger picture of how your body functions.

Who This Guide Is For

This guide is for women 45+, as well as coaches and practitioners in non-medical roles, who want a clearer way to understand how genetic tendencies add context to lab results — without protocols or medical advice.

This guide is especially helpful if you:

  • have had lab results that were “normal,” borderline, or inconsistent

  • feel like test results don’t fully explain how you feel

  • want to understand why patterns show up, not just what the numbers say

  • are curious about genomics as a context layer, not a diagnostic tool

It’s also helpful for coaches who want a more integrated way to understand bloodwork, hormones, and gut testing after 45 — without applying protocols or providing medical guidance.

No prior genetics training is required.

What You’ll Find Inside

You’ll learn how to think about health information in layers — with genomics as the stable reference point and lab testing as a snapshot of current function.

By understanding which questions each type of test can (and can’t) answer, lab results become easier to interpret and less confusing over time.

Why This Matters After 45

After midlife, changes in hormones, stress chemistry, and metabolism make genetic tendencies more noticeable.

Genomics doesn’t replace testing.

It adds context by helping explain why certain patterns emerge, shift, or repeat.

This is not a how-to guide, a protocol, or a list of recommendations.

It’s an orientation designed to help you understand genomics before trying to apply it.

This guide is intended for educational purposes only and does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or personalized recommendations.

Understand what lab tests show — and what genomics helps explain.


© 2025 Inspired Living For Women | Your Genes by Design

All rights reserved.

Educational content only. Not intended as medical or professional advice.

Genetics vs. Genomics: They're Not the Same Thing

A clear, educational guide to what genomics actually means — and why context matters.


Genomics is often presented as if it provides answers — what to do or what to avoid.
In reality, genomics offers a framework for understanding patterns across the body and how genes interact with lifestyle, hormones, stress, and aging.

Inside the guide, you’ll learn:

  • the difference between genetics and genomics

  • what genomics can (and can’t) explain

  • why reports alone often create confusion

  • how interpretation connects genes, labs, and real life

This is not a how-to guide or a protocol.
It’s an orientation — designed to help you understand genomics clearly before trying to apply it.

The information provided is educational only. It does not offer medical advice, diagnoses, or personalized recommendations.

Download the free guide to build a clearer foundation for understanding genomics.


© 2025 Inspired Living For Women | Your Genes by Design

All rights reserved.

Educational content only. Not intended as medical or professional advice.