February is Heart Health Month. And while Valentine's Day puts the heart front and centre, there's a side of heart health that rarely gets the attention it deserves.
We talk a lot about cholesterol, blood pressure, and diet when it comes to looking after our hearts. And rightly so. But there's a growing body of research pointing to something far less visible, and potentially just as significant, that many of us experience every day without thinking twice about its long-term impact. Stress.
Not the helpful, short-lived kind that gets you through a deadline or a job interview. The chronic, grinding kind that sits with you for weeks and months. The kind most of us have quietly accepted as normal.
Why stress matters for your heart
The British Heart Foundation is clear that stress alone doesn't directly cause heart disease. But here's where it gets important: stress changes our behaviour, and those behavioural changes absolutely do increase cardiovascular risk.
When we're stressed, we're more likely to reach for comfort food, drink more alcohol, sleep poorly, and move less. Each of those habits, sustained over time, contributes to higher blood pressure, higher cholesterol, and increased risk of type 2 diabetes. These are all established risk factors for heart disease and stroke.
There's a physiological side too. When you're under chronic stress, your body stays in a heightened state of alert. Heart rate increases, blood pressure rises, and your system stays primed for a threat that never quite passes. Over months and years, that sustained pressure takes a toll on your blood vessels and your heart.
The encouraging part? Stress is a modifiable risk factor. Unlike your age or family history, it's something you can actively work on. And every small change counts.
Feed your heart: the everyday swaps that actually matter
If stress is the overlooked risk factor, nutrition is the one most of us think we understand but could probably do better at. The good news is that eating well for your heart doesn't require a radical overhaul. It's more about consistent, everyday choices than dramatic diets.


Eat the rainbow (and mean it). Fruits and vegetables are the foundation of heart-healthy eating. Leafy greens like spinach, kale, and broccoli are particularly valuable, along with colourful options like peppers, beetroot, berries, and tomatoes. The variety matters. Different colours generally mean different nutrients, so the wider your range, the better.
Make friends with healthy fats. Not all fat is bad for your heart. Far from it. The old advice to avoid all dietary fat has been thoroughly revised. Unsaturated fats from sources like extra virgin olive oil, avocados, nuts, seeds, and oily fish (salmon, mackerel, sardines) may actually support healthy cholesterol levels. It's the highly processed fats and excessive saturated fats that are worth watching: deep-fried foods, processed meats, and cheap baked goods.
Go whole, not refined. Swapping white bread, white pasta, and white rice for their wholegrain equivalents is one of the simplest changes you can make. Whole grains like oats, brown rice, quinoa, and wholemeal bread retain more fibre and nutrients, and they help keep blood sugar steadier throughout the day. Those blood sugar spikes from refined carbohydrates? Over time, they may contribute to the hardening of arteries.
Love your legumes. Chickpeas, lentils, black beans, butter beans. Legumes are nutritional powerhouses that are chronically underused in British cooking. They're packed with fibre, plant protein, and minerals, and they're incredibly versatile. A lentil bolognese, a chickpea curry, beans on toast with a poached egg. There's nothing complicated about it.
Rethink your relationship with salt. The World Health Organisation recommends less than 5g of salt per day, but most of us consume significantly more without realising it. The culprit usually isn't the salt shaker on the table. It's the salt hidden in ultra-processed foods, ready meals, sauces, and packaged snacks. Cooking from scratch more often and flavouring with herbs, spices, garlic, and lemon juice instead of reaching for the salt is one of the most impactful swaps you can make for blood pressure.
Enjoy oily fish regularly. Salmon, mackerel, sardines, and anchovies are rich in omega-3 fatty acids, which you can only get through your diet. Aim for a couple of portions a week. If fish isn't your thing, walnuts, flaxseeds, and chia seeds offer plant-based omega-3s.
Be mindful with alcohol. The relationship between alcohol and heart health is more nuanced than the old "a glass of red wine is good for you" line suggested. Current guidance leans towards moderation at best. For many people, less is genuinely better.


The small things that add up
Beyond what's on your plate, a few other everyday habits make a real difference to your cardiovascular health.
Move consistently. It doesn't need to be intense. A daily walk, regular cycling, even gardening. Research consistently shows that moderate, regular physical activity is associated with lower heart disease risk. The key word is regular. Three walks a week beats one heroic gym session a month.
Prioritise sleep. Poor sleep is increasingly recognised as a cardiovascular risk factor in its own right. Most adults need seven to nine hours, and the quality matters as much as the quantity. If stress is disrupting your sleep, that's worth addressing for your heart's sake as much as your energy levels.
Take stress seriously. This means different things for different people. For some, it's building genuine downtime into the week. For others, it's spending more time outdoors, setting better boundaries at work, or simply talking honestly with someone about what's weighing on them. The BHF highlights mindfulness and meditation as areas showing promising connections to cardiovascular wellbeing.
Know your numbers. Blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar levels are all things your GP can check. Many cardiovascular conditions develop silently over decades, so regular check-ups matter—particularly from your mid-forties onwards.
The Valentine's Day reframe
Heart disease is often framed as something sudden and dramatic. In reality, it's typically the result of decades of gradual change: arteries slowly narrowing, pressure slowly building. That might sound daunting, but it's actually empowering. Because it means the everyday choices you make right now are genuinely shaping your cardiovascular future. What you eat, how you move, how you manage stress, how you sleep.
This Valentine's Day, the most meaningful thing you can do for your heart might not come in a box of chocolates. It might be a walk after dinner, a home-cooked meal with good ingredients, or simply going to bed an hour earlier.
Your heart's been working for you every single day. It's worth returning the favour.


