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Motherhood
- Energy Boosters
Your Baby Today: New Baby, New Mom: Healthy Mom
Energy Boosters
From the Editors of Your Baby Today
High-Energy Eating
The joy of having a new baby in the house is often accompanied
by the misery of fatigue. Making a few changes in when,
how much, and what you eat can really help to increase your
energy level. Start by trying to eat small portions of food
frequently throughout the day. That'll help keep your blood
sugar (and thus your stamina) up; it's a much better strategy
than waiting until you're so hungry that you sit down and
devour a huge meal. The bigger the meal, the more energy
it'll take to digest it, making you feel tired all over
again.
It also takes a lot of energy to digest fatty foods, so
keep your meals and snacks relatively lean. Try, too, to
include a combination of carbohydrates and protein in each
meal so that you get the energy-enhancing benefits of both
nutrients.
The following high-energy snacks/mini-meals all have the
carb/protein mix going for them and each provides some of
the vitamins and minerals you need to keep your body revved
up.
Ten Anti-Fatigue Foods
Trail mix. This mix of dried fruit, nuts and seeds is high
in iron, which helps the blood transport oxygen, a primary
ingredient in the body's energy-making system. Eat in moderation
since the fat in the nuts and seeds can add up.
Fortified whole-grain cereal with 1% milk and sliced banana.
Most fortified cereals are chock full of B-vitamins-thiamin,
riboflavin, niacin, folic acid, B6 and B12. The Bs are instrumental
of the break down of food into fuel. Bananas also provide
potassium, which help the muscles contract and aids in maintaining
the body's fluid balance-important because dehydration can
be fatiguing.
Yogurt with strawberries. This combination gives you a
healthy dose of vitamin C, which helps increase the body's
absorption of iron.
Egg sandwich on whole-wheat toast. Skip the butter on this
sandwich to keep the fat content down, and you end up with
a nice package of B vitamins (in both the whole-wheat toast
and eggs), iron, carbohydrate and protein.
Half bagel with light cream cheese. You get the carbs and
protein (from the cream cheese) without much fat. Bonus:
a dollop of calcium.
Toasted frozen waffle spread with peanut butter. The waffle
covers you on carbohydrates-the muscles' main source of
fuel-while the peanut butter provides protein and a good
dose of B vitamins.
A smear of hummus on pita bread. Legumes like garbanzo
beans (the main ingredient in hummus) are a good source
of protein and zinc, which is mineral needed for mental
energy.
Cup of bean soup. Like the hummus, a good source of protein
and zinc.
Cut-up fruit sprinkled with chopped walnuts or sliced almonds.
Fruit provides sugar, which the body uses for quick energy,
but unlike, say, a candy bar, it also has vital vitamins,
minerals and fiber. The nuts deliver protein.
Water. H20 keeps the body's blood volume up, insuring that
ample amounts of the nutrients and oxygen needed for energy
get transported to the cells. Water also enables critical
electrical messages-like those that make your muscles move
and brain think-to move between cells. At the very least,
try to get of 8 to 12 cups of water a day (non-caffeinated
drinks like juice also count toward your daily fluid intake.)
Energy Stealers
Double espresso. Caffeine will boost your energy initially,
but it may ultimately make you more tired. That's because
caffeine displaces a brain chemical with natural sedating
power called adenosine. But adenosine doesn't go away, it
builds up and when the caffeine in your body dissipates,
the calming chemical can take hold with a vengeance.
Chocolate candy bar. A dose of sugar and caffeine will
wake you up, but when you turn to candy for a quick fix,
you fill up on a food that really has no long-acting energy
boosting vitamins and minerals.
Ginseng ice tea. Like coffee, this caffeinated drink will
give you a short-term lift. Most of these teas don't contain
enough of the herb to make a difference and ginseng works
over time (not immediately) to increase energy.
Big slice of cheesy pizza. When you consume a lot of fat
at one sitting, your body's energy resources get directed
to your digestive system, keeping them from where you really
need them-in your brain and muscles.
The content on these pages is provided as
general information only and should not be substituted for
the advice of your physician.
© Studio
One Networks
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