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Balanced Diet, Balanced Mood
Think of your body as an insanely complex, gooey car. Put in gas and oil (a balanced diet), and
you're good to go. Put in nicotine, alcohol, caffeine, weird, manufactured fats, gummy, washed-out
flour, and sugar, and it's like pouring sugar into the gas tank. You'll sputter, run on, stop and start,
or stall.
Put Food In, See a Difference
Senior New York University clinical nutritionist Samantha Heller, MS, RD, would probably prefer an
analogy to a chemistry set. "If you are chemically balanced," Heller contends, "your moods will be
balanced."
A lot of factors can throw the body out of balance. "A lot of women are anemic," she says. "This
leads to depression and fatigue. Older people are often deficient in the B vitamins. People who don't
eat regularly often have big shifts in blood sugar." People also have chemical sensitivities to certain
foods that can govern mood.
In a study of 200 people done in England for the mental health group known as Mind, subjects were
told to cut down on mood "stressors" they consumed, while increasing the amount of mood
"supporters." Stressors included sugar, caffeine, alcohol, and chocolate (more of that coming up).
Supporters were water, vegetables, fruit, and oil-rich fish.
Eighty-eight percent of the people who tried this reported improved mental health. Specifically,
26% said they had fewer mood swings, 26% had fewer panic attacks and anxiety, and 24% said
they experienced less depression.
How Moods Are Fed or Starved
One big set of chemicals that control mood are the neurotransmitters in the brain led by the
pleasure "drug" serotonin. These substances determine whether you feel good and energetic or
tired, irritable, and spacey. They run on sugar, preferably the form that comes from low glycemic
carbohydrates (not doughnut sprinkles).
The idea is to maintain a stable blood sugar level through the day, slowly feeding these substances
into the brain. Low glycemic carbs include whole grain bread, beans, whole grain crackers, soy,
apples, pears, peaches, and other fruits.
What Kimball calls "crappy carbs" -- commercial granola bars, animal crackers, graham crackers,
potato chips, and of course, cakes and pies -- flood into the system too fast and cause your body to
order up a big shot of insulin, which then tips the balance you've tried to maintain. "You can see it
when you've had a white flour pancake and syrup for breakfast," Kimball says. "By mid-afternoon,
you're ready for a nap." This sugar alert/insulin cycle can gradually become less efficient and lead to
diabetes and other problems.
Comfort Foods Really Work
If you have let your neurotransmitters get off balance or if external forces have conspired to put
you in a bad mood, don't fret, it happens. That's when your body will start to think "comfort food."
According to Joy Short, MS, RD, assistant professor and head of undergraduate nutrition and
dietetics at St. Louis University, you should fulfill that craving -- but in moderation. "You might take
time to think, 'Am I really hungry or just feel like eating because I am stressed,'" she says.
However, if you can't think of a healthier response, eat your comfort item and enjoy it! If you must
eat a deep-fried Twinkie, eat one and lighten up on (but don't skip) the rest of the meals in the day,
she says.
You could make comfort foods more nutritional, she says. Interestingly, both men and women
choose ice cream as their preferred comfort food, but coming in second is chocolate for women and
pizza for men. "If you want a cookie, make it oatmeal raisin or vanilla wafers. Buy low-fat ice
cream. Make your hot chocolate with skim milk. And forget the chips, in favor of popcorn or
pretzels," Short says. Or after Domino's arrives, throw some artichoke pieces, anchovies, or frozen
veggies on top and heat.
What about that universal comfort food, chocolate? Much has been written about chocolate's rich
complement of mood-altering chemicals, some of which trip the serotonin receptors and cause a
"falling in love" feeling, according to millions of chocoholics.
Chocolate is also supposedly loaded with antioxidants that keep the brain and other organs from
being bashed by rogue cells called free radicals. Kimball says chocolate can act almost as a
cannabinoid -- the mood-altering chemical found in marijuana. But Heller and Short say the touchyfeely chemicals are not in sufficient strength to make a difference in the body.
Recommendations for Managing Moods
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Maintain a stable blood sugar, no big swings. This means frequent small meals and snacks,
every four hours or so.
Be sure to drink a lot of water and juice.
Exercise 20 minutes a day for mood -- and an hour for fat-burning.
Do not follow an extremely low-fat diet (quick weight loss is also bad for mood, Heller
says). Fat is needed for anti-depression. Stick with polyunsaturated and monounstaurated
fats and fatty fish or flaxseeds, which are full of healthy omega-3 fats.
Take in tryptophan, an amino acid that makes blood sugar accessible to the
neurotransmitters. This means milk or turkey. Eat a carb alongside your tryptophan source
for better absorption.
Have breakfast.
Spend time in the produce department when you shop (try to eat a lot of bright colors,
which means fruits and veggies).
Pass on food items that come wrapped in crackly cellophane.
Limit coffee (even nutritionist Kimball drinks some).
Don't eliminate any, one food group, such as carbohydrates.