Posts tagged ‘sleep’

March 1, 2012

Foods for Sleep

by Kathleen O'Bannon, CNC

Eight hours of sleep to be healthy? It isn’t always easy.

Eating breakfast first thing in the morning is really important because it helps to stabilize blood sugar levels. Fluctuating blood sugar levels can create an influx of adrenaline that can keep you awake. Avoiding caffeine and nicotine help as well because using them can make you hyper or nervous. They also trigger the production of adrenaline. Adrenaline circulating in your body can speed up your heart rate, increase muscle tension, stop digestion, and encourage shallow breathing. All things that can create fatigue but won’t help you sleep because of the adrenaline still in your body. Eating small frequent meals can also help prevent your blood sugar from dropping. When your blood sugar level drops it signals a stress which in turn signals a shot of adrenaline to surge into your body to give you that fight of flight response. With all that adrenaline coursing through your body it will be difficult to sleep.

Serotonin, melatonin, and tryptophan all help with sleep. Many foods contain these ingredients or help your body make them. If you want to sleep better at night try adding these foods later in the day to help.

Dried Tart Cherries Tart cherries not only provide the requisite serotonin-boosting carbs, it’s also one of a few food sources of melatonin, which has been found to promote better sleep and lessen the effects of jet lag. Plus, tart cherries are packed with age-fighting antioxidants that help with arthritis, gout, and pain.

 

Garbanzo Beans (Chickpeas)

These beans are rich in vitamin B6, which your body uses to produce serenity-boosting serotonin.

 

Honey A rise in blood sugar can reduce the production of orexin in the brain. Orexin is a recently discovered neurotransmitter that’s been linked to wakefulness

 

Chamomile Tea Has a calming effect on the body.

 

Bananas Potassium and magnesium are natural muscle relaxants, bananas are a good source of both. They also contain the amino acid L-tryptophan, which gets converted to 5-HTP in the brain which in turn is converted to serotonin and melatonin.

Warm milk contains the amino acid L-tryptophan, which turns to 5-HTP and releases relaxing serotonin. It’s also high in calcium, which promotes sleep and relaxation.

Nonfat Popcorn Carbohydrates in nonfat popcorn help bring the amino acid tryptophan into your brain, where it’s used to make a sleep-inducing neurotransmitter called serotonin.

Halibut is packed with two building blocks for better sleep: tryptophan and vitamin B6.

 

Add these foods to your lifestyle and sleep like a baby!

Kathleen O’Bannon is a Certified Nutritional Consultant, the author of 10 books on nutrition & health, & a frequent guest on local & national radio, including regular guest appearances on The Frankie Boyer Shows in Boston. Kathleen’s books & nutritional formulas can be found on her web site www.healthaliveproducts.com.

 

 

July 29, 2010

The Anger Cure

by Kathleen O'Bannon, CNC

Recently I have been doing a lot of radio interviews about anger because of my book the Anger Cure. There are three things that can help improve anger and they are part of the 6 secrets on my web site under information. The first one always throws people for a loop, they often gasp when I say it, I’m not sure why!

What is it? Simple: eat within the first half hour of getting up. Most people don’t eat that soon and they might suffer all day and night because of it.

All night? Yes, by not eating in the morning you could have trouble sleeping at night or wake up several times during the night, or toss and turn all night long. But you might especially find that you wake up in a fog, rush to get to some place so much so that you don’t eat at all. Now I ask you: How do you expect your body to run without fuel?

If you tell me you don’t have time to eat anything in the morning, I know you ate too late the night before, went without breakfast or drank too much caffeine the day before or several days before. If you tell me you can’t concentrate to get your life in order in the morning enough to eat, I know you are heading down a slippery slope of dis-ease all because you didn’t start your day with the fuel you need to be able to think and function.

Lately I have been taking moringa daily and that is a really great food for first thing in the morning. I stir the powdered leaf into a glass of 1/3 fresh juice and 2/3s alkaline water. Of course I also eat natural foods for breakfast later after I have done exercises. Because moringa contains complete protein and lots of vitamins and minerals it is actually a whole food and very nutritious. Eating moringa or drinking the tea several times a day can improve your nutritional profile, give you energy, and perhaps even help with weight loss.

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