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View Full Version : Stressed?! Maybe You're Eating Too Much of These



MNeagle
18th July 2012, 08:46 AM
You've all heard "you are what you eat" before, right? Well we now know that that is true on a more fundamental level than you ever could have imagined.

When we eat food, not only does it affect our hormones, our blood sugar and our energy levels, but food actually gets broken down into its smallest molecules and turned into the actual tissue and chemical messengers we are made of.

This includes the tissue and chemical composition of our brains. So, is it possible that the foods we eat can be changing this chemical and physical make-up to actually create feelings of stress and anxiety? Absolutely!

Check out the top five foods that can affect your brain chemistry and cause stress and anxiety.

SLIDESHOW: STRESS FOODS

(http://gold-silver.us/forum/#ss1)1. MSG
MSG is short for monosodium glutamate. MSG over-excites certain cells in the brain so much that they actually commit suicide. This creates a cascade of events that can cause anxiety, migraines, heart palpitations, stomach aches, fatigue, confusion and irritability. Asian restaurants use this quite a bit, which is why MSG toxicity is known as "chinese food syndrome" due to the high usage in chinese food restaurants.

2. Food Colouring
Food colourings have been tested to be safe in small doses by the government, but there are rarely tested in combination with each other for safety. And when they are tested in combination with each other, at higher doses, the results are cytotoxic. That means they literally POISON brain cells leading to confusion, hyperactivity, stress, anxiety and even allergic responses. The two big ones to avoid are "allure red" and "tartrazine" (yellow 5, blue 1 and green s).

3. Alcohol
This may seem counter intuitive because alcohol is a sedative right? True, but it can have an anxiety-inducing effect in some people, especially the next day. This happens because there is a drastic depletion in many of the nutrients that are used to increase chemical messengers in the brain like serotonin, adenosine and B vitamins as a result of alcohol consumption. You don't have to know what the mechanisms are to know that without them, you are seriously messing with your brain chemistry putting unnecessary pressure on your adrenal glands by triggering a flood of stress hormones into your blood stream. Combine this depletion of nutrients with the heavy load of detoxification that your body has to go through after a wild night, and it's a surefire recipe for stress and anxiety.

4. Sugar
Sugar induces anxiety by crashing dopamine levels in the brain. Dopamine is the chemical messenger that makes you feel so good right after you eat a chocolate bar. But, what goes up must come down... and when it does, that's when cravings kick in again. During times of cravings, people can experience high levels of stress combined with irritability and even anger. It's a very similar process to the highs that a drug addict experiences once they get their fix, and the subsequent withdrawal.

5. Caffeine
Caffeine is a stimulant to your central nervous system. This means that caffeine can actually mimic the symptoms of stress from a chemical standpoint including increased heart rate, increased BP, irritability and confusion. So try to stay below 200 mg per day (about a cup and a half of coffee) and consume it before 1 p.m. If you need an afternoon kick, reach for some green tea instead and reap the benefits of antioxidants and metabolism boosting phytonutrients!

Treating stress and anxiety is very individual and often most effective when multiple therapies are combined. Use these guidelines in everyday life and be sure to talk to a health care professional to find out further steps you can take to find the perfect formula to manage this crazy thing we call life.

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/margaret-reffell/food-and-stress-link_b_1680006.html

osoab
18th July 2012, 02:32 PM
3. Alcohol

Notice to All Employees:

Nobody minds a man having a morning eye-opener and it's OK to have a bracer about 10 A.M. and a couple of drinks before lunch.

A few beers on a hot afternoon keeps a man healthy, or at least happy.

And, of course everyone drinks at a cocktail hour. A man can't be criticized for having wine with his dinner, a liqueur afterwards and a highball or two during the evening.

But this business of sip, sip, sip, all day long has got to stop!

Horn
18th July 2012, 02:59 PM
A second pot is required after lunch for concentration on nothing.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CahNAauFgys&feature=related

BabushkaLady
18th July 2012, 11:09 PM
Talk about stress; I was very relieved to see that Chocolate wasn't on the list . . . at least they had the decency to break it down to Sugar and Caffeine!

slowbell
19th July 2012, 06:41 PM
Stressed? Maybe it's a combo of what you eat, and what you do.

I swear, go sailing for a day, and see how stressed you are afterwards. Go surfing, you'll be on a natural high for awhile.

Go fly fishing, and you may just find the answers, to life.

.gov and the med pharma industry, says take something, eat something.

I say, go DO something.

Skirnir_
23rd July 2012, 01:05 PM
Stressed? Maybe one is giving a shit. I stopped doing so, and things evened out.

Neuro
23rd July 2012, 04:01 PM
Stressed? Maybe it's a combo of what you eat, and what you do.

I swear, go sailing for a day, and see how stressed you are afterwards. Go surfing, you'll be on a natural high for awhile.

Go fly fishing, and you may just find the answers, to life.

.gov and the med pharma industry, says take something, eat something.

I say, go DO something.
Excluding harmful chemicals from your diet, and harmful activities from your life, and instead eating wholesome foods and doing good things will surely make you less stressed. I swam a mile and had a good scrub in the sauna afterwards. I feel relaxed!