What’s Your Trigger?

What’s Your Trigger?

It is important to know what triggers you to eat when you know you’re not hungry. If you can identify your food triggers, you can proactively take steps to minimise their impact. Below are some examples of common triggers and suggestions to help you develop healthier habits.

Trigger – Do you eat because you can see or smell food? e.g. driving past a fast food restaurant on your way home or walking past a bakery on your way to work? 

Solution – Take an alternative route to work so you are not tempted by fast food options.

Trigger – Are you eating because you are bored, tired, stressed, depressed, or lonely?

Solution – Practice 20 minutes of yoga, talk to a friend, or go for a walk.

Trigger – Caught up in someone’s birthday or a celebration?

Solution – Encourage your workmates / friends to engage in social activities that don’t involve eating unhealthy foods or consuming alcohol. Try suggesting where you go (so you can control what’s on offer), or a picnic where you can take a food choice that suits your eating plan.

Trigger –Prompted to join in because others are eating around you?

Solution – Ask you partner / friends / family members to assist you with your weight loss journey. For example, ask them not to offer you high calorie snacks, and/or to include healthy snacks at workplace morning teas. You could start a running group, go to a dance class, go surfing, or join an art class.

Trigger – Not paying attention to what and how much you are eating? e.g. eating in front of the TV?

Solution – Avoid eating while watching TV, or at your desk. By eating mindfully, paying attention to what you eat and how much you eat, you will naturally consume fewer calories.

So, what are YOUR food triggers? Take a moment to reflect on this, then use some of the solutions above or brainstorm some others for when you are faced with your triggers again.

Article by Metagenics, Your Shake It Journey.

Thyroid autoimmune disease begins with the diet

Thyroid autoimmune disease begins with the diet

Graves’ disease and Hashimoto’s thyroiditis are two common forms of a larger family of diseases called Autoimmune Thyroid Disease, or AITD.

How autoimmune thyroid disease develops remains a mystery. However, research has concluded that some individuals are genetically predisposed to develop Autoimmune Thyroid Disease whereas others are overcome by AITD via environmental toxicity. Still, many people with a family history of AITD as well as those with high levels of environmental toxins in their bodies do not develop AITD. This fact led researchers to look deeper.

What they discovered is that diet has the most profound effect of either promoting AITD or preventing it in spite of genetic predisposition and environmental toxicity.

Read more

Heal the gut and improve your mood

Heal the gut and improve your mood

The Gut-Brain Axis builds on the idea that our gut influences our neurobiology – heal the gut for good brain health. This axis involves chemical signals that occur between the gastrointestinal tract and nervous system, influenced via intestinal microbiota and its communication with the brain via several physiological pathways.

In the future, it’s possible that many mental health conditions will be treated via the amendment of our intestinal microbial populations.

Treating the gut is a complex task and requires working alongside a health practitioner.  Its approach, however, can be broken down into a basic foundation of 4 steps:

  1. Heal the gut
  2. Avoid what harms
  3. Give what heals
  4. Fix metabolic problems

Read more

If you can’t avoid them – save the carbs for last!

If you can’t avoid them – save the carbs for last!

You may already know that eating certain foods can make your blood glucose levels rise faster than eating other foods.  But did you know that the order you eat a meal can also influence how your body metabolizes the food?

Scientists from Cornell University recently reported on how the order a meal is eaten can directly affect blood sugar levels following the meal.  Specifically, the study showed that consuming the carbohydrate portion of a meal last significantly reduced blood glucose levels after the meal.

Read more

Endometriosis – natural treatment approaches

Endometriosis – natural treatment approaches

Endometriosis is a somewhat mysterious condition, one that involves many factors, especially genetic or environmental, yet its aetiology is largely unknown. With more research going into the study of Endometriosis, new understandings are emerging. With this more recent information coming forward there is a need to take a new approach to the treatment and management of the condition.

The Typical Presentation of Endometriosis

It is estimated that Endometriosis affects one in ten women who may present with a wide range of varying symptoms. The most common presentation is pain. The pain can range from mild to severe and can be described as a dragging pain in the pelvis. There may be pain present during intercourse or when going to the toilet to defecate. Abnormal bleeding may be present during menstruation, with clotting and a longer cycle overall. Premenstrual symptoms commonly associated with endometriosis include irritability and tension, breast tenderness, insomnia, bloating and constipation which resolves once the period comes (1).

Read more

Everything you know about iron supplements is wrong!

Everything you know about iron supplements is wrong!

New research overturns guideline advice that daily oral iron supplements be taken in divided doses to maximise absorption.

A study of iron-depleted young women in Switzerland has shown that optimum levels of iron are achieved when supplements are taken on alternate days in a single dose.

Taking iron on alternate days may also improve compliance by minimising gastrointestinal side effects, researchers have reported in Lancet Haematology.

In the study involving 40 young women with depleted iron stores, they found that the amounts of iron absorbed from supplements were significantly higher in people assigned to take 60mg on alternate days for 28 days than in those who took the same dose daily for 14 days.

Read more