You wake up in the morning, and get
all prettied up. Grab your back pack and try to catch bus, or maybe you drive
to school. When you get to school, you find yourself falling asleep in each
class. Well the problem isn’t that you didn’t sleep enough. The problem is that
you didn’t eat breakfast. Breakfast really is the most important meal of the day. Fasting, or a fast, is when you do
not eat for an extended period of time. That is what happens every time we go
to sleep. We go through a period of five to eight hours that we do not eat
anything, or drink any water. Over time, that begins to wreak havoc on the body.
Body builders have realized this and wake in the middle of the night in order
to give their bodies the nutrients it needs in order to perform. That is why
they can get to be so massive. So by eating in the morning you are “breaking”
the fast, do you get it?
People that go on diets usually
think that breakfast is unneeded and only adds to the total amount of calories
that you ate that day. In actuality, not eating breakfast will make you gain weight! That is the truth. When you skip
breakfast, you are not igniting your metabolism to begin the calorie burning
process. In order to make up for the
lack of nutrients, your body begins to take glycogen and other sugars from your
muscles in order to function properly. That results in your constant fatigue.
All of this happens because you didn’t
eat breakfast. It gets worst. The next meal that you eat will more likely to be
stored as pure fat, probably around your stomach. Your body is responding to the fact that it
has been deprived nutrients for an extended period of time. It is preparing
itself to go another long span of time without food.
However, you can’t just eat anything
for breakfast. Yeah, you can scarf down a sugary pop-tart on the way to school,
but that isn’t going to make a difference. Breakfast should easily be the
largest meal of the day. Not only should it be the largest, it should also be
the most well-balanced. Breakfast should be a mix of whole grains, carbs,
proteins, fats, and a variety of sugars. Though most people do not know which
foods encompass all of that.
Based on my knowledge, here is a
very generic, cost effective breakfast that we can all eat. This breakfast can
be modified to fit your dietary needs, taste, or how much you can actually eat.
1)
One package of instant oatmeal. This accounts
for whole grains and provides four grams of slow digesting protein. Personally,
I like to add an extremely large scoop of peanut butter, some honey, and
sprinkle in a layer of ground cinnamon. Peanut butter is a great source of
protein and healthy fats. I add cinnamon because I recently learned that
cinnamon actually helps the body burn more fat. Honey, because it is a simple
sugar and begins to be digested immediately, resulting in an energy boost. Eating
a full serving of this alone might be enough to fill you up in the morning.
2)
Eggs. The amount of eggs can vary from person to
person. I personally recommend 2-3 eggs for an athlete. Eggs provide a meat
protein and calories that our bodies will begin to use almost immediately. You
can add a myriad of things to eggs such as vegetables or other meat sources.
3)
A full glass of milk, or another source of dairy
such as yogurt. This provides healthy fats and what is called casein protein. Casein
protein is digested very slowly and effective for curbing your appetite later
in the day to prevent over eating.
4)
Vitamins. Now this can generally mean anything
that provides a large amount of vitamins. It could be orange juice, a banana, a
multi-vitamin pill, etc.
MMM, all of the talking you did about food made me hungry. Not only did it make me hungry, it made me have second thoughts on what I should eat for breakfast. In other words, I am not much of a healthy eater when it comes to breakfast. Some days I'll have some leftover chocolate cake, or maybe a few cookies. My breakfast is not only unhealthy, but it is sloppy. I am too lazy to get and go through the time to make me a "lean-mean-fighting-machine." But, I will try to take your words into consideration in the oncoming mornings. I liked your little joke about "breaking" the fast. That had me laughing to my toes. (:
ReplyDeleteThis was very informative and an eye opener about food. I have never really thought about what I eat much. If it is edible and I am hungry I will probably eat it. Also I never knew that eating something in the middle of the night was good for me! Maybe I should be planning some midnight ice cream trips somewhere in the future. I also have always thought that the packaged oatmeal stuff was really bad for me so I just eat cereal all the time. I guess I better start changing my ways.
ReplyDeleteI'm not going to lie, this explains a lot about my morning routine of waking up and passing out the next hour. My only question though is what do we do if we are short on time? I typically stay up till about three or so in the morning, and wake up at about seven to get dressed. Should I eat something before I go to bed? Or would this make it even harder to sleep and inevitably make me even more tired than if I hadn't eaten anything at all? Either way, it seems that I have to get into a habit of eating better. I might come back to this blog for reasons other than English.
ReplyDeleteI should be rather healthy then because my momma cooks me egg whites, usually something grainy, meat, and she leaves me an apple every morning. I love breakfast! If i don't eat in the morning I am super crabby. Although, I sleep a ton and eat breakfast every morning but I am still dead tired at school. I even get a late start and am dead tired. I do think I am going to love reading your blogs because I'm trying to become healthy. Maybe I'll actually listen to your tips, because I don't listen to my mothers and she is a health freak.
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