If you go-to way to manage stress is
devouring a bag of potato chips (because crunching that poor little potato into
submission feels oh-so-good), read on. Feel free to feed your anxiety with
these Eat This, Not That! -approved, stress-relieving eats and
drinks (within reason). Stash some of them in your snack drawer so you can grab
a snack and get back to work, refueled, refocused, and less overwhelmed. Even
if your stress sends you into munching overdrive, none of these picks will
derail your weight loss efforts, leaving you with one less thing to
worry about.
1
DARK CHOLOLATE
Really, we’re not screwing with you. A
study out of the Nestlé Research Center (of course) found that those who deemed
themselves “highly stressed” had lower levels of the stress hormones cortisol
and catecholamines in their system after two weeks eating chocolate every day
for two weeks. Don’t worry, we checked out another study just to verify, and
they also found that dark chocolate buffers the effects of stress in humans. So
it’s official; break off a square to celebrate. (For a couple dark-chocolate
drizzled snacks, check out our list of good snacks and stock up for
the workweek ahead.)
2
STRAWERRIES
Strawberries are surprisingly high in
vitamin C, which has been proven to have a significant effect on stress levels.
Increased vitamin C consumption has been proven to help people cope with
stressful situations. Levels of cortisol (one of the stress hormones) decreased
rapidly in subjects given vitamin C supplement, and the blood pressure of the
study participants returned to normal more quickly in the vitamin C group than
in the control group.
3
WALID SALMON
If you know you have a big day ahead,
plan to have some lox with breakfast for salmon on your salad. It will fight
those overwhelmed feelings from stress and also keep you focused, so you can
nail that afternoon presentation or meeting.
4
BLACK TEA
Once you go black, you never—I’m
talking about tea, I just want to be clear. A 2007 study published in the
journal Psychopharmacology found that black tea drinkers are
better able to manage stress than their herbal-sipping counterparts. Not only
were black tea drinkers generally less stressed out, they also were able to
return their body to homeostasis more quickly after a stressful situation than
non-black tea drinkers.
5
NUTS
Nuts are crunchy, so there’s a stress
relieving activity for you. More importantly, nuts are high in magnesium, a
vital nutrient when in it comes to our body’s natural stress coping mechanism.
(Leafy greens are another great source of magnesium. So over the trendier
options? Try these greens that are healthier than kale.) The
majority of us are magnesium deficient, the RDA for adults is between 320 and
420mg daily and the average American gets about 250mg daily. A common sign of
magnesium deficiency is an inability to manage stress, and the physical
ramifications of that like high blood pressure, insomnia, fatigue, or loss of
appetite. Go ahead, eat that PB & J, it will calm you down. Source: http://www.eatthis.com/5-foods-fight-stress
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