Happy meals
Some days just seem cursed. The alarm
doesn't go off on time, so you're late to work. An unexpected
project bumps your lunchtime workout, and you realize you have no
idea what to make for dinner. When you finally get home, you'd like
nothing more than to dive face-first into a pile of fries with a
side of triple-chocolate ice cream. But not so fast: Treating your
bad mood with junk food will only get you more of the same.
Instead, nurture your body and your mood with the best
blues-busting foods around.
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Leafy
greens
Leafy greens like spinach, chard, and collards are rich in folate,
a B vitamin linked to mood disorders in people with deficiencies
(Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 2003, vol. 72, no. 2).
"B-vitamin deficiencies can be very subtle—it's not like your
tongue suddenly swells up," says Cincinnati-based registered
dietitian Becky Hand. "You feel irritable, out-of-sorts, and you
don't know why." Your body needs folate and other B vitamins to
produce neurotransmitters that regulate mood, including serotonin,
the body's "feel-good" chemical.
All leafy greens are great folate sources; just 1 cooked cup of the most nutritious kinds (think collards and spinach) contains almost half the folate you need daily. Takeaway: Eat plenty of dark greens when you're feeling sad or overtired; try them chopped in soups, or sautéed as a side dish.
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Nuts and
seeds
Maybe birds are chirpy because of their diet: rich in nuts and
seeds. Walnuts and flaxseeds contain mood-lifting omega-3 fatty
acids, while almonds, Brazil nuts, pumpkin seeds, and sunflower
seeds provide magnesium, which helps relax the body and soothe the
mind. "People who eat processed foods—and that's most
people—have a tough time getting enough magnesium," says
registered dietitian Lisa Dorfman, author of The Vegetarian
Sports Nutrition Guide (Wiley, 1999). "Deficiencies are
incredibly common"—90 percent of her clients start out
lacking magnesium, she says—"and [this] causes fatigue,
irritability, and mood swings."
A small handful of nuts or seeds contains anywhere from 155 to 200 calories (so go easy) and varying amounts of magnesium. Walnuts contain about 45 mg per ounce; powerful pumpkin seeds contain 152 mg (women who are 31 to 50 need 320 mg a day). Takeaway: Munch nuts and seeds when you're feeling stressed, achy, or irritable.
Fish
When you're casting about for a mood lift, there's nothing better
than fish. Tuna—even the canned kind—offers niacin, an
anxiety-relieving B vitamin. (Because of mercury concerns, the FDA
recommends no more than 12 ounces of tuna per week, less if you're
pregnant.) Salmon, halibut, and sardines provide omega-3s, linked
to mood in several studies (American Journal of
Psychiatry, 2006, vol. 163, no. 6). An 8-ounce serving of
salmon provides about 3 grams of omega-3s, the smallest amount
found to be clinically effective for mood disorders. You'd need to
eat two 3.5-ounce tins of sardines, two 6.5-ounce cans of tuna, or
24 ounces of halibut for the same effect—or you could go the
luxury route with 4 ounces of caviar. Takeaway:
Eat fish at least twice a week for mood-lifting omega-3s.
Beans
Pile your plate with beans and you'll be helping your body by
stabilizing glucose levels, a key factor in mood swings. "There's a
lot of good stuff in [beans] ... that helps regulate blood sugar so
you don't eat, get high as a kite, and then crash hard," says
nutritionist Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, author of The Whole Soy
Story (New Trends, 2005). Beans pack 230 to 300 calories per
cup (cooked) and offer about one-fourth of your daily magnesium and
iron; up to three-fourths of your daily folate; plus niacin,
riboflavin, and other B vitamins. Takeaway: Beans
are ideal when you're feeling tired, weak, and irritable. Stir
cooked beans into soups, or serve with brown rice or millet.
Pasta
Noodles, particularly whole-wheat pasta, help the body access
tryptophan, a precursor to serotonin. Researchers theorize that
more tryptophan equals more serotonin, and test subjects have
certainly reported feeling happier and more relaxed after munching
on their chosen carb. "Just practice portion control!" warns
Hand.
"A portion is half a cup, not 3 cups." Four ounces (about 1/2 cup) of cooked pasta contains about 74 mg of tryptophan and about 150 calories. Takeaway: When you're feeling wound up and restless, enjoy noodles with a vegetable marinara, sprinkled with nuts, or alongside broiled fish.
Joyce Slaton is a
freelance writer and full-time mom who lives in San Francisco. She
and her happy daughter eat beans and greens every
day.
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