Thursday, June 25, 2015

Your Body’s Response to Food Intake

As we all know, everyone is different.  We look, speak, act, think and do things differently from each other.  So, it stands to reason that our bodies will react differently to things as well, such as the food we ingest. 

My body sends me various signals such as, it’s hungry, my blood sugar is low or it doesn’t tolerate a certain food.  Now, I’m not a scientist or expert, but I can tell you that when I eat too much or eat too much sugar, whether from processed sugar or carbo loaded foods, I feel sick, fatigued, or tremble and feel a bit hyper.  These are not good feelings. 

If you recall, my last post included a chart for putting together your meals and snacks.  The chart is from Quick & Easy Diabetic Menus, Betty Wedman, M.S., R.D.  The only way I’ve found to avoid the yucky feelings after I eat is to follow this chart.  (See post of June 15, 2015, Food Choices and Meal Plans)  When I eat meals and snacks following this chart, I‘m not hungry for at least 2-3 hours, I don’t have episodes of low blood sugar, and I don’t feel yucky. 

So, how do you know when your body is giving you a signal?  There are a couple things you can try.  The most important way is to simply start paying attention to how you feel during the day, especially in the time after you eat a meal or snack.  It’s about becoming self-aware.
 
The way I find most helpful is to keep a food journal.  For some, this can be a big pain in the rear, yet the information you gather about yourself is priceless.  A journal kept for a week or two will give you a sense of what’s going on in your body without journeying inside, like in that movie Fantastic Voyage.


If you track your blood sugar throughout the day, journaling can be done at the same time.  Here’s a pattern you can try for your journaling:

          Before breakfast – test sugars
          Eat breakfast - write down what you ate
          Before lunch – test blood sugars, write down how you felt after breakfast
          Eat lunch - write down what you ate
          Before dinner – test blood sugar, write down what you eat
          Eat dinner - write down how you felt after lunch

If you eat snacks between meals, like I do, simply adjust your journaling to include what the snacks are and how you feel 1-2 hours later.  If you snack before bed, make note in the morning with your blood sugar reading of how you feel before breakfast.

You will want to use a schedule that works with your daily patterns and a journal style that is comfortable for you.  I’ll put a few examples together for my next post so you can get a feel for how simple the journaling can be.  In the meantime, be good to yourself and pay attention to those strange signals from your body.

Reference my previous blog: 
http://newdiabeticlife.blogspot.com/2015/06/food-choices-and-meal-plans.html

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