Eating Healthy in a
Time-Starved World
by:
Protica Nutritional
Research
Americans are
literally running
out of time.
Achieving a
work-life balance,
which is still a
luxury for tens of
millions of working
parents, has been
overtaken by an even
greater demand: a
work-life-nutrition
balance.
Unfortunately, this
increasing demand
for nutrition has
not been accompanied
by a useful strategy
that enables people
to reclaim time from
their harried lives.
The result of this
dilemma has been an
additional layer of
stress applied on
top of an already
stressful life. This
has further
highlighted stress
as America’s top
health problem
something that was
first brought to
public attention in
the early 1980s, and
has since more
obvious in the 2
decades since then[i].
Once the link
between time
mismanagement and
stress is made – and
it is virtually
axiomatic at this
point that this link
exists[ii] -- a
range of adverse
health and nutrition
consequences often
result. The vicious
cycle that ensues is
harrowing and known
to most people
through direct
experience, or via
painfully seeing it
manifest in the life
of a family member,
friend, or
colleague.
Stress can -- and
often does -- lead
to unhealthy
eating[iii], which
in turn, leads to
even more stress
because the body is
not receiving the
essential
micronutrients and
vitamins that it
requires. While this
is happening, since
poor eating is often
associated with
undesirable weight
gain, another level
of psychological
stress – this one
associated with body
image problems – is
unleashed.
Although if the
cycle ended here
this would be enough
to solidify this as
a major problem, it
continues beyond
this point and
becomes worse.
This psychological
stress due to body
image
problems/weight gain
often leads to
“emotional eating”.
It is estimated that
75% of all
overeating is the
result of emotional
eating[iv]. This, in
turn, leads to yet
more nutritional
deficiency, since
the emotional eating
is typically of
unhealthy comfort
foods that are rich
in saturated fat.
This – as can be
inferred -- leads to
yet more stress, and
the cycle continues,
unabated, often
resulting in
malnutrition,
obesity, and in more
cases than most
average people
realize, even
suicide.
The almost clinical
description of this
negative cycle in
the preceding
paragraphs does not
remotely capture the
indescribable pain
and suffering that
tens of millions of
Americans experience
each day due to the
collision of stress,
lack of time, and
poor eating habits.
While no description
could accurately
capture the
devastation that
this negative loop
causes, it is enough
in the context of
this article to
firmly declare that
it is a profoundly
significant crisis.
No quick-fix
solution to a
problem of this
magnitude is
possible, and any
attempt for an
overnight solution
should be met with
the most aggressive
skepticism. The key
to addressing a
situation of this
immense complexity
is to identify the
root cause, and then
provide remedies
that mitigate or in
some cases, avoid
the negative loop
from beginning in
the first place.
One of the root
causes of this
problem has been
noted already: a
lack of time. If
more Americans had
more time, or felt
that they had more
time, the stress
associated with not
having enough time
would not be able to
pull them under and
into a negative
nutrition spiral.
Therefore, a
solution that works
on this level – the
level of time – is
going to be help
solve this problem
to some extent.
It is within this
awareness that time
is of the essence
that a number of
nutritional
supplements have
been created.
Unfortunately, while
many of these
supplements take
mere seconds to
ingest, an array of
them are not
providing the body’s
requirement for
micronutrients and
vitamins.
Furthermore, and
quite irresponsibly,
many so-called
“energy bars” are
very high in
calories and
carbohydrates, and
as such can lead to
emotional eating and
trigger weight gain.
It is even more
unfortunate than
this to observe that
the race to market
many nutritional
supplement products
has been more about
making money through
clever advertising
and slogans, than it
has been about
helping people save
time, eat healthy,
and avoid
potentially
life-altering
negative stress
cycles. This is
evidenced by the
number of so-called
nutritional
supplements that are
little more than
expensive and
pretentious candy
bars.
However, there are
some products that
have risen to this
ethical challenge –
products that have
been truly inspired
by actual
nutritional
scientists who see a
dire need in
society, and have
engineered a useful
product to help meet
that need.
The easiest way to
identify such
products is to find
those that deliver a
complete, balanced
source of nutrition
for time-starved
individuals,
including: adults,
kids, athletes,
sedentary
individuals, and all
those in between. At
the same time, these
elite products
should provide a
range of essential
nutrients so that,
in effect, the
nutrition source can
be relied upon as a
complete meal when
time is severely
limited.
Solving America’s
time-starved dilemma
is bigger than any
one product, or
series of products,
to solve. However,
though the perfect
solution to this
complex problem
remains elusive, it
is clear that part
of that eventual
solution will depend
on resolving causes,
and not chasing
symptoms.
Nutritional products
that offer
scientifically
developed meal and
supplement solutions
will be a major ally
in this resolution.
References
[i] Source:
“America’s #1 Health
Problem”. Stress.org.
http://www.stress.org/problem.htm
[ii] Source: “Stress
Management”. WebMD.
http://my.webmd.com/hw/emotional_wellness/hw153409.asp?pagenumber=3
[iii] Source:
“Nutrition”. SVCMC.
http://svh.nymc.edu/quickcheck/mstress/nutri.asp
[iv] Source: “Are
You an Emotional
Eater?”. About.com.
http://exercise.about.com/cs/nutrition/a/emotionaleating.htm
About The
Author
Copyright 2004 - Protica
Research -
www.protica.com
Founded in
2001,
Protica,
Inc. is a
nutritional
research
firm with
offices in
Lafayette
Hill and
Conshohocken,
Pennsylvania.
Protica
manufactures
capsulized
foods,
including
Profect, a
compact,
hypoallergenic,
ready-to-drink
protein
beverage
containing
zero
carbohydrates
and zero
fat.
Information
on Protica
is available
at
www.protica.com.
You can also
learn about
Profect at
www.profect.com.
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