Food is the fuel for life!
Is the food you eat good enough to Pay Your Body Back™for all you ask it to do?
Your body needs protein, water, carbohydrates, and fat to function correctly. It uses what it needs for power and stores the rest as fat for later use.
The trick is figuring out what to feed your body to fuel it well and not leave too much behind.
Understanding the difference between Grow Foods, Treats, and Trash makes healthy choices simple.
Grow Foods, a term coined by Registered Dietitian Jill Fleming, are items on which the sun has recently shined. The more refined and processed something is, the farther from a “grow food” it becomes. Raw vegetables and fruits are great examples of “grow foods,” as are whole grains. These foods fuel your body; allowing young children to grow and adults to thrive.
Treats are items which may taste good, but aren’t going to help you grow or thrive. It is okay to have a cookie or some ice cream, but it should be a treat — something special and extra outside what you give your body to grow and thrive. Treats are not limited to sweets. For example, salty and fried items such as chips have no nutritional value, yet can be quite tasty. Soda, even diet soda, is a treat.
Trash are items which contain things your body doesn’t need, can’t use and may be damaging. Avoid items with trans-fat, artificial sweeteners, colors, and flavors.
By choosing to fuel your body with Grow Foods at meals and snacks, and avoiding the Trash you can afford to give yourself a Treat.
Finding Grow Foods:
- Read the label. If there are ingredients with more than three syllables — it isn’t a grow food.
- Avoid canned vegetables and fruit containing added salt and sugar.
- Keep an eye out for high fructose corn syrup – this is another name for sugar.
- Partially hydrogenated oils are trans-fat should be avoided.
- Avoid “quick cooking” packaged foods such as instant rice and oatmeal. These grains are broken down to cook faster and contain much less beneficial fiber.
A salad and a smoothie each day will pack in the fresh fruits and veggies. Try adding a chopped up carrot to your smoothie in the morning!
Keeping Treats in Perspective:
- Limit treats to once a day or a few times per week.
- Pay attention to the portion size. Split the giant cookie with a friend or save half for tomorrow.
- Don’t replace meals with treats. A doughnut isn’t breakfast — it’s a treat.
- Beware of sneaky treats. Some things look like grow foods but are really treats in disguise. Yogurt with high fructose corn syrup is more like pudding than a grow food.
- Limit soda (and diet soda) to treat times. Don’t drink soda as your beverage with a meal. Give your body healthy beverages such as water, skim milk and herbal tea.
Pay Your Body Back™ with enough grow foods every day and it will pay you back with good health!
Check out these other Pay Your Body Back™ Strategies
Get more valuable information in Eliz’s new book, The Busy Woman’s Guide to a Healthy Heart, or in her Award Winning Blog.
Eliz Greene survived a massive heart attack while seven-months pregnant with twins, struggled to lose the 80 pounds gained during her pregnancy, and searched for a way to hold on to the perspective and passion she found in her near-death experience. Drawing on her background as an adaptive movement specialist, Eliz developed simple strategies and tips to help other busy women be more active, eat better and manage your stress.
As the Director of the Embrace Your Heart Wellness Initiative, Eliz travels the country energizing and inspiring audiences in keynotes and workshops on women’s heart health. She writes one of the top 100 health and wellness blogs. Find more at www.EmbraceYourHeart.com.
2 Responses to “How To Pay Your Body Back™ With Grow Foods”
[…] Pack in the fruits and veggies: After indulging in “naughty foods” your body needs some “Grow Foods” – ones very close to how they were when they left the farm! Find tips to Pay Your Body Back™ with Grow Food. […]
[…] diet – no matter what the ads or emails tell you! Fill your plate and refrigerator with Grow Foods (items the sun shined upon, grew out of the dirt, and are as close to how they left the farm as […]