Moody Foodies-Mo’s Hangry Woe’s

Happy MORSELICIOUS MONDAY!
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Now onto my post:

Do you ever get the MOODY FOODIES?

Or as I call them, Mo’s Hangry Woes! Hangry = hungry + angry.

Just ask my boyfriend or family about when Mo has a sugar binge or worse, low blood sugar. GET OUT OF MY WAY WHEN I NEED FOOD!  Real-whole-GOOD FOOD!

Feeling tired and sluggish, getting sick more than your fair share, dull looking skin, suffering from constant pain or lacking focus may often be the result of what you put in your mouth and belly.

Food plays a direct role in the way feel. “We are what we eat. From our head down to our feet.” 

Our brain chemistry changes when we bite into a bagel or piece of candy. Wheat triggers binge eating, according to Dr. William Davis, author The Wheat Belly. “Carbs set off a series of a chemical reaction that leads to a boost in brain serotonin,” (Judith Wurtman, PhD and former director of the Research Program in Women’s Health at Massachusetts Institute of Technology Clinical Research Center.)

The higher the levels of serotonin, the more content we feel, temporarily. Over time, eating too many fatty foods can lead to depression.

Chronic stress creates elevated levels of the hormone cortisol, which can increase our cravings. (Jeffrey Morrison, M.D. and author of Cleanse your Body, Cleanse your Mind.) When we feel stressed out, we are more likely to use food as comfort and what are our typical comfort foods?

Recently, I wrote an article on inflammation for examiner.com discussing how an anti-inflammatory diet can help alleviate numerous diseases caused by chronic inflammation and this now I’d like to address how the foods we eat affect our moods.

Eating a rainbow, again, I note: skittles don’t count; every day or at least striving to eat a rainbow every day will not only improve your mood, but your skin will shine, sleep will improve, energy will thrive.  Raw fruits and vegetables are high in vitamins, fiber, phytonutrients, micronutrients and good carbs, promoting healthy moods.

Minimally processed foods contain high vitamin content, natural fiber, antioxidants, and lower calories.

 

Omega-3 foods like wild salmon*, walnuts and olive oil help to feed the brain cells, improving our mood. These healthy-fat foods also improve memory while keeping you sated for hours.

 

Julia Ross, a pioneer of this concept wrote a number of books on the subject. The  http://www.moodcure.com explains why bad mood foods can create depression and sluggishness and  provides solutions on how we can feel better emotionally, without the use of caffeine, alcohol, tobacco, or anti-depressants. I highly recommend you visit her site and read her book.

Here’s a list of some GOOD MOOD FOODS:

  • Avocados:  elevates your spirit
  • Dried beans/lentils: high in protein, fiber, iron
  • Spinach:  so nutrient dense, it does wonders for your health, mood and prevention of illness
  • Quinoa:  helps reduce depression
  • Apples: “an apple a day keeps the Doctor away” for many reasons, including; detoxifies the liver, high in fiber reducing cholesterol and improving heart health, and contains the antioxidant, quercetin, which helps boost the immune system
  • Blueberries: this “superfruit” is chock-full of antioxidants keeping your neural pathways running smoothly, promoting positive energy.
  • Oranges: helps pump more oxygen through your body and brain to recharge your system.
  • Cayenne (one of my personal SPICY favorites!) improves blood circulation, metabolism, digestion and anti-inflammatory
  • Parsley: antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, Vitamins A, C & K
  • Tumeric: natural anti-inflammatory, antibiotic, improves digestion, skin tonic, lowers cholesterol, aids in fat metabolism, blood purifier…how can it NOT put you in GOOD MOOD and it’s such a pretty mustard yellow color!
  • Green tea: cancer fighting, improved cognition, antioxidants, lowers cholesterol
  • Dark Chocolate/Raw Cacao:  high in magnesium and triggers the brains production of natural opioids to make you feel good. The tryptophan in dark chocolate helps to boost the mood-lifting serotonin in our brain.
  • Chia seeds/Flax seeds: Potent source of omega-3, full of amino acids (best to grind flax seeds to reap the benefits, chia are good to go “as is”)
  • Sunflower seeds:  Rich in vitamin E, selenium and magnesium, all contributes to a good mood
  •  Nuts (walnuts, almonds, cashews, Brazil): healthy fats, vitamins, protein
  •  Almond/Coconut milk: High in vitamins, especially Vitamin D and calcium, watch for carrageenan-best to avoid on a regular basis
  • Fresh garlic: anti-bacterial, anti-viral, anti-fungal
  • White onions: help reduce inflammation
  • Cherries are a great source of melatonin, which help promote a restful night’s sleep. And MORSELICIOUS zzz’s make us all pleased. (I love my rhymes!) J Exhaustion is a contributing factor to our bad food cravings. We are less prone to bad cravings when we are well rested.
  • red smiley heart

Processed, chemically and genetically altered foods (GMO’s) wreak havoc on your body, especially when consumed as a regular staple in your diet. Chronic pain, learning disabilities, increased medical visits and bills, fatigue, inconsistent sleep and irritability often occurs when we are overfed and undernourished. Many animal products, sugar, artificial colors, preservatives and chemical sweeteners have negative, long-term effects on the body. Below is a list of common foods in the Standard American Diet a.k.a. (S.A.D.) and some of the associated negative health effects.

  • Sugar: diabetes, obesity, vitamin loss, learning/behavioral disabilities, mood swings
  • Chemical sweeteners: carcinogenic effects, migraines, nervous system damage
  • Artificial preservatives/colors: promote cancer, liver overload, ADHD
  • Low fiber: increased risk of colon cancer, cardiovascular disease

How can we create new healthier-better-MORSELICIOUS-foods?
My suggestion is my 85/15 rule or Mo’s 85/15:

85% of the time, choose and eat real-clean-whole foods and

15% is for going out, traveling, “guilty pleasure” foods,

but try not to make your choices so bad, you will end up in a BAD MOOD.  :(

Create your own version of a decadent chocolate soufflé or a baked enchilada casserole oozing in a MORSELICIOUSness. Click here for my recipe:

Vegan-Veggie-Enchilada-Casserole1-200x300
Celebrate yourself instead of punishing yourself.

Mo rapelling Costa Rica

Some food for thought or thought for food:

Start a Good Mood Potluck Club; The MOODY FOODIES!  Kind of sounds like a band, doesn’t it? Maybe we can get groupies! :) Schedule meetings/parties once a month or every other month and exchange your MORSELFIED recipes.  Make it fun! Combine with your current book club and pick a theme.

What is your favorite GOOD MOOD FOOD? Will you share?

* For those who consume fish, please pay attention to whether or not it’s farm raised or wild. Lots of studies and research show the dangers of farm raised fish.  Visit www.seafoodwatch.org for your own peace of mind.

Please contact me to schedule a complimentary health coaching session Morselist.com 

Please LIKE macnmos on Facebook.

What is inflammation?

Happy Morselicious Monday, belated birthday Dad, a.k.a. Mac and  pre-Halloween!

Are you dressing up for Halloween? Please share your costume ideas and photos on

www.facebook.com/macnmos  Looking forward to seeing all of your creative ideas.

I may dress up as a MORSELICIOUS RAINBOW to walk my walk!  Speaking of rainbows, many of my clients ask me about inflammation and what causes it, what it really does to our bodies and how to prevent it from becoming chronic.

A little Morselicious P.R.: this article was published earlier this month in www.examiner.com/article/what-is-inflammation

What are auto-immune disorders?

Auto-immune disorders are a condition where the body attacks itself.

Diabetes, Celiac, Multiple Sclerosis, Rheumatoid Arthritis, .Chron’s, Lupus, Fibromyalgia are just a few of the more well known auto-immune disorders.

At the root of all disease, including heart disease and all cancers, auto-immune disorders is inflammation.

Since we’re so close to Halloween and thinking about costumes, I couldn’t resist this pic.

What is inflammation?

Swelling, inflamed tissue. Our body protects itself by sending inflammation to our injured area to protect it to heal, which works well in an acute condition or sprain type injury.
Think of a time when you sliced your finger and the area around the cut gets inflamed to begin the healing process. That’s a good thing.

Then, think of chronic inflammation, when our bodies are constantly inflamed, for example, our arteries. Not good.

According to Dr. Mark Hyman in his Elimination Diet book,

Lifestyle-induced chronic disease is on the rise and accounts for nearly 80% of our health care costs. Nearly 70% of our population is overweight or obese. Almost 1 in 4 teenagers have pre-diabetes or Type 2 diabetes, up from only 9% in 2000 and almost zero in 1960.

How do we get rid of inflammation?

We can begin to reduce it by consuming a low inflammation diet, exercising and reducing stress.

Think of yourself being under constant stress, never allowing yourself time to de-compress. NOT good for the inflammation factor.

Deep breathing, taking a walk, stretching, laughing, getting enough sleep, spending time with loved ones contribute to reducing stress, cortisol and inflammation. WIN/WIN!

What is a low inflammation diet?

Think eating a rainbow of produce every day.

I teach a workshop on this very idea.

If we consume every color of the rainbow in REAL food,

(skittles don’t count), every day, we are very close to getting all the micro and phyto-nutrients our bodies need. In addition, we will have less room for the white-processed junk, like white bread, pasta, rice, pastries, cookies, cakes, sugar, which also spikes our blood sugar, causing inflammation.

Do you see a connection? A rainbow connection? Name the singer for 2 points!

Hint: “It’s not easy bein’ green.

Think: more color, more NATURAL color, more fiber, more nutrients, more plant-based foods.

Do your best to consume high ORAC (Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity) value antioxidant foods. ORAC is food’s antioxidant activity.

I will discuss this further in another post.

Here are just a few examples:

Red: tomato, beets, rhubarb, radish

Orange: pepper, carrot, sweet potato

Yellow: squash, pepper, lemon

Green: kale, broccoli, spinach, zucchini

White: onion, cauliflower, garlic, jicama

Blue: corn, potato, moon watermelon (from Japan)

Indigo/Purple: cabbage, eggplant, cauliflower

The closer we eat to nature, the happier and better our bodies will respond, thus treating us better. What’s in YOUR  Rainbow?

TheMorselist.com

The Wellness Beat with Karen Langston

Happy WORK-it-out-Wednesday!
Have you been working on your ideas for
our Defeat Diabetes Contest?
A special MORSELICIOUS birthday wish to Doug!!!
His MORSELICIOUS almond pear tart was a hit and the recipe will be posted soon… :)
Happy Happy Bday to my number one MORSELICIOUS fan!
—-
Today, we’re meeting the awesome Karen Langston who beat Chron’s disease!
Q.  Please share how you got started in health & wellness.

Wow… It was an “AHA Moment.” I had had surgery for Crohn’s Disease, wearing diapers to work, hair falling out and miserable with every aspect of my life. I was skin and bones and not wanting to live and feeling guilty about not wanting to go on as I had a beautiful baby girl that I could not be a mother to. Two people who did not know each other recommended the same naturopathic doctor and I can tell you I did not believe in anything natural what so ever! I went because I figured she would do what everyone else did.…poke and prod and fill me up with drugs and send me on my way. I did not know that naturopathic doctors were holistic. Within 3 months I was in remission for the first time in 5 years. I was a believer.
I went into Holistic Nutrition and continued my own journey to health and wholeness while I learned at school. When I graduated I furthered my education with Live Cell Microscopy and had the wonderful opportunity to work with a naturopathic Doctor that had been bringing people who were suffering with cancer back to a state of wellness and wholeness for over 55 years. In the 2 years I was there I was a part of people’s lives that were given 3 months to live to thriving cancer free. It was such an honour. It truly made me a complete believer from having the opportunity to witness what our bodies are capable of if we provide the right support

Q.  You are a walking testament that one truly can cure diseases with food and prevention

Awww shucks; thank you. I can tell you that restoring myself to a state of health and wholeness did not happen overnight. It was a long journey.  The biggest factor in restoring my health had to do with my desire to have a better life. First it was replenishing my body with much needed minerals, vitamins, essential fatty acids and other nutrients. I had food sensitivity and allergy tests done and removed the foods that did not agree with my body. That was really hard to do because my mind set back then was “I can’t have this… I am not deserving of this…” It was not until I changed my mindset to “I only put good things in my body that shows I love myself” that I was ready to deal with the next phase; the emotions. I would have to say the emotional journey was probably the hardest.  I used a program developed by Dr. Walsh in Toronto called Somatic training; changed my whole life. This technique taught me how to let go of the filters I have been viewing the world from and to see what I really wanted to see. I then went to Florida to be properly trained in this technique; ironically the person I got my training from Lance Ware was also a client and then trained with Dr. Walsh and perfected the art to include relaxation techniques. This was all perfect for when I was in the process of healing from Crohn’s I then developed the beginning stages of cervical cancer. Instead of panicking and falling into the scare tactics of the medical profession I decided to heal myself with the techniques I had learned over the last 10 years with great success.

Q.  How does your approach differ from Western Medical Doctor Care?

The medical profession has such a funny outlook on disease. When you are diagnosed it is gravely important to start on medications right away and then you are told over and over that you have this disease for life, there is no cure and will have to be on drugs the rest of your life.  Basically you become your disease and are known for the disease you have. We need to take back our identity.

When I work with someone that has cancer or, weight issue or a disease, I ask them what has been going on in their life. You can tell a lot about a dysfunction by what is going on in a person’s life. When you have a disease, condition or illness and even cancer, it is your body’s way of telling (alerting) you that something is off kilter or out of balance and needs attention to fix. So I look at their lifestyle, home environment, work environment, their outlook on life, their childhood and childhood relationships, diet, the foods they crave, and their comfort foods. We do food sensitivity testing and nutrient testing and find out where they are lacking in nutrients.  Then together we work on bringing them back to wholeness and state of wellbeing. They do all of the work, my role is only to provide the tools, encouragement and coaching to get them there.

Each person I work with is unique; their physiology is unique therefore their plan to wholeness is also unique. Every single one of us has a natural physician inside of us, we just need to tune in and tune up.

Q.  What is your vision/mission for business plan?

My greatest vision is to own an island where I stroll out of bed and walk across the beach barefoot to my world renown healing centre where people from all over the world come to get realigned with their mind, body, spirit.

My current vision, passion is spreading the word about health and wellness in a fun and entertaining way with my internet show The Wellness beat which you can get a peek at KarenLangston.com where you can also sign up for my Healthy Bites weekly Ezine.

Of course I am extremely passionate about bringing awareness to Crohn’s and IBD to the world and will be speaking about that in a signature talk and the release of my mini book on flare ups. I have my life story on my healing journey; I just have to find the time to write it. I have been keeping a journal since the day I found out I was pregnant, and that is pretty much my manuscript. All in the right time space and sequence.
My business plan is simple, be honest and give information freely to build trust and to let people get to know you. If you come from the heart, be joyous, full of passion and do what you love the money just comes!

Karen Langston is an author, mentor, coach, speaker and host of a weekly entertaining internet health show “The Wellness Beat.” She is also a proud member of the National Association of Nutrition Professionals and an active director on the Board. In her role as an internationally recognized Holistic Nutritionist based in Arizona she consults with clients across Canada and the US on all health matters with a special focus on Crohn’s Disease and the mind/body connection. She received her education at the world-renowned Institute of Holistic Nutrition in Toronto, Canada and Certified Nutritional Practitioners Council of Canada, recognized by the International Organization of Nutritional Consultants. Her credentials also include Early Childhood Education Certification, Applied Holistic Nutrition degree, Certified Nutritional Practitioner, Live Cell Microscopist, Capillary Puncture Technician, Therapeutic Lifestyle Educator, Soma Therapies and Functional Medicine.   http://karenlangston.com/articles/

Karen Langston CNCP
Host of The Wellness Beat

Director of Wellness
Az Produce Markets

Fun & Flexible Friday & Ask Nutri-savvy: INFLAMMATION & disease

Happy Fun & Flexible Friday!

How was your week?
Any fun pre-Valentine’s Day plans?

Please share!

Thanks again for your wonderful questions

for our Registered Dietitian, Lauren O’Connor and

keep them coming.

Q.  Does inflammation really cause disease?

A: Yes, its true!: The very mechanisms that play a role in healing, repair (and maintenance)

can wreak havoc in the body, too. When it comes to inflammation – marked by redness, swelling, heat and pain -

the defense mechanisms brought on by your own immune system can go into overdrive

if not regulated within normal limits.

Inflammation is regulated by your hormones, which can either intensify

or lower the response to pain or injury.

Chronic inflammation arises when hormonal defense activity

is unable to turn off its response even when the healing is complete.

On a cellular level, toxins build up in the body resulting in oxidative stress

and free radicals that the body must fight to rid.

The hormonal defenses in reaction to free radicals can result in chronic inflammation

likely due to abuse and overuse of the immune system.

Health threats that entail chronic inflammation are autoimmune diseases, including Type 2 Diabetes, Arthritis, Skin Disease (Eczema and Psoriasis), Coronary Heart Disease and even Cancer.

A Healthy diet rich in phytonutrients (whole fruits and vegetables, whole-grains, legumes) with a healthy balance of lean animal proteins, carbs and healthy fats can be key to reducing the threat of chronic inflammatory-based disease.

Some tips to eating well:

Limit your intake of saturated fats: (but do include a minimal intake of heart-healthy coconut):

replace butters and oils with apple sauce, bananas or pumpkin purees in baked treats (cookies, cakes).

Use less oils in prepping foods (hint: adding a little low sodium broth can help keep grilled onions from sticking to pan).

3 Colors, 3 meals: Fruits and vegetables can build the rainbows of your diet with their natural vibrant color.

Be sure to keep your meal attractive and healthy by adding in 3 fruits and/or vegetables to your dishes

(ie: make a heart-healthy un-fried rice with broccoli, carrots and green onions).

Focus on the veggies – low in calories and far less (albeit natural) sugars.

Include a fruit or vegetable in every snack: Don’t get stuck on an energy bar rut or starch-heavy treats

like potato chips or crackers, enjoy fruits and nuts, fruit and yogurt or

vegetable sticks and a zesty dip (like hummus) instead.

Remember my suggestions for keeping your sugar intake within reason by using mini fruits or 1/2 portions.

Make half your plate fruits or vegetables: Your MyPlate recommendation states this is key to a healthy diet.

http://nutrisavvysblog.wordpress.com

Please use your VALENTINE’S DAY COUPON Code:

xomo” for 15% off all orders over $19.99 until

February 14th. Share the MORSELICIOUS LOVE!!

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