Sweeten Your Willpower
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 11:45am (GMT)
Have you had those days when you really stuck to your guns and
maintained your willpower? You did your morning exercises, had a good
breakfast and felt a great start to the day. You chose wisely in the
cafeteria at lunch and passed up the pies. Even those mid-afternoon
cravings didn't get you. You could have picked the snickers bar at the
vending machine, but you had an apple instead.
You got through the day feeling very proud of yourself until . . . a
moment of weakness in the evening. Maybe you were at the ballpark or
the movies or just over at a friends house when all of a sudden you
found yourself gorging down a donut or a piece of pie.
What happened? How did that super-strength that you had during the day just all of a sudden vanish?
It's in the Blood
Some cool new research that I read about in the latest Scientific
American Mind sheds a little light on this and offers some advice to
help you. In the experiment, volunteers experienced different
environments where they had to ignore distractions and exhibit
self-control. Before and after the tasks, experimenters monitored blood
sugar levels to see how much energy the restraining behavior cost them.
The research suggested that willpower is energetically expensive. That
means that every time you successfully keep those cravings at bay, it
costs you some energy in the form of using up blood sugar. Researchers
actually monitored a drop in blood sugar after volunteers suppressed
their urges.
Beyond that, the study also found that if subjects were given a sugar
drink to get their blood sugar back up they were able to suppress more
urges for much longer. On the other hand, if volunteers were given a
similar tasting drink sweetened artificially, they were less able to
keep their willpower up. The real sugar raises the blood sugar back up
but the artificially sweetened drink does not.
Use the Slow Burners
This is not an endorsement to reach for a sugar-laden soda every time
you feel an urge that you are trying to control. In fact, if losing
weight is your goal this would be counter productive. However, this is
another argument for a low glycemic, fiber-based carbohydrate diet.
I have discussed the glycemic index of carbohydrates in the past.
Essentially, it is a measure of how fast your body turns the food into
sugar and dumps it into your bloodstream. Simple carbs from donuts,
cakes, white bread, etc. spike you blood sugar fast. While complex
carbs, from whole grains, fruits and vegetables gradually increase your
blood sugar.
Another way to look at it is that complex carbs will provide a steady
and sustained release of sugars into your blood. Based on the new
research, this will help you fight urges and maintain your willpower
because it will be difficult to crash your blood sugar.
Kicking the Habit
So whatever habits you are trying to replace, a low glycemic diet might
give you that extra edge that you need to stay the course. Typically, I
promote this style of eating for physical health, but now it appears
that it is a weapon against any urge - whether that devil on your
shoulder is calling for junk food, a cigarette or impulsive shopping.
More and more we are realizing how food controls our behavior. The
brain is very responsive to what you choose to put in your mouth. Feed
your brain what it needs to win.
Copyright (c) 2007 The Brain Code LLC
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