x
Black Bar Banner 1
x

Alert!  New Secured Wallets are installed! new Blog system with AI  power and auto blog curation coming soon  Alert! 

Ads by Markethive - View All
Blogs
The Blog Feed
Write a New Blog Post
Search Blog Status
Most Viewed
Most Recent
Most Shared
Alphabetical
Blog Main Menu
Markethive Blog (default)
All Blogs
My Blog Posts
Friends' Blogs
Blog Categories
All
Advertising
Blockchain & Cryptocurrency
Business Development
Diet & Weight Loss
Environmental
Health and Wellness
History and Culture
Home and Garden
Marketing
Mentoring & Training
Money & Finance
Other
Political
Prayer & Religion
Programming & Technical
Real Estate
Search Engine Optimization
Social Media
Spirituality
Sports & Recreation
Transport
Travel & Events
Website Design
Blogging Tools & Assets
My Blog Info
Members Subscribed to You
Blogs You Are Subscribed To
Website Widget
Wordpress Plugin

Why Your Hormones Are to Blame

Posted by Bobby Brown on December 14, 2020 - 3:30pm


 

They cause junk food cravings at night

 

Ever sneak a late-night snack after a hefty dinner and then go to sleep? (We’re looking at you heaping bowl of ice cream after that generous slice of meatloaf, roasted carrots and mashed potatoes!) Why, oh why?

“It’s not a character flaw. It’s simple biology. In functional medicine, we look at the root causes of health problems ― like how powerful hormones trigger night-time food cravings,” explains functional medicine specialist Mark Hyman, MD.

To tame your cravings, it helps to understand the havoc four powerful appetite hormones can wreak:

  1. Insulin. Your body produces this to process sugar in your diet. “Eating too much sugar or flour makes insulin spike, then crash ― even after a large ‘healthy’ meal,” Dr. Hyman says.
  2. Leptin. This puts the brake on your appetite, telling your brain, “Oh, I’m full. I don’t need any more food.” Leptin won’t work as well when you eat a lot of sugar, processed foods and flour.
  3. Ghrelin. This “hunger hormone,” produced in your stomach, helps regulate your appetite. It says, “I should eat ― I’m hungry!” and may spike when you’re sleep deprived, Dr. Hyman says.
  4. Peptide YY. This hormone, made in your intestines, says, “Hey, I’m full! I’ve had enough to eat. I don’t need to eat any more.” Peptide YY levels may drop when you don’t get sleep.

Feeling stressed? This drives up cortisol (the stress hormone), adding to your hunger, raising blood sugar and insulin, and starting a vicious cycle.

How to balance your hormones and tame your raging appetite

If you binge time and time again, your body can’t burn those extra calories, Dr. Hyman says. So it stores them as fat. To break the cycle, he recommends:

Eat regular meals. (Don’t skip breakfast.)

Always include a protein. (Choose chicken, fish, grass-fed meat) and high-quality fat (nut, seeds, avocados, coconut, olive oil).

Avoid all sugary drinks. That includes both hot and cold ones, from sodas and sweet tea to fancy calorie-laden coffees.

Avoid gluten or dairy if you can’t tolerate them.

De-stress during the day. (Breathe, do yoga, exercise).

Make sleep a priority. There’s no badge of honor for sleep deprivation. You’ll instead provoke imbalances in ghrelin and peptide YY.

“Taming your night binges can help you avoid weight gain and diabetes, not to mention feel a lot better about yourself,”

THE FUTURE OF MEDICINE HEALY MICROCURRENT TECHNOLOGY WWW.MILLIONAIREDREAMS.COM

Andries Van Tonder Thanks for sharing Bobby
December 15, 2020 at 5:39am
Bill Rippel Some great info Bobby, thanks.
December 15, 2020 at 3:02am
December 14, 2020 at 11:54pm