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Nancy Clark, MS,
RD, CSSD is Board Certified as a Specialist in Sports Dietetics
(CSSD). She counsels both casual exerciser and competitive athletes
in her private practice at Healthworks (617.383.6100) in Chestnut
Hill, MA. She is author of the bestselling Nancy Clarks
Sports Nutrition Guidebook, Cyclists Food Guide, and
Food Guide for Marathoners. See nancyclarkrd.com
and sportsnutritionworkshop.com
for more information.
More
often than not, athletes ask me What is a well-balanced
diet? What should I be eating to help me perform at my best?
They feel overwhelmed by the seemingly endless list of nutrition
donts. Dont eat white sugar, white bread, processed
foods, fast foods, french fries, soda, salt, trans fats, butter,
eggs, red meat... Youve heard it all, Im sure.
If you want to eat better but dont know where to start,
heres a nutrition strategy that can help you fuel your body
with a well-balanced sports diet. The suggestions guide you
towards an eating style thats simple and practical, yet can
effectively help you eat well to perform well, despite todays
bewildering food environment.
Eat at least three
kinds of nutrient-dense food at each meal. Dont
eat just one food per meal, such as a bagel for breakfast.
Add two more foods: peanut butter and lowfat milk. Dont
choose just a salad for lunch. Add grilled chicken and a crusty
whole grain roll. For dinner, enjoy pasta with tomato sauce
and ground turkey. Two-thirds of the meal should be whole
grains, vegetables and fruits, and one-third lowfat meats,
dairy, beans or other protein-rich foods.
Too many athletes eat a repetitive menu with the same 10
to 15 foods each week. Repetitive eating keeps life simple,
minimizes decisions and simplifies shopping, but it can result
in an inadequate diet and chronic fatigue. The more different
foods you eat, the more different types of vitamins, minerals
and other nutrients you consume. A good target is 35 different
foods per week. Start counting!
Eat "closer to the earth" by choosing more foods
in their natural state. For instance, choose oranges rather
than orange juice; orange juice rather than sports drink;
whole-wheat bread rather than white bread; baked potatoes
rather than french fries. Foods in their natural (or lightly
processed) state offer more nutritional value and less sodium,
trans fat, and other health-eroding ingredients. Youll
find these foods along the perimeter of the grocery store:
fresh produce, lean meats, lowfat dairy, whole grain breads.
If possible, choose locally grown foods that support your
local farmer and require less fuel for transportation to the
market.
Fuel your body on
a regular schedule, eating even-sized meals every four hours.
For example, a reducing diet (non-dieters need another 100-200
calories per meal) might be:
Breakfast (7-8:00am): 500 calories (cereal + milk + banana)
Lunch (11-noon): 500 calories (sandwich + milk)
Lunch #2 (3-4:00pm): 400-500 calories (yogurt + granola +
nuts)
Dinner (7-8:00pm): 500-600 calories (chicken + potato + greens)
This differs from the standard pattern of skimpy 200 to 300
calorie breakfasts and lunches that get followed by too many
calories of sugary snacks and super-sized dinners.
Depending on your body size, each meal should be the equivalent
of two to three pieces of pizza; thats about 500 to 750 calories
(or 2,000 to 3,000 calories per day). Think about having four
"food buckets" that you fill with 500 to 750 calories
from at least kinds of foods every four hours. Even if you
want to lose weight, you can (and should) target 500 calories
at breakfast, lunch #1 and lunch #2. Those meals will ruin
your evening appetite, so youll be able to "diet"
at dinner by eating smaller portions. (Note: Most active people
can lose weight on 2,000 cals, believe it or not!)
Whatever you do, try to stop eating in a crescendo
(with meals getting progressively bigger as the day evolves).
Your better bet is to eat on a timeline and consume 3/4 of
your calories in the active part of your day; eat less at
the end of the day. One runner took this advice and started
eating her dinner foods for lunch, a sandwich for lunch #2
(instead of snacking on cookies) and then had soup and a bagel
for dinner. She enjoyed far more energy during the day, was
able to train harder in the afternoon and significantly improved
her race times.
Honor hunger.
Eat when you are hungry, and then stop eating when you feel
content. Hunger is simply a request for fuel; your body is
telling you it burned off what you gave it and needs a refill.
To disregard hunger is abusive. Just as you would not withhold
food from a hungry infant, you should not withhold food from
your hungry body. If you do, you will start to crave sweets
(a physiological response to calorie deprivation) and end
up eating junk.
While counting calories is one way to educate yourself on
how to fill each 500-calorie bucket (for calorie
information, use food labels, fitday.com, and calorieking.com/foods),
you can more simply pay attention to your bodys signals.
Keep checking in with yourself, Is my body content?
Or, does my body need this fuel? If confronted with
large portions that would leave you feeling stuffed, consider
letting the excess food go to waste, not to waist.
Think moderation.
Rather than categorize a food as being good or bad for your
health, think about moderation, and aim for a diet that offers
85 to 90 percent quality foods and 10 to 15 percent foods
with fewer nutritional merits. Enjoy a foundation of healthful
foods, but dont deprive yourself of enjoyable foods.
This way, even soda pop and chips, if desired, can fit into
a nourishing food plan. You just need to balance the junk
with healthier choices throughout the rest of the day. That
is, you can compensate for an occasional greasy sausage and
biscuit breakfast by selecting a low-fat turkey sandwich lunch
and a grilled fish dinner.
Take mealtimes seriously.
If you can find the time to train hard, you can also find
the time to fuel right. In fact, competitive athletes who
dont show up for meals might as well not show up for
training. Youll lose your edge with hit or miss fueling,
but youll always win with good nutrition!
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