today we're going to talk about nutritional psychology and if your food
Vesna:is making you anxious or depressed.
Vesna:Now our food choices affect our mental wellbeing.
Vesna:And when I talk about mental wellbeing, for most people, the first thing
Vesna:that pops into their head is that.
Vesna:It's the absence of anxiety or depression, but really mental
Vesna:wellbeing is about reaching our highest potential using our cognitive
Vesna:abilities, our emotional resilience in order to be our best versions of
Vesna:ourselves or hit our peak potential.
Vesna:When we think about anxiety or depression, we think about all
Vesna:the external circumstances that create anxiety or depression.
Vesna:And what I want to talk about in this podcast episode is the How there
Vesna:is a lot more internal things going on and imbalances that are really
Vesna:causing the anxiety and depression.
Vesna:The first one is glucose control.
Vesna:Now our brain, its main source of fuel, is glucose.
Vesna:and so we need a constant supply, a 24 7 supply of this fuel, glucose.
Vesna:Our brain controls our breathing, our heartbeat, so many different things in
Vesna:the body, even when we're sleeping.
Vesna:So therefore we need to make sure we have Correct glucose control.
Vesna:when there isn't enough glucose in the brain, or we have a dysregulation
Vesna:without glucose, those symptoms mimic anxiety and depression.
Vesna:if you have ever had low blood glucose levels or hypoglycemia, if you've gone
Vesna:way too long between meals, or you've been very stressed and you haven't eaten, you
Vesna:may feel irritable, anxious, depressed,
Vesna:hangry
Vesna:Just not yourself, total lack of concentration and confusion, right?
Vesna:So those symptoms mimic anxiety and depression.
Vesna:And that is because our brain needs the steady supply of glucose
Vesna:but if for whatever reason we go too long between meals, we have
Vesna:processed foods, we don't have enough protein, it is going to cause.
Vesna:A great big spike in our glucose and then it our glucose very low.
Vesna:It's in those low points that we can bring on symptoms of anxiety
Vesna:because when the glucose becomes low.
Vesna:it's kind of an alarm signal for the body.
Vesna:It floods the body with stress hormones to increase that glucose back up again.
Vesna:So when we have normal glucose control, so we eat something, you know, we have
Vesna:our lunch, we have some carbohydrates in there, glucose levels rise, insulin
Vesna:comes in, it pulls that glucose out and it moves the glucose into the cells where
Vesna:we convert it off as energy, except.
Vesna:When we've got this imbalance in this kind of glucose cycle where we
Vesna:have these spikes of glucose, which means that we have spikes of insulin.
Vesna:Now we have insulin receptors in the brain, which means that glucose disruption
Vesna:really affects our mental health.
Vesna:So I see this in my clients who are exhausted, overstressed, burnt out.
Vesna:They struggle, their body struggles to maintain correct glucose control.
Vesna:So they're going to feel those symptoms when they go too long between meals.
Vesna:The other thing is because we do have insulin receptors in the brain.
Vesna:If someone has insulin resistance, they're more likely to have a
Vesna:correlation with anxiety and depression.
Vesna:And in fact, they are calling dementia the type 3 diabetes.
Vesna:Okay, so it's all about this glucose control and how much it affects our brain
Vesna:and our mood and our mental well being.
Vesna:here, our diet choices really matter.
Vesna:If we're eating junk food, sugary foods, soft drinks, Yes.
Vesna:things that are high in sugar or ultra processed foods.
Vesna:That is going to cause a massive spike in our glucose, which is then going
Vesna:to dump us down later and we just kind of live on this rollercoaster.
Vesna:And the other thing is if we don't have our meal balanced right?
Vesna:So if you're having carbohydrates for breakfast in the morning carbohydrates
Vesna:would generally hold your glucose levels for about an hour and a half.
Vesna:And then they plummet.
Vesna:But if you can add protein to it, so like a protein powder or eggs or things like
Vesna:that, or yogurt and things like that in the morning, your glucose levels will stay
Vesna:stable for about three to four hours and you're not getting these dramatic drops.
Vesna:Again, this is really important because I see in my community, women who have these
Vesna:anxiety symptoms, who feel very, very tense and overstressed and overwhelmed.
Vesna:And as soon as we start improving the protein in the meals and adding
Vesna:more regular meals, eating every three to four hours initially, it
Vesna:really balances that glucose level and the brain has a sense of balance.
Vesna:Steady supply of fuel, and so therefore, it's able to keep up with
Vesna:the production of neurotransmitters, the chemicals in our brain that helps
Vesna:us to feel relaxed and feel good.
Vesna:The second huge impact to anxiety and depression is actually our gut
Vesna:health that may seem a little bit out fair rhyme, but really it's very
Vesna:much proven, the gut brain axis.
Vesna:So our digestive system is connected to our brain by the gut,
Vesna:brain axis or the vagus nerve.
Vesna:so what we are finding is that when there is.
Vesna:Gut derived inflammation or leaky gut.
Vesna:when the gut lining becomes compromised know, we have 70 percent of our immune
Vesna:system around our gut as it's compromised the immune system triggers inflammation
Vesna:Which becomes whole body inflammation including the brain and it's throwing
Vesna:out the neurotransmitters It's called an inflamed brain and it's leading
Vesna:to anxiety depression psychiatric disorders So what do we do here?
Vesna:Right?
Vesna:So how do we fix a leaky gut?
Vesna:I did talk about that in a previous episode on gut health, but what you
Vesna:want to look at here is removing the foods which are inflammatory, which
Vesna:are really going to irritate the gut and prevent the gut from healing.
Vesna:whether or not you're sure you have leaky gut or not, and sometimes people
Vesna:can be completely asymptomatic, but if you have an aspect of anxiety or
Vesna:depression or mood disorders or low mood.
Vesna:You really want to take a look at improving your gut health,
Vesna:and it can be as simple as removing the inflammatory foods.
Vesna:The big ones are wheat or gluten, because it really breaks down the gut.
Vesna:Wheat is very hard to digest.
Vesna:It's GMO wheat now as well, okay?
Vesna:And processed foods, and even milk, normal milk.
Vesna:The casein, the protein in the milk is harsh on the digestive lining
Vesna:and creates more inflammation.
Vesna:So, they become barriers to your gut being able to heal itself.
Vesna:Then reducing the inflammation and taking all that inflammation out of the brain
Vesna:so therefore your brain can regulate its neurotransmitters Which are basically
Vesna:your happy chemicals in your brain.
Vesna:Now the third one is overthinking what happens is we get in this habitual
Vesna:pattern we get stuck in this state of overthinking So I have a lot of women
Vesna:say to me my head just doesn't shut up.
Vesna:There's so much noise in there You I've constantly got something on my mind.
Vesna:There's something that I'm always worried about.
Vesna:Or I just feel constantly overwhelmed.
Vesna:And that level of, I guess, too much thinking, it kind of
Vesna:burns the brain out, right?
Vesna:So it's using a lot of the neurotransmitters, it's draining
Vesna:a lot of the neurotransmitters, and they can't be replaced in time.
Vesna:Okay?
Vesna:So neurotransmitters are meant to balance the brain from, you know,
Vesna:revving us up and slowing us down, and then when they become exhausted
Vesna:and we can't rely on those, we can't regulate our mood and we can't.
Vesna:relax or soothe our anxiety or elevate our mood naturally because those chemicals are
Vesna:gone If you relate to these symptoms of overthinking and being overstressed, and a
Vesna:lot of our stress is mental and emotional stress, if you relate to that, then you'll
Vesna:need to look at ways to reduce that.
Vesna:you know, the biggest thing that we do is we kind of get
Vesna:stuck in these thought traps.
Vesna:We get triggers and we dwell and we dwell and we tap into
Vesna:these analytical mind of ours.
Vesna:We just kind of spins in a loop it's that loop that keeps stress hormones
Vesna:activated all day long, which means.
Vesna:We need higher amounts of glucose, then higher amounts of insulin, which is
Vesna:going to lead to insulin resistance.
Vesna:But it's really going to disrupt brain activity and just burn a lot
Vesna:of these neurotransmitters that we need for a healthy, happy mood.
Vesna:So those are my tips.
Vesna:The first ones are really nutritional psychology.
Vesna:So really looking at your glucose control in your brain, looking at the foods that
Vesna:you may already have that are sugary, that are processed, carbohydrates.
Vesna:Sugars, junk food, confectionery, cakes, biscuits, soft drinks,
Vesna:even eating out, right?
Vesna:the condiments are full of sugary foods.
Vesna:That is going to throw out your brain chemistry.
Vesna:Okay, it's going to throw out your glucose control, affect your brain
Vesna:chemistry, and affect the insulin receptors leading to insulin resistance.
Vesna:And all that means is that our mood is going to be up and down, and
Vesna:eventually it can just stay quite low.
Vesna:The second one is the gut brain axis.
Vesna:So looking at how the gut is connected to the brain.
Vesna:Removing the inflammatory foods which are preventing the gut from healing
Vesna:itself And the third one is to rein in that overthinking, find better ways
Vesna:to not get caught up in those thought traps, not get caught up in the ways
Vesna:that when you get triggered, Okay.
Vesna:That your brain stays stuck on that thought and replays it as a loop.