11am hunger pains. 3pm boredom
and energy fix. Does this sound familiar? When you open your desk drawer, go to
the vending machine, or meander by your colleagues snack wall, do you see this…
Depending on how you feel, do you
dive in with carefree abandon? Do you say “TODAY I need this treat!” or “I’ll
do “better” tomorrow” or “It’s just one piece”.
Does the stress, hunger, boredom, tiredness or need for energy drive you
to make decisions that may not be the most beneficial for your body? Do you
even know if these options are harmful or helpful?
A recent article
suggested that desk drawer snacks are an over rated office perk that should be
removed in 2017 corporate wellness plans. I agree if used unwisely. However, rather
than eliminate the desk drawer snacks, I say make it over. Take your current
vending machine, desk drawer or maybe that shared group of snacks and give it a
make-over with two simple points in mind:
Is this snack HARMFUL or HELPFUL
for my body?
Rather than use “good” and “bad” –
let’s move away from the punitive terminology and towards a mindset of
nourishing the body; a perspective of self-reflection and thought; and a
solution model that is tailored, not prescriptive.
Below I provide some options for
making over that snack drawer with “HARMFUL” and “HELPFUL” in mind. This
approach can be applied to vending machines by working with your vending
machine company or check out ones that provide healthy snack/meal alternatives –
LeanBox, Berkshire Natural, or Healthy You Vending as examples. This
can also be applied to a shared snack wall or corner stocked in one employee’s
area from pooled funds.
Before I suggest some options, let’s
first define HARMFUL and HELFPUL
HARMFUL: Snacks that….raise and crash blood sugar, have too many unpronounceable
ingredients, the first ingredient is sugar, corn syrup or another additive,
added sugars is above 15g per serving, contain too many artificial ingredients,
additives or oils. They make you jittery, bloated, cramped, or sluggish.
HELPFUL: Snacks that….are in their natural form (with packaging
just to contain the item), have 5 or less ingredients OR have all natural
ingredients such as apples, figs, brown rice, honey etc…all things we eat in
their original form, have less than 15g of sugar roughly per serving. They satiate,
are calming, energizing versus hyper and jittery.
Would a “HELPFUL” to your body
snack drawer look like this? (on the
left are organic wild rice cakes)
Along with what’s captured in the
pictures, below I’ve listed some ideas for what a HARMFUL and HELPFUL snack drawer
might contain.
In an upcoming blog, I’ll discuss
how to tackle the “WHYs” behind choosing your snack drawer options in the heat of the moment. But for now, consider the following: We all have those
stressful, over tired days; hopefully not most of the time. We all have
cravings and needs. Indulging 10% of the time – not every day - is beneficial
for balance and to ward off the issues that come with denial. So allow yourself
that 10%, but make sure that 10% isn’t a death by a thousand cuts. Meaning 10%
every day. Crowd out that 10% desire and craving with the 90% helpful. Keep the
helpful items within reach while also keeping moderation in mind.
Craving strikes? Drink water, take a quick walk, stretch, talk with
coworkers – DISTRACT yourself from the need to reach in that drawer for reasons other than an ENERGIZING SNACK.
Snack wisely.
Remind yourself of the drawer’s purpose.
Stay tuned for more tips when the snack attack hits!
HELPFUL
Nuts
– preferably raw (lightly salted if so)
Whole
fruit – preferably organic
Dried
fruit
Full
fat plain yogurt
Hummus
Lentil/bean
based chips
Carrots,
peppers – veggies – preferably organic
Pre-portioned
cheese – full fat or raw milk
Organic
rice cakes
Coconut,
seltzer water or tea.
Nut,
seed, low sugar bars
Pickles,
olives, kombucha (fermented tea drink)
HARMFUL
Candy
Bars & candy – high sugar or low % chocolate
Chips
– especially those baked in corn, palm oil
Buttery
packaged popcorn
Sugary
cereal
Animal
Crackers
Yogurt
or chocolate covered pretzels
Pretzels
with multiple flavorings
Juices
– less than 90% fruit
High
sugar energy/power bars
Pop
tarts
Cookies
with high fructose corn syrup or artificial ingredients
NOTE: These are only recommendations for snacks based on Your Wellness Scout experience. This is not an endorsement or critique of any items specifically listed or pictured in this blog.