The majority of eating advice centers on losing weight. Instead, let's look at how changing what you eat can help fend off mid-day energy slumps and blah feelings from your work day.


Photo by D Sharon Pruitt.

Most people are aware, in some sense, of how what they eat impacts how they feel. Hardly a kid escapes childhood without learning what binging on post-Halloween candy feels like, and we've all experienced the post-holiday-meal call to hibernation. But regular food affects our body and energy throughout the day, even within a few hours. Here are a few examples of how eating impacts your energy levels, and what you can do to get more out of your daily fuel.


Structure Your Daily Diet Like a Pyramid



A significant number of people, in the U.S. especially, eat lightly (if at all) in the morning, heavier in the afternoon, and top the day off with a hearty dinner (and dessert). The problem with this method is that it deprives you of food when you need it most, and loads it on when you need it least. When you wake up in the morning, 6-8 hours without food or water is when you would most benefit from a hearty meal, not when you're cruising towards bed time. When planning your meals for the day, visualize them like a pyramid—not the food pyramid, although knowing more about that certainly helps. Consider your day like building a pyramid of food. Breakfast is the base—large and filling—and your evening snack is the tiny tip. Photo by Yasin Hassan.


Eat Protein Early On




Just inverting the order of things will go a long way towards helping your workday energy reserves, but it's not enough. In addition to increasing your early morning calorie intake and decreasing your evening calorie intake, you need to incorporate protein. Nearly all cases of mid-morning blahs, afternoon space-outs, and general exhaustion at work—ruling out that you stayed up all night with friends, or a sick child—can be attributed to low blood sugar. If you grab a cup of coffee and a bagel at 7:30AM on your way to work, caffeine and carbohydrates offer a powerful but short-lived energy boost. It's almost a guarantee that by 10:30AM you'll either be spacing out at your desk or heading down the hall to raid the vending machine for a quick and equally carbohydrate-laden pick-me-up. Photo by Nathan Borror.

This isn't to say that carbohydrates are bad; you need them to live and for basic brain functioning. A diet comprised mainly of carbohydrates, however, is a recipe for a constant cycle of blood sugar highs, lows, and the accompanying feelings of exhaustion that go with them. If carbohydrates are the kindling of your metabolism, protein is the slow burning old-growth wood that keeps you going. The following charts illustrate, albeit in a simplified form, the difference in blood sugar levels after eating carbohydrate heavy meals and protein heavy meals.



Ideally your blood sugar and energy levels should be slow and steady like the bottom graph, not swinging wildly up and down like the top graph. You don't need to give up on bread or never drink juice with breakfast again, but you work on getting more protein in your morning routine. If you look at the order you're about to place at Bagel Hut or the meal you're about to cook at home and your response to "Where is the protein?" is "Uh, somewhere?" you need to add some in. Here are some quick ideas for ways you can incorporate protein into your breakfast:

Scramble, fry, poach, hard boil, or otherwise eat eggs. The protein content is high and it's a good source of fat and vitamin A.

Buy a container of protein powder and mix a protein shake to accompany your regular breakfast. High-protein breakfast shakes are extremely popular, and a basic Google search

Skip the cereal or switch to high-protein breakfast cereals like those offered by Kashi

Try peanut butter, sweetened with a little honey, instead of jelly on your toast.

Yogurt is a great source of protein. Try getting plain/unsweetened yogurt and adding in fresh fruit. The fruit-at-the-bottom kind is packed with sugar.


Eat Low Glycemic Index Foods.




Both for breakfast and the subsequent snacks and meals, focus on low glycemic index foods. The glycemic index, contrary to fad diets that try to make it so, is not an end-all eating guide. It is, however, a very useful guide for measuring how quickly the food you eat will be turned into glucose. Unlike people with diabetes or hypoglycemia, you don't need to commit the index to memory for your personal safety, but it helps to read it over and be aware of where foods fall. High GI foods like white bread, white rice, and most cereals, are easily converted into glucose in your body. Low GI foods like most vegetables, whole grains, meat, milk, nuts, and eggs, are converted much slower. Steer yourself towards Low GI foods and you'll iron out most of the bumps in your daily blood sugar. Photo by Rich Audet.

Eat frequently.




If you're eating once in the morning right after you wake up, then in the middle of the workday, and then again when you finally get home at the end of the day and scrape together a meal, you're doing it wrong. You need to eat frequently, ideally every 2-3 hours. This doesn't mean you need a super-sized Sonic Burger meal several times during the workday. Eat a snack that's high in protein and complex carbohydrates between your regular meals. Cottage cheese, fruit, yogurt, tuna, hard-boiled eggs, protein-bars, an apple with peanut butter, and trail mix (heavy on the nuts, not the dried fruit and candy) are all great high-protein snacks. Photo by Nick Sarebi.

Ideally you want your daily blood sugar levels to look like that nice gentle wave seen in the chart above, not a graph of the last 10 years on the Dow Jones.


Stop Dehydrating Yourself




Dehydration isn't a binary situation—you aren't either extremely well hydrated or clawing along a dry lake bed in Nevada, wondering why you wandered away from the tour group three days ago. The minor signs of dehydration include lethargy, headaches, muscle pain, and a general sense of confusion. Fortunately, staying well hydrated is as simple as developing the habit of regularly drinking water. The worst case scenario for drinking a little too much water at work is having to hit up the bathroom a few more times than usual. The best case scenario is that you feel more energized. Photo by Steven Depolo.


Fortunately picking up the water habit is easy. Buy a water container (if you can't find one at your local super store that fits your personality and water volume needs you're not looking hard enough), and keep it filled on your desk. The difference between drinking 32 oz. of water every day (in addition to my normal coffee and drinking at meals) was simply putting a decanter on my desk and keeping it filled. If the water was there, I'd pour a glass and drink it while reading over my work. If it wasn't there, I didn't drink it. If you enjoy tracking things, check out our guide to graphing your life and use the techniques within to chart your water consumption. Alternately, you could set a timer on your computer or wear a watch that beeps every hour to remind you to drink up.


One of the added benefits of increasing your water consumption is that you'll inadvertently be cutting out less healthy fluids. You likely won't have enough room to drink three containers worth of water and a couple Cokes too, so the less healthy drinks fall by the wayside.

Keep Track of Your Energy Levels




Tracking your energy levels is key to figuring out what works for you. Keep a simple log of the food you eat and the energy levels you have during the day. Pretty soon patterns will start to emerge like "Ate big breakfast of eggs, toast, and protein shake: haven't felt hungry or tired all morning", "Skipped breakfast, had donut and coffee with Tim in the break room. Thinking about napping in the conference room before lunch.", and so on. Photo by Ganesha Isis.

Although we're primarily concerned with energy and not with weight loss, most of the top five contenders in the Five Best Weight-Management Tools Hive Five feature logging tools and personal metrics. The best match for our purposes is definitely FitDay. At FitDay you can log not only the food you eat and the fluids you drink, but also custom variables like level of energy, happiness, and more. After you experiment with your diet and water intake you can check out the graphs on FitDay to see how things shook out. Pair the FitDay charts with a simple text file journal that highlights the day's events (so you can compare the good and bad days on the chart to the bigger things happening in your life) and you've got a solid tracking tool.


Five Best Weight-Management Tools Weight loss can be a challenging undertaking (even maintaining your weight can be tough when the… Read more


For another interesting way to keep track of your energy over the course of the week, check out how to use Excel to "energy map" your days.


Smooth your blood sugar with big helpings of protein and complex carbohydrates, cut the sugary snacks out, and increase your water consumption and you'll be well on your way to keeping your head off your desk and ending the day bright eyed.

For more ideas on staying energized during the day, beyond hacking your diet, check out our top ten ways to stay energized. If you've got a favorite high-protein snack, let's hear it in the comments.