Archive for June, 2014

Jun 29

Teens Not Only Eat the Most Sugar—They’re Affected More Intensely by It Too | TakePart

Great article that Greg just forwarded.

–> http://www.takepart.com/article/2014/06/20/how-sugar-changes-teen-brain?cmpid=tp-ptnr-nourishedkitchen

EA

Teens Not Only Eat the Most Sugar—They’re Affected More Intensely by It Too
New research looks at how the adolescent brain responds to sugar consumption.

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June 20, 2014 By Steve Holt

Steve Holt is a regular contributor to TakePart. He writes about food for ‘Edible Boston,’ ‘Boston Magazine,’ ‘The Boston Globe,’ and other publications.
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It’s no secret that teenagers love sugar. One-fifth of the daily diet of a typical American adolescent comes from added sugar—more than any other age group. Half that sugar comes from sweetened beverages such as soda, energy drinks, and sports drinks. But there’s more that sets a teen’s relationship with sugar apart from an adult’s sweet tooth. Not only do teens eat more of it, but it affects their brains differently too. That could have repercussions far more severe than a few cavities.

New research from Yale Medical School shows that sugar may change the still-developing adolescent brain by increasing blood flow to the parts of the brain that control reward and executive function.

“This study is the first step in understanding what is occurring in the developing adolescent brain in response to drinking sugar,” says Ania M. Jastreboff, assistant professor of internal medicine and pediatrics at Yale and a lead researcher on the study. The findings of Jastreboff’s team were presented at the American Diabetes Association’s Scientific Sessions last week and will be published soon.

The researchers asked a small group of normal-weight adolescents and adults to drink 75 grams of glucose and then performed brain scans to examine each group’s response to drinking the sweetened water. The team found that adolescents, compared with adults, exhibited increased response in regions of the brain associated with reward motivation and executive function—areas that help humans connect past experience with present action.

“We hypothesize that these striking differences in brain response to glucose ingestion might contribute to adolescents’ higher consumption of added sugars,” Jastreboff says, adding that further studies are necessary to determine how these findings affect adolescents’ eating behavior. The researchers hope future studies will analyze whether this sugar’s effect on the teen brain is contributing to skyrocketing obesity rates.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that since 1980, the percentage of 12- to 19-year-olds who are obese has more than tripled, rising from 5 percent to 21 percent in 2012. Overall, more than a third of children and adolescents are now overweight or obese. As for the cause, in recent years many experts have blamed our excessive consumption of sugar, especially fructose. Besides contributing to obesity, sugar has also been linked to high blood pressure and diabetes. More Americans now believe that between sugar and marijuana, the sweet stuff is more dangerous.

Jane Says: Sugar Isn’t Addictive—but You Can Eat It Like an Addict

For Jennifer Harris, director of marketing initiatives at the Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, the new findings echo a 2013 study she helped conduct that showed that adolescents’ brains are especially excited by advertisements for food, compared with other products marketed to them. That scientific understanding may be relatively new, but food and beverage companies discovered this years ago, she says, and make a habit of marketing sugary drinks more heavily to teens than to adults.

A possible solution, Harris says, is a soda tax. Researchers learned from the institution of tobacco taxes that adolescents are disproportionately more likely to reduce their consumption of the taxed product, because they typically have less discretionary money to spend.

“The main thing is that [food and beverage companies] should not be pushing products that have no nutritional value in their marketing to adolescents,” she says.

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Jun 27

Hop on maya!

He doesn’t quite touch the ground, but he doesn’t know that, and don’t tell him either 😉

EA

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Jun 27

Aaaaaaahhhh…

I think sawyer got this from maya. Whenever he drinks from a cup he does this “aaaaaaahhh” sound. Pretty funny.

EA

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Jun 27

Debbi’s last pump!

…and dinner at shin sen gumi with Alex, Armine and Ellyssa.

EA

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Jun 22

Maya’s Welcoming Greeting After work

This is a pretty typical welcoming when I get home from work. Maya face plants into the window until I get all my stuff out of the car. She usually wants to run around the block right when I get out of the car saying “daddy run!” …more if an order than a question I think.

…And sawyer is not far behind usually in mommy’s arms.

EA

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Jun 19

Sawyer and Daddy Hanging Out in the morning

Sawyer has been climbing off the bed for several weeks now. I finally got it on video. Take a look…

EA

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Jun 13

Where’s Maya!???

Maya was cold in the morning so we wrapped her up in the blanket.

EA

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Jun 10

How to Prepare for Parenthood in 11 Easy Steps

This is a very effective guide and extremely accurate too.

Thank Greg for sharing! 😉

–> http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/5411134?utm_hp_ref=tw

EA

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How To Prepare For Parenthood In 11 Easy Steps

Congratulations, you’ve decided to reproduce. For a person used to living life on his or her own terms, parenthood can be quite the shock. As with any life change, dutiful preparation can make all the difference in the world. Here are 11 easy steps you can take to prepare:

Step 1 Hire an actor to shadow you throughout your day. This person should remain no more than three inches away from you at all times. Pay them extra to sit in your lap should you attempt to get off of your feet. Bonus points if they trip you with their body when you’re walking around your home. From 3 p.m. to 4 p.m., let them jump on your body.

“Can I close the bathroom door?” No. Hire someone you feel comfortable with, because they will be supervising your waste elimination process.

Every 15 minutes, make this person a snack.

Step 2 Call all of your friends without children. Tell them it’s been lovely knowing them, but you’re going away. Let them know you’ll see them on Facebook.

Step 3 It’s important that you get used to completing simple tasks while being a parent. Obtain a pair of handcuffs or a zip tie. Affix one hand behind your back. Go about your day.

Step 4 If you plan on driving while being a parent, borrow three orangutans (ask for strong-willed ones) from your local zoo. Put them in rear-facing car seats. Keep your eyes on the road.

Step 5 Cooking is a big part of raising a family. Buy a copy of Julia Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Visit your neighborhood specialty market and acquire the ingredients necessary for her famous beef bourguignon. Spend the next eight hours cooking. When the meal is done, quickly bring it room temperature. Throw the entire pot against a wall. Clean it up.

Step 6 Parenting may slightly affect your sleep patterns. To prepare yourself for this, find the most annoying ringtone on your phone. Ask a stranger on the street to set up 2-3 surprise alarms between midnight and 5 a.m. Live like this for months. If you think you’ll be tempted to complain to someone, let them know ahead of time that their only response to you should be, “This is somehow your fault.”

Step 7 A huge part of parenting is constant worry. Smart parents-to-be will get themselves used to living life with moderate to severe anxiety. Hire a skywriter to spell out your full name, social security number, home address and blood type over the nearest maximum security prison yard.

Step 8 Start watching children’s television programming. You might hear a popping, crackling noise in your head. Don’t be alarmed — that’s just the sound of your brain melting.

Step 9 You may be gifted a child who wants to sleep with you. Joy! Practice co-sleeping by having a carpenter craft a special bed for you. Tell him you want it one third of the width of a standard twin bed. Don’t use a pillow or sheets. If this is too costly, you can also just sleep curled up in your bathtub.

Step 10 Turning your car into a parent-mobile is easier than you think. All you need are:

18 individual non-matching socks
6 clean diapers in three sizes
2 balled-up pee pee diapers (you can find these in your community dumpster)
6 cups of random crumbs
1/2 cup of strawberry jam or any sticky substance
18 broken toys
2 handfuls of confetti
2 empty juice boxes
changes of clothes for 10 children
Mix these items together on your lawn, being careful to get the jam on everything, then throw it all inside your car and mix thoroughly. Drive around in shame.

Step 11 Visit your local thrift store and buy 10 large garbage bags of clothes. Dump them in your living room. Bring in the orangutans and start folding. Enjoy.

You’re now ready. Good luck.

Bunmi is the author of The Honest Toddler: A Child’s Guide to Parenting. This is a humor book, please calm down.

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Jun 10

Shibeby??

Another one of Maya’s new words. Can you guess what it means…

Hint: she uses it in the soapy bathtub.

EA
Shibeby-Slippery.m4a

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Jun 06

Chef Maya!

…Ok well it was just bananas. But that’s the first step to a life of culinary excellence! Huh auntie Samira!

EA

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