Would you like more energy? Want to bounce out of bed in the morning? Need to power through your Inbox? Isn't what all frantic overworked people want? Energy and lots of it! Yet that's not what is meant by the word ‘energy' when it's listed on a food pack.
As a nutritionist, I hate the word ‘energy'. These days it's everywhere on energy drinks, energy bars, B vitamin pills and even breakfast cereals that claim ‘carbs for energy' as if there was something magical about their cereal.
The problem is that the term ‘energy' has two meanings. Tired people seeing ‘energy' on a food pack think it will give them more ‘vitality' and ‘vigour' of the sort associated with the ‘high energy' lifestyles in the media.
To a science-based person, however, ‘energy' means something completely different. It refers to the fuel value supplied by food and diets and burned by activities.
These are the units used to measure food energy - kilojoules (abbreviated to kJ) and Calories (Cals). Kilojoules are the metric units that have replaced Calories, e.g. a bowl of cereal supplies 480 kilojoules or 117 Calories.
A ‘high energy' food (seemingly positive) simply means it's high in kilojoules/Calories (not so positive), something to avoid if we're sedentary or overweight. Chocolate bars are often promoted as ‘high energy' together with images of athletes sprinting, running a marathon or doing push-ups. If that's what you do with your day, then you need food high high kilojoules. If you're a tired office worker getting little or no exercise then you definitely don't! In reality, ‘high energy' means high kilojoules - around 1090 kilojoules or 265 Calories for an average 60 gram bar of chocolate. You'd have to jog 30 minutes to burn off that amount.
1 glass orange juice = 400 kJ or 95 Calories
‘Energy drinks' is another misleading term for the processed, coloured, flavoured caffeinated drinks sold at night clubs and workplaces. The ‘boost to energy' from these comes from their caffeine and sugar - simple! Caffeine is an effective aid to both mental and physical performance. We love it because it decreases our perception of fatigue and increases alertness - for about 2 or 3 hours but then we crash. Overdo the caffeine and it can have side effects ranging from insomnia to the very serious cardiac arrythmia in caffeine-sensitive people. See a report in the Medical Journal of Australia from 2009 of a healthy 28-year-old men who suffered a cardiac arrest after 7 to 8 cans of energy drinks within 7 hours (up to 640 mg caffeine).
And don't forget, energy drinks still contain sugar like ordinary soft drinks. If you're not burning if off, all that sugar slips into your fat stores.
Vitality comes from a balanced lifestyle which includes:
If you're tired and are craving more ‘energy', chances are your life is somewhat unbalanced. A little more sleep, a little more exercise and more fresh foods are the answer, not energy drinks and energy bars. Remember there's energy (vitality and vigour) and there's energy (empty kilojoules/Calories)! Choose the former not the latter.