Foods and Moods

This article is written by Brianna Baker, a sophomore at Redondo Union High School and founder of the Stress Less Club. She is also a member of Beach Cities Health District’s youth workgroup – a collection of teens who are brainstorming peer-to-peer engagement strategies around mental health and substance use prevention.

Today’s teenagers face ever-mounting internal and external pressures from school, home, extracurriculars and personal expectations of perfection. Making matters worse, most teenagers also display a lack of understanding when it comes to properly managing these growing stressors. So, it begs the question: how can parents and teens positively combat stress in a realistic, affordable way?

Here in the South Bay we are fortunate to have phenomenal school districts that offer a myriad of opportunities to students, including clubs, AP courses, sports, arts, extracurricular activities and great teachers. But it’s easy to be overwhelmed by all of these choices – especially when you feel pressured to partake in as many as possible to strengthen your college applications. As a result, many teenagers in the South Bay are disregarding their mental health to compete academically, socially and emotionally with their peers.

Now for the good news: there are many natural ways teens can combat stress – and one of them involves food.

Research shows that healthy foods improve your physical and mental health, so maintaining a well-balanced diet is crucial for preventing and managing stress.

Here are a few simple and tasty options:

It’s also important to understand foods that can have an adverse impact. Many times, overly stressed teenagers reach for empty-calorie comfort foods or energy-boosting drinks to gain immediate, but unhealthy, relief from stress and fatigue. Two common examples include:

Maintaining a healthy diet is an easy way teens – and people of all ages – can help control their stress. Moreover, it’s empowering to know we teenagers have the ability to take health into our own hands through the foods we choose to put on our plates.

 

 

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