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The Better Period Food Solution: Eat Your Way to a Lifetime of Healthier Cycles
The Better Period Food Solution: Eat Your Way to a Lifetime of Healthier Cycles
The Better Period Food Solution: Eat Your Way to a Lifetime of Healthier Cycles
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The Better Period Food Solution: Eat Your Way to a Lifetime of Healthier Cycles

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“Cravings, headaches, mood swings, fatigue, bloating—you can manage these PMS/period symptoms through your diet! Tracy Lockwood Beckerman tells you how.” —Joy Bauer, MS, RDN, health and nutrition expert for NBC’s Today show

Sometimes it feels like there’s just no way to feel good during your menstrual cycle. It seems like ibuprofen and sick days are the only way to get through—until now. The Better Period Food Solution teaches you how to eat for a better, healthier, more comfortable period!

This helpful guide shows how nutrition and certain foods can not only help alleviate painful period symptoms, but also heal your body through every stage of your cycle. Whether you suffer from painful periods or low energy, or a more chronic problem like endometriosis, The Better Period Food Solution will guide you through the nutrition choices that are best for your body. The book also includes sample meal plans and recipes that allow you to enjoy a lifetime of healthier cycles.

“The book that every woman with a period never knew she needed, but she does. She really, really does. Tracy Lockwood Beckerman empowers readers to use real food to take control of their cycles, from ‘feisty hormones’ to fertility. She writes with charm, wit, and a solid evidence base. Beckerman’s expert advice and approachable voice make this book the most entertaining non-fiction I’ve read all year.” —Maggie Moon, MS, RD, author of The MIND Diet

“[Tracy] makes it easy (and fun) to learn how food can help reduce menstrual cramps and PMS and manage other conditions like amenorrhea and PCOS.” —Rachel Berman, RD, author of Mediterranean Diet for Dummies
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 22, 2019
ISBN9781612439518
The Better Period Food Solution: Eat Your Way to a Lifetime of Healthier Cycles

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    The Better Period Food Solution - Tracy Lockwood Beckerman

    INTRODUCTION

    Jeans that won’t zip, stubborn cheek pimples, relentless chocolate cravings, uncontrolled tears after watching tiny puppies play. Does any of this sound familiar to you? If your period had a voice, she would say, Sweetie, it’s not you, it’s me. You better believe that your period and reproductive health have more control over you than you think, for better or for worse.

    Because no one dares to voice the truth about their period (we’ve been stuck in this period suppression for eons), it’s been nearly impossible to become informed and truly understand what the heck is going on down there…until NOW! This book is going to help tackle the menstruation taboo, aid in the menstrual revolution, and teach you how to nutritionally support yourself toward a better period. Period.

    I want this book to empower you, squash menstrual shame, and make you feel like an absolute boss when it comes to your period. It will help you break free from the shackles society has placed on periods and menstrual health. Understanding what foods and nutrients your body needs to amplify your cycle will ignite you to support your cravings, mood swings, and hormonal fluctuations, and, finally, take control of your period—not the other way around.

    A bit about me. A big reason why I even got into the field of nutrition was because I wanted to know exactly how food affects the body. No one really talks about why food makes them feel a certain way, and that didn’t seem right to me. Why did some foods make me feel happy while others down in the dumps? Why did some foods make me feel tired or more energized? And why was I craving certain foods more (ahem, chocolate) right before my period? In order to find the answers I was looking for, I became a registered dietitian and pursued a master’s degree in clinical nutrition from New York University.

    If you don’t know what a registered dietitian is, we are basically doctors of food. We dissect every metabolic system, every organ, and every medical ailment and learn how food and nutrition can prevent disease and even heal or treat a medical condition. It may sound strange but when we see food, we see medicine.

    Registered dietitians are also scientists. We dissect evidence, data, and stats to compile sound, ethical, unbiased, and well-researched answers. We are required to work in hospitals and have to get matched to a dietetic internship program to complete a residency program (similar to what doctors have to go through). We also have to pass a national dietetics exam before we can legally practice as a registered dietitian. My point is, registered dietitians know what we are talking about.

    I decided to specialize in women’s health because I wanted to teach women how to nutritionally support their periods, enhance their fertility, and improve their reproductive health. My clients often ask me, Is it even possible to eat your way toward a healthier menstrual cycle? As I immediately smile, I can’t help but exclaim, Yes, it is possible! Good nutrition can keep your reproductive system going like a well-oiled machine, powered by real foods.

    Besides being professionally qualified, I personally understand how impactful nutrition (and self-care) is for a healthy menstrual cycle. After I stopped taking the pill, it took me a long time to restore my natural menstrual cycle. Like an old iPhone that hasn’t been powered in years, I had to adjust my lifestyle, eating patterns, and, ultimately, my perspective of health to bring my period back to life.

    I was in need of real, science-based nutrition facts while I was going through my own journey; something relatable, digestible (pun intended!), and evidenced based, and I did not have anywhere trustworthy to lean on. This book will ultimately fill that gap as it tackles the topic of nutrition for periods, so think of it as my gift to you. I hope this book will empower you to lean in toward FOOD as medicine to help you surf the crimson wave, as Cher Horowitz from Clueless puts it, and feel even more like a fearless female (though you already are!).

    This book will introduce you to food cycling, a novel concept I created that’s been extremely beneficial for women to help understand their bodies and their menstrual cycles better. Food cycling teaches the importance of eating particular nutrients during each phase of the cycle to promote hormonal balance, enhance well-being, manage mood, reduce premenstrual syndrome (PMS), and boost energy. Certain phases during your cycle mess with your appetite, mood for specific foods, sexual desire, and even your personality. This book gives you guidelines on how to work within those parameters rather than trying to escape them. No matter if you are 13 or 45, studies upon studies have shown that food cravings and even our appetite is influenced through feisty hormones that ebb and flow during our cycle. Regardless of age, we should all learn how and why hormones have the ability to magically transport us from our couch to our kitchen. Speaking on behalf of a friend! :)

    I’ll also teach you which nutrients manage and heal symptoms in reproductive and hormonal conditions such as polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS), endometriosis, amenorrhea, and PMS, all backed by evidence-based research. This book also lays the ropes of fertility-focused nutrition to help those who want to be proactive in supporting their bodies toward an optimal environment for future pregnancies.

    Society has placed a taboo surrounding periods and menstrual health, as if we should be ashamed of this natural and miraculous process that’s ultimately kept the human species alive. We have to be more open about the topic of good period health and break the stigma, one voice at a time. No longer should we be embarrassed to talk about our periods, our cramps, our moodiness, our pain, or our struggles to get our cycles back or become pregnant. For crying out loud, the documentary Period. End of Sentence won an Oscar this year! Ladies, let’s end this nonsense and let’s talk about it, learn about it, and do something about it. Let’s be part of the change and make menstruation mainstream. Us gals have to stick together, right?

    PERIOD 101

    Before we dive into the best foods to eat to support a healthier period, let’s learn more about the endocrine (the collection of glands that produce hormones) and reproductive systems, and how they play in the same sandbox as the menstrual cycle.

    Our body is more connected than you may think. There are conversations going on 24/7 between our nervous system, digestive system, and endocrine system through little sound bites known as neurotransmitters. These chemical messengers dictate basically everything, such as behavior, mood, sleep, and so much more. In addition to neurotransmitters, our body is controlled through something we are all very familiar with: hormones!

    HORMONAL HELPERS

    The menstrual cycle is truly a physiological miracle made possible through the dedication of hormones. It’s a tightly coordinated cycle that relies on precise hormonal symbiosis and timing. Think of your hormones as a cheerleading squad—all cheerleaders need to be in sync and work together to successfully perform those jaw-dropping stunts!

    Hormones communicate through the blood and nervous system and basically have VIP access to all the cells in the body. These hardworking hormones tightly regulate the endocrine system to maintain homeostasis, or natural balance, in the body. Their effects can take as little as seconds or as long as days to be felt. Pretty cool stuff!

    Hormones are carried through the blood to all parts of the body to initiate a menstrual cycle. Hormonal signals fire off in the hypothalamus, a pea-sized controller in the brain that sits pretty at the top of the menstrual hierarchy. Think of the hypothalamus as Beyoncé, the ultimate decision-maker and leader. Beyoncé interprets what’s going on in the body and then says yah or nah to specific hormone production in the bod. Her answer has a domino effect on *a lot* of menstrual cycle decisions thereafter. Imagine Beyoncé instructing her personal assistant to coordinate with her glam squad (e.g., stylist, hair and makeup team) to create the best looks for an upcoming music video. Her posse needs to work together to come up with knockout costumes and styles and then depend on the final approval from upper management, aka Queen Bey, before moving forward. So yes, a lot of peeps are involved!

    Trudging forth with our menstrual cycle class…hormones are carried to the pituitary gland, basically Beyoncé’s right-hand man (or should I say woman!). Hormones are then secreted at various sites thereafter: gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is secreted by the hypothalamus; follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) are secreted by the pituitary gland; and estrogen and progesterone are secreted by the ovaries.

    FSH and LH signal ovulation (when the ovaries release an egg). Afterward, a surge in estrogen and progesterone promotes thick uterine tissue to grow in the uterus to potentially support a pregnancy. If pregnancy does not occur, estrogen and progesterone plummet and voilà! your period arrives as your uterine lining sheds. This entire process takes place every month (unless you become pregnant or enter menopause).

    Many more hormones are involved in the picture, such as testosterone, androgen, thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), parathyroid hormone (PTH), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), prolactin, glucagon, insulin, cortisol, adrenaline, calcitonin, and human growth hormone (see the Hormonal Breakdown chart on page 8 for more information). These, and many others, work together to facilitate a menstrual cycle by acting on glands, such as the adrenal gland, thyroid gland, parathyroid gland, and of course, the ovaries!

    There is a lot of responsibility riding on the ovaries every month. The ovaries need to coordinate with the rest of the endocrine squad (hormones, glands, and organs) and be ready each month to prep the body for the undertaking of a potential pregnancy. As you can imagine, this process requires precise hormonal coordination during every single menstrual cycle, even if pregnancy does not occur.

    Hormonal Breakdown

    Hormones are extremely sensitive, but don’t worry, that’s a good thing! Hormones are influenced by a plethora of factors including the foods we eat, stress levels, lack of sleep, age, medication, and environmental conditions, such as light and temperature. The hypothalamus responds to these factors and then tells the body to either make more or less of that hormone. For example, the hypothalamus is impacted tremendously by anxiety. Anxiety has the power to inhibit the release of the hormone oxytocin, which is known as the love hormone. So, when you are feeling anxious it’s no wonder you aren’t feeling so lovey dovey!

    THE MENSTRUAL CYCLE DEETS

    The goal of the menstrual cycle is to release a single, mature ova (egg) from a huge pool of eggs. This is how the cycle works:

    The Menstrual Cycle in Action

    Believe it or not, each and every month the body is prepared to support a pregnancy. When pregnancy doesn’t occur, your period comes. A menstrual cycle can be anywhere from 21 days to 35 days. Your cycle is measured from the first day of your last period to the first day of your next period. For example, day 1 of your cycle is the first day of bleeding.

    The menstrual cycle is not black and white. Meaning, some women could have a shorter or longer cycle, could menstruate for longer than five days, could ovulate anywhere from days 10 to 18, or could have PMS the day after they ovulate or the day before their period. I’m basing the following breakdown around a 28-day cycle as a general average cycle length, but from woman to woman, there is a lot of variation. The timing below is an approximation because the menstrual cycle is not an exact science. Remember that everyone’s bodies are beautiful and uniquely different, just be aware of your own!

    Based on an average 28-day cycle, to further break it down:

    1. Menstrual Phase (days 1–5), you bleed

    2. Follicular Phase (days 6–11), getting ready to release an egg

    3. Ovulatory Phase (days 12–14), releasing of the egg

    4. Luteal Phase (days 15–28), getting ready to bleed…again. FYI, PMS can start any time after ovulation until menses onset.

    DISCLAIMER: To help you separate the phases of your cycle with hopes of learning what distinct nutrients your body needs, I’ve decided to chop up the phases this way. Although, you’ve probably learned that the follicular phase is considered the first half of your cycle, starts on the first day of your cycle, refers to all the days prior to ovulation, and could last more than 2 weeks depending on when you ovulate. Please see Follicular Phase on page 33 for more information.

    NEW PHASE, WHO THIS?

    The reproductive system is anything but basic. Each phase is roped together with intricate ups and downs that are associated with physical, emotional, cognitive, mood, sleep, and hormonal changes. You know on The Bachelor when the contestants describe the journey as an emotional roller coaster? Well, like the show, each phase of the cycle is a different and wild adventure. My advice? Hold on!

    Jokes aside, each phase of the cycle is associated with different moods, nutritional needs, thoughts, and cravings, all regulated by hormones. You may not have known this but your hormones depend on nutrients. If you are lacking a nutrient, it’s possible your hormones may be thrown off-kilter. As a result, you can feel more sluggish, extremely emotional, have low libido, or develop hormonal acne.

    Ever feel like you just can’t stop crying after watching a heartfelt music video? Personally, the music video, Happier by Marshmello featuring Bastille has sent me into a faucet for almost an hour (cue to go to a computer and watch that video if you haven’t already). It may or may not have been the hormones talking but some phases of the cycle may make you feel like you have no control over your reaction to an otherwise mundane event.

    It’s important to point out that some of us feel these symptoms more than others. Note that if you are on hormonal birth

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