Holiday Cheer Diabetes Style

Now is the time for moderation

Now one poor choice of a meal or binging on snacks one time isn’t going to undo all the hard work you’ve put in the rest of the year, but string together a week of decadent overindulgence and problems may start to occur.

Here come the holidays!  If you’re a diabetic, it’s that time of the year when you have to be extra vigilant.

The constant snacking, huge festive meals and the endless parties create a dangerous temptation to break with healthy eating habits in favor gluttonous indulgence. The fact that it is winter in the Northern Hemisphere doesn’t help matters as many of us are hibernate mode and  are less physically active as a consequence

“Eating and meal planning are essential components of controlling diabetes.  But, the holidays thrust diabetics into situations that demand they resist the constant allure to overeat,”   Mimosa Nguyen,  a registered dietitian told Diabetics Weekly.

The path to managing these enticements, Nguyen said, is the same focus needed to control diabetes employed over the course of the rest of the year.

Nguyen encourages diabetics to employ foresight, suggesting they enquire after party hosts regarding the party menu so they can better navigate how to stick to their healthy regime.

She recommends that diabetics temper their eating: choosing only healthy options and avoiding overeating.

“You need to remain in control,”  Nguyen insists, “Holidays can be an anxiety riddled time of the year and often we overeat when we feel stressed. So, diabetics need to be extra so that they don’t undermine healthy routine they have stuck to during the rest of the year.

“Try to remain active,” the dietician says. “After meals take a walk. Don’t  let the winter weather inhibit you from getting the exercise you need. She also suggests that if you’re at a party, don’t position yourself right by the food, noting that proximity to temptation makes resistance more difficult.

Now one poor choice of a meal or binging on snacks one time isn’t going to undo all the hard work you’ve put in the rest of the year, but string together a week of decadent overindulgence and problems may start to occur. But if you do fall from the path, Nguyen says don’t beat yourself up. Rather, get back your healthy routine as quickly as possible.