Sunday, July 8, 2012

Food Journal Reflection


The Food/Activity Journal was really beneficial for me to take an analytical look at what I was eating, drinking, and how much exercise I was getting. I think one of the most important things I did in my Food/Activity Journal was to look at how much sleep I was getting each night. Not enough! I noticed that my eating habits were sporadic. If I would have put a time next to each time I eat, it would have shown that I go long periods without eating anything. And usually during those times, when I do eat something, it isn't a well planned, nutritious snack or meal. My work schedule during the weekend has a lot to do with that- I'm a barista and usually work long shifts without a break.
My job also helps contribute to what I'm now referring to as my coffee addiction, which is one of the things I wanted to change as my goal for the last week of my journal. The other thing I noticed was that I have terrible sleeping habits. Almost every night, I would fall asleep on my couch instead of my bed. I usually wake up about half way through the night and then sleep a few more hours in my bed. The poor sleep quality and far less than eight hours per night of sleep were a bad combination, and something that I wanted to change as part of my goal.
I feel like I've made baby steps towards my goal. The easiest goal for me to change was to alter my sleeping patterns. I've actually fallen asleep in my own bed for the last week, and slept at least (and sometimes longer than!) eight hours a night, with a few exceptions. At work, I've learned to drink water instead of making myself coffee drinks (with the exception of my cup of drip coffee when I get there, which is completely necessary for me in order to wake up and actually be nice to customers, I've found). I have another goal for myself, and that is to do more planning for what I'm going to consume during the day. If I stock up my apartment with healthy snacks and meals for the upcoming day, I will be less likely to eat what is around and available, and not necessarily nutritious.
This activity helps reinforce that what we put in our bodies have a paramount effect on us. It goes back to that old saying- you are what you eat. On the last day of class, the point was brought up that there are certain, crucial nutrients that our bodies need that we can only get from certain foods. Antioxidants found in lots of fruits and vegetables play a vital role in keeping our whole bodies healthy. In a class, we could investigate the effects of antioxidants on different systems in the body. Something I was thinking about doing with a project like the Food/Activity Journal is to have students look at what kinds of foods they are eating, and then further delve into where those foods come from, how they're processed (if they are), and look at what affect that food might have on the human body. For a math project, students could calculate the distance and gas mileage that was required to transport the food (i.e. an eggo waffle would probably start in a corn/wheat field somewhere, be transported to a processing plant, to another factory, to stores, and so on). If we had time for a project, they could even visually represent their work via a map. This was just one broad idea, and I think that there are just so many applications that a food journal could have. It makes it personal to the student, and brings up bigger ideas about where food comes from, what is done to processed food before we consume it, and what effects that may have on them.

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