Every afternoon, is your office suddenly filled with workers who are lethargic and cranky? Are you one of them?
The culprit likely is the eating free-for-all that takes place during the holidays. Eating too much high-sugar, high-carbohydrate, high-fat food can produce an office full of people who lack energy and are moody.
"We talk about comfort food making us feel better," said Dr. Henry Emmons. "And it does — for half an hour or 45 minutes. An hour or two later, our energy drops, our mood drops and we can feel more anxious."
And if we really overdo it, "it doesn't stop at the end of the holidays," he warned. "You can get into a pattern that continues for months."
Nonetheless, the office holiday pig-out remains a tradition. In addition to potluck buffets, many co-workers bring in brownies, cookies and cupcakes to share with their office mates.
They don't bring bunches of bananas. That's also part of the tradition.
"Most people equate the holidays with sugar bombs," said Dr. Gregory Plotnikoff. "That's strictly social conditioning and marketing. There's nothing natural to that."
Emmons and Plotnikoff are part of a movement to change eating habits by making people aware of how the food we eat can affect everything from bad breath to mental health. Emmons, a psychiatrist at Minneapolis-based Partners in Resilience, is author of the books "The Chemistry of Joy" and "The Chemistry of Calm." Plotnikoff is an integrative-medicine physician at the Penny George Institute for Health and Healing in Minneapolis and author of "Trust Your Gut."