Skip to content
Buy Any 2 Items, Get 20% OFF Sitewide. Shop Now

NTBAY HOME

What the longest-living people in the world eat, drink, and do before bed for restful sleep?

by PR NTBAY 26 Jul 2021 0 comments
What the longest-living people in the world eat, drink, and do before bed for restful sleep? - NTBAY® HOME

What the longest-living people in the world eat, drink, and do before bed for restful sleep

  What are the Blue Zones, you ask? This term refers to the five regions in the world—Okinawa, Japan; Sardinia, Italy; Nicoya, Costa Rica; Ikaria, Greece; and Loma Linda, California—where people not only regularly live into the triple digits, but their minds and bodies are both still working well. 

  National Geographic journalist Dan Buettner has been reporting on these regions extensively for years, and dubbed them Blue Zones. Each region has (of course) its own distinct habits, cuisine, and culture, but all five places share a few values: Maintaining a strong sense of purpose, eating mostly plant-based, and moving every day are three such examples. Another is valuing low levels of stress, which naturally means restful sleep is a top priority.

1. The people in the Blue Zones typically avoid foods with added sugar—before bed and always.

  It's too simplistic to say sugar = bad, because there are many different kinds of sugar (17, to be exact). But the one that is problematic for your health is added sugar. The food that people in the Blue Zones eat generally does not contain added sugar, unless it's for a celebration. Rather, in these regions, eating sugar isn't a habit, and the people living in them tend to be intentional about consuming it.

  When it comes to sleep, studies have shown that consuming added sugars before bed contributes to more restless, disrupted sleep, as well as taking longer to fall asleep in the first place. This is largely due to the blood sugar spike and drop that typically occur after consuming added sugar.

2. They drink green tea (lots and lots of it) in the Blue Zones.

  Tea is one of the only beverages people in Blue Zones drink (the others are water, coffee, and red wine). "Okinawans nurse green tea all day long—and green tea has been shown to lower the risk of heart disease and several cancers," according to the Blue Zones' website. One of the many benefits of green tea is that it doesn't lead to crashes the way coffee can, yet it's also full of antioxidants.

  If you are sensitive to even small amounts of caffeine, no sweat. Sip on herbal tea like chamomile or mint before bed (or later in the day) instead.

  This matcha green tea powder from BLK & BOLD checks all the health-boosting boxes and tastes great when served hot or cold. “Matcha is chock-full of catechins—aka ECGC—which contain anti-inflammatory and cancer-fighting compounds,” Tracy Lockwood Beckerman, RD, previously told Well+Good. “These helpful antioxidants go after inflammation in the body and work to repair and heal the damage.”

3. They drink red wine after 5 p.m. and in moderation.

  You may be surprised to find this one on the list, and Buettner readily admits that there's controversy around couching alcohol as being beneficial to health—let alone sleep—in any way. "I'm well aware of the recent studies around alcohol showing that it increases the chance of breast cancer in women, or that it can cause falls, car crashes, and other fatal events," he says. "But I can tell you that in all five Blue Zones, they drink a little bit every day and it adds to their quality of life," he says. “If you drink a little bit of red wine with a plant-based meal, it will about quadruple the flavonoid or antioxidant absorption and lower cortisol levels at the end of the day,” he also previously told Well+Good. We'll also caveat this by noting that neuroscientist Kristen Willeumier, PhD told Well+Good that "alcohol is initially sedating, [but] once it is metabolized, it can lead to disrupted, poor quality of sleep later in the night."

  “Sardinians are famous for their daily consumption of the robust, regional red wine called Cannonau,” says Buettner. If you’re on the hunt for the red wine of choice for those in the Blue Zones, this is it. Cannonau di Sardegna, the local name for grenache, has two to three times the amount of flavonoids (a type of antioxidant) as compared to other red wines.

4. People in the Blue Zones don't often eat right before bed.

  In Okinawa, Japan, they are careful to leave plenty of time between their last meal of the day and when they get into bed for the night—most make dinner the smallest meal of the day, and they eat it in the early evening. “Food triggers our body’s release of insulin, which works in opposition to the body’s sleep hormone, melatonin. Eating too much or too close to bed could diminish your body’s melatonin production and make it harder to fall asleep,” Whitney English Tabaie, RDN, previously told Well+Good.

5. They eat breads made from whole grains.

  Bleached white flour doesn't have a place on menus in the Blue Zones, but that doesn't mean all bread is off-limits. People in these regions often eat breads made with whole grains like rye and barley, which contain nutrients and minerals like tryptophan and magnesium; the former helps increase serotonin levels, which is a precursor to melatonin production, and the latter helps with relaxation and good sleep.

Original link: https://www.wellandgood.com/blue-zones-sleep-foods/

Sample Block Quote

Praesent vestibulum congue tellus at fringilla. Curabitur vitae semper sem, eu convallis est. Cras felis nunc commodo eu convallis vitae interdum non nisl. Maecenas ac est sit amet augue pharetra convallis.

Sample Paragraph Text

Praesent vestibulum congue tellus at fringilla. Curabitur vitae semper sem, eu convallis est. Cras felis nunc commodo eu convallis vitae interdum non nisl. Maecenas ac est sit amet augue pharetra convallis nec danos dui. Cras suscipit quam et turpis eleifend vitae malesuada magna congue. Damus id ullamcorper neque. Sed vitae mi a mi pretium aliquet ac sed elitos. Pellentesque nulla eros accumsan quis justo at tincidunt lobortis deli denimes, suspendisse vestibulum lectus in lectus volutpate.
Prev post
Next post

Leave a comment

All blog comments are checked prior to publishing

Someone recently bought a

Thanks for subscribing!

This email has been registered!

Shop the look

Choose options

Recently viewed

Edit option
Back In Stock Notification
Terms & conditions
What is Lorem Ipsum? Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book. It has survived not only five centuries, but also the leap into electronic typesetting, remaining essentially unchanged. It was popularised in the 1960s with the release of Letraset sheets containing Lorem Ipsum passages, and more recently with desktop publishing software like Aldus PageMaker including versions of Lorem Ipsum. Why do we use it? It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using 'Content here, content here', making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for 'lorem ipsum' will uncover many web sites still in their infancy. Various versions have evolved over the years, sometimes by accident, sometimes on purpose (injected humour and the like).

Choose options

this is just a warning
Login
Shopping cart
0 items

Enjoy 10% off your order at checkout!

10% OFF

Your discount will be applied automatically at checkout!

Proceed to Checkout
Recommended3