It鈥檚 time to ditch lunch with your computer. Get your blood pumping instead, and you could wind up a more efficient worker all afternoon, no extra screen time required.
鈥淓xercise, particularly intense exercise, for just 30 minutes can increase brain plasticity, science-speak for improved memory,鈥 says . Just 20 minutes of aerobic activity at 60 to 70 percent of your max heart rate, researchers have found, . The final result of your lunchtime exercise: a supercharged afternoon in which you鈥檒l likely get more done than you would have if you鈥檇 stayed glued to your chair, not to mention a big step toward your training goals.
The right way to do it: Work out, and then eat lunch. 鈥淓xercise has powerful effects on insulin sensitivity,鈥 Roussell says. 鈥淪o exercising before you eat improves your body's ability to shuttle those lunchtime carbs to your muscles and away from your fat cells.鈥
When you鈥檙e eating, eat; don鈥檛 do anything else. Chowing down in front of your computer screen can make you eat more calories at that meal鈥攁nd later in the day, Roussell says. In a published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, researchers found that people who ate in front of a computer screen鈥攕tudy participants played video games鈥攁te two times more cookies later in the day than the people who didn't eat in front of the screen. The people who ate in front of the screen also reported feeling less full from their meal.聽
鈥淪atiety is a cascade of signals that we need to recognize and pay attention to for them to work the most effectively,鈥 says Roussell. If you鈥檙e answering emails, chatting with the guy next to you, and trying to finish up a report, you鈥檙e not giving your food your full attention. That could compromise your feelings of satiety, he adds. Eat in the break room. When you get back to your desk, you鈥檒l be satisfied鈥攁nd you might finally come up with that elusive million-dollar idea.