Little Athletes Need Proper Hydration & Nutrition In Order To Perform Optimally

How are you hydrating and feeding your little (or not so little) athlete?

Eating a healthy diet ensures that your athlete is getting all the nutrients his or her body needs to produce energy and create new muscle tissue, enzymes, and other cellular structures involved in energy metabolism. Proper nutrition can also help repair damage from training as well as everyday wear and tear, and it keeps the body’s muscles, bones, joints, tendons, and organs functioning optimally.

You are taking your child to his or her sporting event. What have you provided for hydration and nutrition during and after the event?

Sadly, Americans spend hundreds of millions of dollars on energy drinks and energy bars each year. Bar and drink makers add dozens of elements to these products, including vitamins, minerals, herbs, and whey, to make you believe that you are buying something healthy. However, the active ingredients usually come down to two simple substances: sugar and caffeine. If your child is exercising at a moderate level, or sitting on the sidelines, these extra sugars just turn to fat, overwork the pancreas, and wear out adrenal glands.

Sports drinks hit $7.5 billion in sales last year alone, and according to the trade journal Beverage Digest, they are one of the top beverages consumed, after energy drinks and bottled water. But when you look at the main ingredients: water, high-fructose corn syrup, and salt, are you really giving your body what it needs to function optimally? Despite slick marketing, these drinks are not healthy, nor do they increase performance. The real problem lies in their choice of ingredients — the use of high-fructose corn syrup in particular — which should be your first tip-off that this stuff is bad news.

High-fructose corn syrup — the number one source of calories in the United States — is the most prevalent sweetener used in foods and beverages today. It has been clearly linked to the rise in obesity and metabolic syndrome. Just like other sugars, it disrupts your insulin levels, which in turn increases your risk of nearly every chronic disease there is.

Energy Rules for Athletes of All Ages

Please understand that energy and stamina do not come from sugar. Taking in simple carbs like sugar, corn syrup, pasta, or bread before an event tends to cause a quick spike in blood sugar followed by a corresponding fall, making you feel more exhausted than before. More than anything, simple carbs and excess complex carbs will make you sluggish and hamper your performance. If you want to create energy naturally, here are three simple rules to follow:

  1. Just before a game or hard workout, eat a little bit of fruit, such as an apple, plum, pear, citrus fruit (not juice), or berries. They are great right before a game or workout because they give you a small spike without the massive plummet.
  2. Two to three hours before a game or hard workout, complex carbs, fats, and a small amount of protein will do the trick. Sweet potatoes, brown rice, olive oil, almond butter, flax oil, walnuts, almonds, and eggs are all easy to digest and can give you more sustained energy for the day.
  3. Post exercise, your body is nitrogen-poor and your muscles have been broken down. That is why you need amino acids from animal proteins like chicken, beef, and eggs, as well as vegetable carbohydrates.

So, what can you use instead of sports drinks? Here is a simple recipe to help your little athlete hydrate during an event. Mix all ingredients together well and store in the refrigerator.

1/4 cup fresh lime juice

1/4 cup fresh lemon juice

2 cups cold water

1/8 tsp Himalayan salt – This salt has small amounts of many minerals we all need, whereas table salt does not.

2 tbsp natural honey – Get your honey from your local farmer. Many products labeled as honey or “natural” in grocery stores are made with high fructose corn syrup and contain little, if any, real honey.

I am part of a global movement for positive social change working to help people and the planet become healthier.

Picture of Rota Krape, RN

Rota Krape, RN

Picture of Rota Krape, RN

Rota Krape, RN

In the know

Related Stories

Healing Water for My Soul | Palmetto Bella

Healing Water for My Soul

My love for healing water is the whole point for so many of the stories I tell and that I’ve told on the pages of Bella Magazine this year. The drops of healing water in my life are the moments of loving connection with others where I get the opportunity to share life with them, and they with me, with no strings attached. Some of these encounters this year have been a brief passing moment as I exchanged glances and a smile with someone, and other encounters have been for long chapters of my life that continue. There are so many times in this chaotic year when I have felt

Read More »
Gearing Up Your Health in the New Year | Palmetto Bella

Gearing Up Your Health in the New Year

2020 isn’t going to win any awards for the difficult and unpredictable year it’s been, with its controversial presidential election, pandemic, economic hardships, racial tensions, and widespread fear and uncertainty about health and quality of life going forward. Thousands have succumbed to a newfound virus called SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19) that continues to elude medical doctors and scientists. Many of us found out that we aren’t as healthy as we thought and that we should have been taking better care of ourselves. Looking to the new year, what can we do to help our bodies become stronger and perhaps more resistant to the many pathogens out there? Perhaps

Read More »
A CAUSE FOR Celebration | Palmetto Bella

A CAUSE FOR Celebration

Appalachians tend to be very independent and content with their lives. They live close to nature and have a deeply held belief in God. They are friendly, kind, and helpful to one another, and they take care of the needs of others. Appalachians also have a strong sense of what is right, and of what ought to be. When I was still working as a nurse, we lived in a small town in western North Carolina. The population was mostly poor and set in their ways. Because they did not take kindly to people from “outside,” it took a long time for me to make friends with our neighbors, who

Read More »
HOW TO Celebrate the Holidays WITH SPECIAL DIETARY NEEDS | Palmetto Bella

HOW TO Celebrate the Holidays WITH SPECIAL DIETARY NEEDS

In 2008 I finally figured out that the health problems I had been experiencing for over a year were due to food allergies and sensitivities. There were a number of foods that caused my symptoms, the primary ones being gluten grains (wheat, rye, barley), corn, soy, and milk. I began to feel much better during the summer after I eliminated these foods. During the fall I began thinking about the Thanksgiving and Christmas holiday meals that would be coming up. I could not eat the traditional turkey dressing, green bean casserole, sweet potato casserole, or my mom’s pecan pie. Even the canned cranberry sauce was off-limits for me because it

Read More »