Lunch at work: how to avoid the midday dip

July 28, 2015

Midday doldrums are often caused by heavy lunches and a lack of energy-inducing activities. Try the following steps to make the best out of your lunch time and start a productive afternoon work session.

Lunch at work: how to avoid the midday dip

Head outside and sit in the daylight for 10 minutes

  • Better still, have your lunch outside and divide your break between eating and a walk.
  • Here's why: your office probably has about 500 luxes of light, which is equal to about 500 candles.
  • That compares with 10,000 luxes at sunrise and 100,000 at noon on a July day.
  • So when the afternoon doldrums hit, go outside and sit in the sunlight.
  • It will help reset your chronological clock, keep down the amount of melatonin (the sleep hormone) your body produces during this circadian dip and give you a valuable boost of beneficial vitamin D, reducing your risk of osteoporosis as well as various cancers.

Take a coffee break

  • Take a brief midmorning break for tea, coffee and/or a snack.
  • Use this time to relax and refocus, but, more importantly, to consume a few calories you might otherwise eat at lunchtime.
  • Shrink the size of your lunch accordingly and the result will be less stupefying later.

Snack all day long

  • Simply snack on nutritious foods whenever you get hungry, rather than eating lunch per se – but watch portion sizes.
  • Then use your lunch break for some kind of exercise, whether it's in the company gym or walking around a park.

Eat smart

Choose activating protein, not energy-sapping carbs.

  • So a tuna salad without the bread is a better choice than a tuna sandwich.
  • A green salad sprinkled with low-fat cheese, a hard-boiled egg and some sliced turkey wins over a pasta salad. The change can really make a difference.
  • When researchers compared men who ate an 1,000-calorie lunch with those who ate a 300-calorie lunch or skipped the meal altogether, they found that when given a chance to nap after lunch, nearly all of the participants did so.
  • But while the lunch-eaters slept for an average of 90 minutes, those who skipped lunch slept for only 30 minutes.
  • These were also high-carbohydrate lunches (carbs stimulate serotonin release, which increases sleepiness), which may have contributed to the napping.
  • You shouldn't skip lunch altogether, but the combination of eating less and eating fewer carbohydrates should lead to less sleepiness.
The material on this website is provided for entertainment, informational and educational purposes only and should never act as a substitute to the advice of an applicable professional. Use of this website is subject to our terms of use and privacy policy.
Close menu