Nutrition After Pregnancy: Too Busy with the Baby to Eat?
With your amazing — and exhausting — new 24-hour job (feed baby, change
baby, burp baby, rock baby, and repeat), you barely have time to change
your clothes, shower, or think about anything that's not baby-related.
It's natural to be completely focused on your new little bundle, and
completely unfocused on your own needs — like your diet after delivery.
The problem with forgetting to eat, though, is that skipping meals
deprives you of energy. And as you've certainly figured out by now,
parenting takes lots of energy — even more energy if you're fueling a
milk-making factory and need a solid breastfeeding diet. Here's how to get the best nutrition after pregnancy when eating's the last thing on your mind (or your to-do list)
Postpartum Diet Trick 1: Snack when your baby snacks.
Your little one is eating every two to four hours now — and so
should you. Sneak in small bites of fruit, yogurt, low-fat cheese, or
whole-grain bread or muffins whenever you prepare to feed your baby —
or, if you've mastered the one-handed feed already, while
you're feeding your baby (talk about multitasking!). Stash healthy
snacks within arm's reach (almonds and raisins next to your favorite
nursing chair, a banana and a bag of crackers in your stroller bag) so
your diet after delivery keeps you satisfied. (Get more clever diet after pregnancy tips.)
Postpartum Diet Trick 2: Just say yes!
When friends ask if there's anything they can do to help, suggest
they pick up a roast chicken, a tray of lasagna, prewashed bags of salad
greens, a giant carton of fruit salad, a platter of veggies and dip, or
a dozen whole-wheat bagels (melt a slice of cheese on top of one of
those babies, and you have yourself a healthy mini-meal staple for your
diet after delivery). Try to keep your kitchen stocked with
easy-to-prepare foods you like, so that thinking about what to eat takes
no thought at all.
Postpartum Diet Trick 3: Befriend your freezer.
If you cooked in quantity while you were pregnant, now's the time
to defrost those homemade goodies and enjoy them. If you never actually
got around to following through on your make-ahead plans, stock up on
frozen dinners and snacks (look for healthy ones — your store should
carry plenty) for your diet after delivery. More nutrition after
pregnancy shortcuts: Frozen vegetables are as nutritious as fresh, and a
lot faster to prepare, and frozen fruit makes a quick smoothie when
blended with yogurt.
Postpartum Diet Trick 4: Dial up a delivery.
Nobody deserves deliveries as much as someone who's just made one
(a significant one). Tap into every delivery option available to you —
groceries (sure, you won't get to squeeze the peaches, but at least
you'll end up with some), delis, restaurants of every kind from sushi,
now that you can, to pizza. (In fact, getting good nutrition after
pregnancy should be a breeze compared to your taboo-ridden pregnancy diet!)
Consider ordering ahead a few meals, so that you'll have something to
reheat tomorrow (or tonight, when that midnight feeding leaves you
starving).
Postpartum Diet Trick 5: Plan ahead.
If you're boiling an egg for lunch, boil six so they're ready and
waiting for you tomorrow. If it's salmon salad you crave today, crack
open a large can so that you'll be able to fish for an easy snack the
next day. Bake a half-dozen potatoes at once — it's quick and easy to
warm them later (with some pre-shredded Cheddar and leftover broccoli).
Ditto brown rice — make a box, and reheat it all week. And if you
actually manage to get to the market, linger where the prepared foods
hang out (bag a rotisserie chicken, sliced roast turkey, turkey
meatloaf, ready-to-eat veggie and fruit salads). And don't forget to
visit the salad bar — heap a few dishes high with your favorites (but
keep the dressings on the side so you don't end up with limp lettuce
tomorrow).
Postpartum Diet Trick 6: Drink, drink, drink.
Keep bottles of water in every room of the house, so no matter
where you and baby are, you can grab a quick drink. To keep yourself
hydrated (dehydration leads to postpartum fatigue — something you've got plenty of already, thank you), make sure you have a drink every time baby does.
Source: http://www.whattoexpect.com/first-year/week-4/too-busy-to-eat.aspx#
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