Food provides energy for physical activity. As you become more active
and more fit, your energy needs (how many calories you need) may change. To get
the energy you require, you need to get the proper amount of:
- Protein, which is needed to maintain and rebuild
tissues such as muscles.
- Carbohydrate, which is the body's preferred source of
energy.
- Fat, which also provides energy.
- Water, to
replace water lost through activity.
Food guides, which group foods according to
the nutrients they provide, are designed to help you get all the nutrients you
need by eating the proper amount of foods from several different groups. (See
the food
guide pyramid
.) Eating a diet that is varied, balanced, and moderate can
provide you with all the nutrients the body needs without getting too much or
too little of any one nutrient.
- Balance means eating the
recommended number of servings from each food group most
days.
- Variety within each food group (for
example, eating different fruits from the fruit group instead of eating only
apples) ensures that you will get all the nutrients you need, since no one food
provides every nutrient. Eating a wide variety of foods will also help you
avoid eating too much of any substance that may be harmful.
- Moderation means eating a little of everything but nothing in
excess. There are no good foods or bad foods. There are only good and bad
diets. All foods can fit into a healthy diet if you eat everything in
moderation.
Those who are very active or who are athletes may have special
nutritional needs. They usually don't need more protein than other people, but
they do need more carbohydrate (grains, vegetables, fruits) than the amount
recommended for the average person. Carbohydrate is stored as ready energy in
the liver and muscles, and this supply is used up very quickly during exercise.
Endurance athletes (such as runners and cyclists) need a particularly large
amount of carbohydrate. The carbohydrate needs to be eaten right before and
during exercise because the body cannot store a lot of carbohydrate.
For a better understanding of your own nutritional requirements, talk
to a sports doctor or dietitian. That's wiser than listening to friends or
fellow athletes, because myths about eating are common, and athletes are
usually
no better informed about nutrition than the average person. For more
information, see the topic Healthy Eating.