My
afternoon food fades. Had them all my life. I remember in high
school hoping any complicated classes would be in the morning because I knew
I’d be dozing through class in the afternoons. Later, as an adult, I
figured out the connection to food, to what I had for lunch. I assumed it
was a blood sugar issue and tried to figure it out from that perspective.
Maybe too much. Maybe too little. I could never get the
pattern. Maybe gluten. Maybe MSG. Preservatives? No
suspect held up to repetition. Then by chance during a fade, I checked my
blood pressure. Well actually, Judy thought to check it and told me to do
it. My blood pressure was very low. Both numbers were below a
hundred.
I
checked with Hal. We sorted through hypoglycemia and hypotension and
settled on the latter. It’s not a big deal. Nothing to
medicate. It’s just a thing, but now it has a name. Post Prandial
Hypotension. A sudden drop in blood pressure after a meal. Food
fades. The solution? I continue to do what I’ve been doing all my
adult life; watch for patterns and avoid the foods that make me crash.
It’s a whole lot easier to pick out the patterns now though, since I’m no
longer trying to correlate with blood sugar. Black coffee in the morning
is fine. I’ve figured out a safe breakfast. A couple snacks for
lunch, and dinner doesn’t seem to matter so much. It’s working.
Mom
had it too. Two o’clock in the afternoon she’d have to lie down on the
front room couch and take a nap for an hour. She always wanted to be back
up again by the time I got home from school, but sometimes she was still
asleep. She never made the connection to what she had for lunch or blood
pressure. I got there but it took me a long time. And I had more
resources available to help me figure it out.