Mindful Eating: Transform Your Relationship with Food

In today’s fast-paced world, it’s easy to rush through meals without fully enjoying or noticing what you eat. Mindful eating offers a powerful way to reconnect with your food and your body’s natural signals. By slowing down and paying attention, you can cultivate a healthier and more enjoyable relationship with eating.

What Is Mindful Eating?

Mindful eating is about being present and fully aware during meals. It involves tuning into the flavors, textures and smells of your food while also paying attention to hunger cues and emotions. Unlike traditional dieting, mindful eating isn’t focused on restrictions, but instead on listening to your body’s needs and enjoying food without guilt.

Benefits of Mindful Eating

Practicing mindful eating offers several benefits:

  • Better digestion: Eating slowly and chewing thoroughly can improve digestion and nutrient absorption.
  • Weight management: Being mindful helps prevent overeating, making it easier to recognize when you’re full.
  • Enhanced enjoyment: Savoring each bite can make meals more pleasurable and satisfying.
  • Reduced emotional eating: Mindfulness can help you identify triggers for stress eating and make healthier choices.
  • Improved relationship with food: By removing guilt and judgment, mindful eating fosters a more positive outlook on eating.

How to Practice Mindful Eating

Here are simple steps to incorporate mindful eating into your daily routine:

  1. Eliminate distractions: Turn off the TV, put your phone away, and sit at a designated eating spot.
  2. Take a moment of gratitude: Before eating, pause to appreciate your food—where it came from, who prepared it, and its nourishment.
  3. Engage your senses: Notice the colors, textures, and aromas while you’re eating your meal. Take your first bite slowly and savor the flavors.
  4. Chew thoroughly: Aim to chew each bite around 20-30 times, which aids digestion and allows you to enjoy the full taste of your food.
  5. Eat slowly: Put your utensils on the table or on your plate in between bites and take breaks during your meal.
  6. Tune into hunger and fullness: Check in with yourself throughout the meal to gauge your hunger level. Stop eating when you feel satisfied, not stuffed.
  7. Acknowledge your emotions: Notice if you’re eating due to stress, boredom, or sadness. If so, consider non-food ways to cope, like deep breathing or a short walk.

Mindful Eating Exercise

Try this exercise with a small piece of fruit, like a raisin or a slice of orange:

  • Hold the fruit and observe its shape, color, and texture.
  • Bring it to your nose and smell it.
  • Place it in your mouth without chewing and notice how it feels.
  • Slowly chew and pay attention to the sensations and flavors.

Mindful eating is a simple but impactful practice that encourages a balanced and joyful approach to food. It may take time to break old habits, but each mindful bite brings you closer to a healthier and more harmonious relationship with eating.

Start small and be patient with yourself. Over time, mindful eating can become a natural and rewarding part of your life.

Here’s to savoring every bite and living well!

Indigestion Issues?

Indigestion, also known as dyspepsia, is the uncomfortable feeling you get in your belly usually during a meal or after. It usually comes with bloating, nausea or vomiting, belching, and gas. In some cases, you can feel it while or after having a drink (alcoholic or non-alcoholic). It can occur after eating spicy or fatty foods, food high in acidity, and from overeating. It is usually the symptom of an underlying problem like gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), ulcers, gallbladder disease, or irritable bowel syndrome just to name a few.

If you are having indigestion issues and are tired of taking prescription or over-the-counter medications, you might have already started looking into natural remedies to help you overcome those issues. There are many natural remedies to choose from, but there are a few that stand out the most and actually top of the list when helping ease the pain and comfortability of indigestion and all that it brings.

There are some preventive measures that can be taken to minimize indigestion symptoms. These would be the first line of defense to combat indigestion. Such as frequently eating smaller meals. You can do this by eating a small meal or snack every 2 to 3 hours. Also, eating at a slower pace can help your indigestion; it also reminds you to eat more mindfully. Limiting your caffeine intake and increasing your water intake are also good ways to help with indigestion. Make sure not to eat too late in the evening, this actually causing the heartburn, acid reflux, and indigestion that you are working to combat. Adding whole foods to your diet such as lean meat, fruits and vegetables are a great way to get your body healthy and avoid upset stomach and avoiding spicy foods.

Sometimes it can be hard to remember to do all these things (especially avoiding spicy foods in my case), so there are other natural remedies out there that will help with indigestion as well. These are the top few I found while doing my research:

  • Baking soda – acts as an antacid
    • Mix about 1/2 a teaspoon baking soda with a cup of water.
    • Can drink up to 2 to 3 times daily.
  • Ginger – promotes healthy digestion
    • You can add ginger as a spice to your meal.
    • You can make yourself a ginger tea to drink.
    • You can add 2 teaspoons of ginger juice and 1 teaspoon of honey to a warm cup of water to drink.
  • Apple Cider Vinegar – has alkalizing effect
    • Mix a tablespoon of ACV and a teaspoon of honey in a cup of water.
    • Can drink up to 2 to 3 times daily.
  • Fennel Seeds – contain volatile oils that help reduce nausea and control flatulence
    • In a cup of hot water, add 2 tablespoons of fennel and leave it to steep for a while. Strain the water and add a teaspoon of honey. Can drink up to 2 to 3 times daily.
    • You can chew a spoonful of fennel seeds.
    • You can dry roast, grind, and sieve fennel seeds. Take 1/2 a teaspoon of this powder along with water. Follow this remedy twice daily.
  • Chamomile – calms the stomach and soothes spasms in the intestinal tract
    • You can take a half-teaspoon chamomile tincture up to three times daily.
    • You can have a nice cup of chamomile tea.
  • Peppermint – the oil soothes intestinal muscle spasms and helps relieve nausea
    • You can take one or two capsules containing 0.2 milliliters of oil per capsule three times a day, between meals.
    • You can have a nice cup of peppermint tea.
  • Aloe vera juice – reduces inflammation
    • If you have a 1/2 cup of aloe vera juice before a meal, it will settle your stomach.
    • It is also a laxative, so be mindful that you will probably need to be near a bathroom.

There are plenty more remedies out there, what are some you have tried?