Eating Too Fast
Speed eaters are not necessarily overweight but
they might experience other health problems such as reflux, indigestion
(‘heartburn’), and possibly even food poisoning. Some people are simply in
a hurry to gobble down their ordinary sized meal. It is when speed eaters
regularly move on to eat more that weight gain becomes a problem. Fast eating
may lead to overeating but not in every person.
Why do some speed eaters overeat?
The
stomach, small intestine and a complex array of hormones and brain chemicals
regulate appetite and satiety but it appears that they are too slow to
kick in.
The popular thought is that it takes 15 to 20
minutes before the brain realises that the stomach has received enough food and
you do not need anymore.
How does speed eating increase risk of reflux and
indigestion?
Speed eating equals lazy chewing. Over-sized
boluses of food are sent hurtling down the food pipe and the food is squeezed
through the gastro-esophageal junction. If you flush each bite down with a
drink, then you have gotten the ingredients for indigestion and reflux. The other speed eating trap for reflux and indigestion is when too
much food is crammed in too quickly; the stomach is simply over filled and
over-flowing.
Early treatment for reflux is exactly the
opposite to speed eating behaviours. Treatment advice is to slow down eating,
separate fluids from food, make the bite-size small and chew really well before
swallowing.
What has food poisoning got to do with speed
eating?
Although not all poisoned or contaminated food is
detected by an off smell, tainted taste or suspicious appearance, some is. If
you gulp it down bad food too fast, you may not notice an off or bad taste or
smell until it is too late.
Why do you speed eat?
The pace of eating is influenced by external
triggers (dining atmosphere, sounds, colours, lighting), whether you are in the
company of other slow or fast eaters, and have a sense of urgency to move on
and do other things.
We try to blame ourselves for being time-poor but if you set the
alarm to get up 5 minutes earlier and you get 30 minutes for lunch then there
is no need to rush the food down.
How long should you take to consume a meal?
How long you take really depends on what you are
eating - the texture and amount served. It is not possible to put a hard and
fast ‘time target’ for any meal.
If you are always first to finish regardless of
what the meal is, slow down. For some
people, it is not the duration of the single meal but rather how long between
courses that matters more. Wait about 20 minutes before you choose whether to
have more.
Tips to slow down the speed eater.
Even though slowing down is a hard thing to do
for speed eaters who get no feedback like ‘heartburn’, reflux or indigestion,
it can be done with a small amount of practice.
With practice and armed with a few tips they can
slow down:-
1. Start by changing the environment in which you
dine. Be selective about who you dine with. Avoid fast eaters. Avoid
distracting and cluttered dining spaces.
2. Avoid stressful and excitable conversations at
dining time.
3. Find the slowest eater at the table and mirror
that person’s pace. Watch and mirror their every move including how much food
they load on their utensils, when they put the utensils down, and the pace they
lift the fork or spoon to the mouth.
4. Add conversation to the table and apply the
etiquette of not talking with your mouthful.
5. Avoid eating with people you would rather not
be with.
6. Put relaxing music on rather than high paced
music.
7. Find a relaxing place to dine at rather than
in a food court or at your desk.
8. Send your computer, phone or mobile tablet to
sleep to avoid sudden text, message, phone and email interruptions that
demand a quick swallow and hastened reply.
8. Dim the lighting. Perhaps use candles at night
to create a relaxed feel.
9. Program your smart phone to timer mode or
metronome beat and set your eating pace to match a preset slow interval.
10. If you watch the big screen whilst
eating, avoid stressful news broadcasts or high-paced game shows. Tune into
something more relaxing or choose a calm, slow paced DVD.
11. Avoid allowing yourself to get over-hungry.
It is harder to slow down the pace when you are very hungry.
12. Do not automatically buy a dessert when you
buy lunch. Eat the savoury part of lunch slowly. Then walk away and wait until
the very end of your lunch break to decide whether you are still truly hungry
for something more.
13. Do not set your heart on dessert the minute
you look at a restaurant’s menu and do not order it as soon as the wait-staff
clean away the main course plates. Wait at least 10 minutes - with a bit
of luck, they will be equally slow at delivering the final course. By then,
your brain may have had enough time to ‘see’ how full the stomach feels.
14. Put utensils down between each mouthful. This
popular recommendation is hard to keep doing because old habits die
hard. A ready-loaded fork is an entrenched and automatic habit so
practice, practice, practice or shift to toddler sized utensils or swap
to chopsticks used in the wrong hand.
As usual, we remind you to take your Memo Plus
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