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    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    The Case for Making Time for Meals

    Last Modified: Feb 5, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

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    Does this sound like you?

    • Breakfast: eaten one-handed while youโ€™re running around getting ready to go.
    • Lunch: scarfed down at your desk while youโ€™re working on three different things at once.
    • Dinner: sometimes at home, sometimes in the car, or eaten out of a Tupperware at some random place (kids' piano lessons, the gym, the doctor's waiting room...).
    Making Time for Meals

    Itโ€™s understandable: weโ€™re all busy, and food seems like such an incredible time suck sometimes. Who has the time to actually sit down and eat a whole meal after youโ€™ve already spent all the time cooking Paleo food from scratch? If you made time for a full breakfast, youโ€™d have to get less sleep, and isnโ€™t that bad, too? What's anyone supposed to do?

    The problem everyone always talks about with eating on the run is what youโ€™re eating: itโ€™s the way โ€œeating in the carโ€ typically means โ€œeating fast food in the car.โ€ But even if youโ€™re eating healthy food, cramming it down on the go isnโ€™t ideal. So hereโ€™s the case for making it a priority to sit down and pay a little more attention to your food, at least at dinner time.

    Satiety and Food Intake

    The first reason to sit down and eat calmly is that youโ€™re much less likely to overeat.

    On Paleo, the idea is that you donโ€™t have to count calories because youโ€™re not eating food that wreaks havoc on your hunger cues, so can just listen to your body to tell you when itโ€™s full. But if youโ€™re paying attention to your email while mechanically shoveling in food with the other hand, youโ€™re not listening to your body at all. If youโ€™re distracted, that feeling of โ€œIโ€™m fullโ€ doesnโ€™t appear as quickly, and it isnโ€™t as strong:

    This study studied people eating in four situations: driving, watching TV, talking to other people, or just eating alone. Among their findings:

    • People who watched TV ate the most.
    • People who ate alone had a lower desire to eat after finishing their food, but people who were driving did not. (In other words, eating didnโ€™t make them any less hungry).

    Given the same amount of food, the distracted subjects felt less full after eating.

    This study also found that women who ate while playing a computer game didnโ€™t feel as satisfied by their food as women who werenโ€™t distracted. If the distracted hadnโ€™t been given a set amount of food by the researchers, they probably would have eaten more than the non-distracted women in order to โ€œfeel full.โ€

    This effect is especially true if the meal is also energy-dense (think: trail mix, guacamole, dried fruit, Paleo โ€œbarsโ€ and treats). Eating in a hurry may also be independently associated with overeating, regardless of distraction.

    This effect means that eating while distracted makes you much more likely to overeat, relative to your bodyโ€™s actual needs. It takes more food to make you feel full, because the satiety signals have to shout over all the other noise in your brain before you can hear them. And youโ€™re eating faster, so you eat more bites before that feeling of โ€œIโ€™m not hungry any longerโ€ gets to your brain. Those natural signals that do away with the need to count calories are effectively gone.

    This might be one reason that eating family dinners is strongly associated with protection against obesity for children and teenagers, especially when the relationships at the table are positive. Taking your time over a meal is very beneficial for your weight, compared to neglecting the food while you worry about something else.

    If you canโ€™t sit down:

    • Donโ€™t eat out of the bag. Instead, serve yourself however much you want to eat, and put the container away. This will help prevent overeating even if you arenโ€™t paying attention, because there just wonโ€™t be any more food within easy grabbing reach.
    • Replace family mealtimes with other ways of communicating โ€“ movie night, game night, or even just talking in the car.

    Nutrition

    Another problem with eating on the run is the type of foods most people turn to. And itโ€™s not just junk food: even if youโ€™re eating Paleo, you might still not be getting the best nutrition.

    For the one thing, vegetables are a pain in the neck to speed-eat. Theyโ€™re bulky, theyโ€™re hard to transport, they take a long time to eat, you often have to use utensils instead of your hands โ€“ if youโ€™re looking for something to grab and go or eat in the car, vegetables arenโ€™t great.

    Accordingly, most people tend to skimp a lot on vegetables when theyโ€™re rushing through a meal โ€“ instead, theyโ€™ll turn to something like Paleo granola bars or trail mix. But using nuts like this as a staple food is not in the spirit of Paleo, even though it technically fits the letter. Thereโ€™s not enough protein, too much Omega-6 fat, and again, nuts are very easy to overeat.

    paleo bagwithapple

    If you canโ€™t sit down:

    • Pack carrot sticks, pepper strips, or other finger-friendly vegetables with the meals you grab on the go.
    • Try one of these make-ahead breakfast ideas instead of nuts for a quick protein source. A lot of them are finger-friendly.
    • Try Mason jar salads for a quick way to bring more vegetables to work for lunch.

    Stress and Digestion

    Stress is another reason why rushed meals arenโ€™t great. Sit-down meals give us time to relax, slow down, and switch from โ€œfight or flightโ€ mode back to โ€œrest and digest.โ€ Taking time to relax at lunch can help prevent any morning stress from snowballing into a nightmare in the afternoon: you get a break and some perspective when you get back. Winding down at dinner can help you relax after anything that might have happened during the workday, so it doesnโ€™t keep you up at night.

    In other words, traditional meals help you manage the constant influx of stress that comes with the modern world โ€“ take them out, and youโ€™ve done away with a major stress management tool.

    That would be bad enough, but trying to eat while youโ€™re in โ€œfight or flightโ€ mode also has negative consequences for digestion. High-stress โ€œfight or flightโ€ mode means that blood is directed away from your intestines and into your muscles, exactly the opposite of where you want it for digestion. If youโ€™ve ever felt like the food "sits like a brick in your stomach" after eating when youโ€™re really tense and stressed, thatโ€™s one reason why.

    If you canโ€™t sit down:

    • Find another form of stress management to replace the benefit you would otherwise get from meals. For example, you could take up meditation, journaling, or some kind of art or handicraft-type hobby.
    • Reduce stress while you eat. If you have to eat while you work, try to do it while working calmly, not while youโ€™re frantically rushing to meet a deadline. If you have to eat in the car, take a deep breath and let go of any road rage before you take a bite.

    Summing it Up

    Cramming down meals on the go just isnโ€™t ideal. It makes most people more likely to overeat, itโ€™s stressful (which can really mess with digestion), and it tends to steer people towards less-healthy meals even if theyโ€™re eating Paleo food and not drive-thru. There are some ways to do damage control, like making an effort to pack fresh vegetables or manage how much youโ€™re eating โ€“ and itโ€™s absolutely better to do them than not. But the best is to sit down, eat calmly, and savor your food: itโ€™s healthier, and itโ€™s also much more pleasurable.

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