One question: when did you last take a proper lunch break? Or eat dinner without checking your phone? WH reveals how to stop on-the-go eating habits from super-sizing your waistline and damaging your health.
Is your dinner table more of a laptop desk, the perfect place to spread the weekend papers or even an occasional overflow for your wardrobe? Stop to think about when you last sat down for mealtime. If you have your yoghurt on the way to work, scoffa sandwich over the keyboard or inhale a bowl of pasta on the couch while watching series, then you need to keep reading.
According to a survey of British eating habits, sixty percent of meals are consumed while watching TV. That’s if we allow ourselves to sit down long enough to watch an entire programme – the average person shovels down all three meals in a total of 23 minutes, according to the Conscious Food group, when we should be spending 20 minutes per meal for good digestion. That’s some serious fast food!
WATCHING THE CLOCK
The consequences are dire, says dietician Jennifer Nelson. Racing to prepare, cook and eat a meal puts unnecessary strain on our bodies. “The side effects of speed eating include bloating and gastrointestinal problems, such as nausea and diarrhoea, and you’re more likely to consume unwanted kilojoules and gain weight in the long term.”
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Irreconcilable Differences?
You’re one-upping your partner on all health fronts and now your relationship has more tension than your new resistance bands. Here’s how to get over the hurdle of mismatched goals.
Hot And Bothered
Inflammation is all the rage in health conversations right now and research is establishing it as a major player in all sorts of issues you don't want to deal with. But! You can safeguard yourself from the smokin' internal inferno with these smart strategies.
Self-esteem under the microscope
The term brings to mind positive-thinking memes with sunset backdrops and swirly lettering. But could I you sum up self-esteem when asked as part of a pub quiz? Didn't think so. And there's more at stake here than winning the points.
the reset
IT'S NEVER TOO LATE TO START OVER
Mind Over Muscle
Could you level up your strength training just by putting your mind to it?
ON BEING THE HEROINE OF YOUR OWN LIFE
Olympian. All-African Games winner. African champion. Record-breaker. Javelin athlete Jo-Ané van Dyk talks mental fortitude and what it takes to live up to your own hype. If there's one thing she can do, it's to throw down. And it's all about to reach peak levels.
Why Women Are Choosing to Be Child-Free
The choice can be liberating, yet stigmas persist. Here, how to cut through the noise with clarity and confidence to make the decision that's right for *you.*
FUEL YOUR SKIN
Inside your body, there's a crew of unsung protein heroes that scientists believe are the key to a healthy, glowing complexion. Heads-up: your routine is about to change for the better.
How To Be Decisive
You could use a Magic 8 ball to help you make a choice. Or, while you're waiting to 'ask again later', let our experts explain the best ways to get unstuck.
Build A Strong Base
You heard it here: the pelvic floor is the forgotten core - and you're selling yourself short by waiting for a specific life stage to train it. Your four-move workout is here.