For many Veterans, eating fast began with basic training. Consuming food has always been something you do to survive, and eating is a considerable aggravation for drill instructors given the short time frame to equip new troops. Digesting food fast during mealtime can last through your time in service. We must adapt and overcome.

Some of the effects of poor eating habits on your overall health

Consistently eating fast can have lasting effects on your overall health and well-being. Some of the short term effects include excessive bloating, elevated blood pressure, increased blood sugar levels and decreased nutrients to the body. Long-term effects include increased chances for obesity, metabolic syndrome, diabetes and gastritis.

According to Ann MacDonald at the Harvard Medical Blog, eating slower may help you feel full faster. “Scientists have known for some time that a full stomach is only part of what causes someone to feel satisfied after a meal. The brain must also receive a series of signals from digestive hormones secreted by the gastrointestinal tract. Research suggests that leptin amplifies the signals that enhance the feeling of fullness.

“Other research suggests that leptin also interacts with the neurotransmitter dopamine in the brain to produce a feeling of pleasure after eating. The theory is that by eating too quickly, people may not give this intricate hormonal cross-talk system enough time to work.” We know that modifying how you eat and slowing down when eating can prove challenging for those who served.

Benefits of Whole Health on food and drink and components of health

Whole Health strives to achieve the VA mission: “Honor America’s Veterans by providing exceptional health care that improves their health and well-being.” One component of Whole Health includes mindfulness and is every part of your health. Mindfulness uses the senses to pay attention to your likes and dislikes. Being aware of the food you eat urges you to focus on the smells, surfaces, flavors and tastes of food. You may then become more conscious of the food you are eating and be able to make better decisions with your choices. As a result, you may experience fewer episodes of binge eating, emotional eating and pleasure eating.

Practices to eat mindfully include using chopsticks, using your non-dominant hand, eating while sitting down and avoid watching a tv or media device. You can also try practicing gratitude for the meal, chew your food ten to fifteen times per bite, take a sip between bites, put proper portions on your plate and try to make the meal last at least twenty minutes.

Whole Health has a variety of additional services available to assist Veterans with reaching their goals in all aspects related to their health and well-being. In addition to mindfulness, Whole Health Coaching and Whole Health Partner support is also available, offering individual and group settings. Whole Health coaches and partners work with Veterans and employees to improve their well-being by making the lasting changes that align with their values so they can achieve behavioral change.

Services to assist in reaching your goals

Circle of Health

Some offerings include “Taking Charge of My Life and Health” sessions, independent Whole Health coaching, healthy eating courses and tobacco cessation support. In addition to coaching and partner support, complimentary integrative health services assist Veterans in their journey toward healthier eating. Those additional services include nutrition resource support, I-Rest Meditation, Deeper Dive, Mindful Warrior and Self-Hypnosis. Other ancillary resources to guide you in living your best life include the MOVE! Program.

The Circle of Health is a visual picture of the Whole Health approach to care. This helps you explore connections between important aspects of your life and your health and well-being. Fill out your Personal Health Inventory, then share it with a trusted source, a friend, a health care provider or mental health clinician, and start living Whole Health today.

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6 Comments

  1. Paul Radford June 12, 2023 at 22:05

    Okay guys. Let’s give the Doc and the VA a break here. Yes, we all were programmed to wolf our food without a thought given to taste. In some ways I’m grateful for it. Part of my service included many LRRPs where silently wolfing nasty cold rations was a necessity. And when the SHTF quickly gobbling down whatever was easy to get to was often the only way to get a much needed energy boost. But, surely you know we weren’t always under the gun! And proper eating habits was widely disseminated in all media and fairly common knowledge way back in the 70’s. Most of know know at least a little about this subject. This article is just trying to let us know that we can do better, if we want to, and the VA has tools we can use to help in that mission.

  2. Michael Thorpe May 26, 2023 at 09:31

    If I remember right, I made a conscious choice to join the military and abide by their governing rules. Now, I can blame the military or now the VA because personnel at the VA are writing information that I can CHOOSE to use or complain about. I have found in my own past that once I found a way to regulate my mental health then I can work forward on other issues: eating habits, poor sleep, confusion, etc. Life is all about choices so when are you going to make the right choices? Be blessed.

  3. Red Hoffman May 22, 2023 at 05:28

    I went through BCT in early 1977. During every meal we were allowed 3-5 minutes to eat. The mess hall only accommodated about 20 soldiers and as soon as that last seat was filled, you were required to be done with your meal and get up and out the door so the next soldier in line would have a place to sit. This method of eating became the norm for every meal since. Is it the VAs plan to negate the mental programming when it comes to eating by throwing a blog describing the VA thoughts of how to properly eat to make things better? Like my obesity, my heart problems, my diabetes and all related problems I have been dealing with since I retired? My mental health has been in bad shape as well…and when I read articles like this, it chaps my bottom.

    • Aaron R May 22, 2023 at 18:07

      Did you guys seriously spend the time go write this article, one that is better suited to elementary school kids, telling us things like chew 15 times? How patronizing, I swear lol.

      Meanwhile I have to beg at my VA appts to get my doc to pay attention to ANY issue I have.

      Great organization. Definitely don’t regret my service at all.

    • Joseph milia May 25, 2023 at 18:32

      Eating fast is always something you do in the service . Serving for 29 years I never had the luxury of eating slow and enjoy my food . Now I have acid reflux/ and high blood pressure/ and other health problems . It’s actually impossible to stop eating fast . It’s something the military installed in a soldier. Your brain goes into a survival mode. Subconsciously you just don’t know it .

  4. Jesus valdez May 21, 2023 at 18:33

    I eat every meal as if was the last supper, eating in the mess during basic training did not help, I cannot even remember what I ate or what it tasted like, I’m trying to change but it is so difficult, my wife says I need to stop to breathe. O
    Working on it.

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