Diets Aren’t Sustainable – Try Improving your Eating Habits
Diets just aren’t sustainable, instead try improving your eating habits to help maintain your health and well-ness as you age.
Eating healthy whole foods is always my number one focus when working with clients, but it’s just one aspect of healthy living. I’ve worked with many people who eat really nutritious meals, but still struggle with poor digestion (bloating, constipation), insomnia, weight gain, pain in the joints and more. Often when they improve their eating habits many of their health issues subside.
5 Ways to Improve Your Eating Habits
- Eat calmly – try not to rush your meals (especially at work) or eat when you are emotional. This will help to optimize your digestion (more about that below).
- Eat regularly – eating regularly can help to maintain your blood sugar levels, which helps to keep you energized and focused!
- Eat with small utensils – this is a trick I started for myself years ago…eating with small utensils often helps to slow you down so you don’t wolf down your meal and overwhelm your digestion.
- Eat upon waking then hours before bed – feed your brain upon waking up, but give your body plenty of time to properly digest before bed – you will sleep better!
- Taste your food – this one is tied into eating calmly and eating with small utensils and does require you to chew your food well. The more your food breaks down the more you will taste!

Find success in healthy eating habits...
- When your body recognizes what you’ve just eaten it can break it down and digest it more efficiently. Good digestion is the key to your health & vitality and focus on eating real whole foods can be a very effective way to eliminate abdominal pain/distension, bloating and constipation. Whole foods (not processed or commercially packaged) not only builds and supports our body but it can help to heal your digestive system – reducing its exposure to irritants and its heightened immune response.
- Improving your daily food habits is just as important as eating a whole foods diet. When habits related to eating improve many see the weight loss they desire, sleep improves, energy improves and digestion improves.
- The traditions of our elders can offer so much richness to your meals and the sharing of those meals. Even if you didn’t have the opportunity to experience it when you were younger, there is still time to impart some of that wisdom and tradition for your friends and family now. Cook together, laugh together and eat together. Food should be prepared and shared with love.
- Cooking your food makes it easier to digest it and although it may lose a bit of nutrients in the process, it is easier for the digestive system to break down and use…which means better extraction of nutrients and easier assimilation. Too much raw foods require more energy from the body to then break it down, slowing transit time through the intestines, contributing to digestive issues. On the other side you don’t need to over cook your vegetables (especially as the weather is getter warmer) so keep a bit of crunch to it to help maintain nutrients and good fibre.
- Eating for your constitution is super important when trying to improve our digestion and vitality. Don’t focus on foods that will make your condition worse. If you are thin and always cold, eating cold, raw food will just make you feel cold and won’t help your digestion. If you have an inflammatory condition such as arthritis or joint pain, drinking alcohol, eating dairy, lots of animal protein or fried foods won’t reduce your inflammation.
SUPPORTING YOUR BODY WITH NUTRITIOUS WHOLE FOODS
Foods in TCM (traditional Chinese medicine) have certain properties and affects on the body after eaten. Cold food can exacerbate a cold feeling in the body and spicy food can add fuel to the internal heat you may already feel inside. Grilled or baked foods have a drying affect on the body and stewed foods and soups have a moistening affect.
Some foods are helpful for building our bones, hair, muscles, cells, fluid and energy. These include carbohydrates, protein and fat found in animal products, nuts/seeds, legumes, tubers/root vegetables and whole grains. Although they are highly nutritious, if we eat too much of these building foods it can create some stagnation inside, which could create inflammation in the body, joint pain and digestive issues.
Other foods have a clearing or moving quality to them…they often have fiber in them which helps to clear away built up toxins and helps the bowels to move. They include legumes, whole grains, green vegetables, bitter melon, sweet potato, seeds, fruit and bitter greens.
Having a nice mix of building and clearing foods is perfect for most people, but sometimes our health issues are far more complex and long standing, so get professional help from a practitioner if you can.
A little Recap for healthy eating
- Focus on WHOLE FOODS in your diet - avoid processed, refined or packaged meals
- Improve food habits - make sure to slow down when you eat, chew well, don't eat late or when stressed
- Remember the traditions of our ancestors - what homemade meals did your grandparents make?
- Cooked food is better than alot of raw food - most people do better digesting vegetables that are cooked
- Eat for your constitution


Cindy is a registered acupuncturist, certified Pilates instructor, holistic nutritionist and a foodie. She works with her patients to support their whole body health, emphasizing self care, living a positive life and nourishing the body and mind. Cindy is the owner/creator of My Fit Over 50, a website dedicated to health of women through menopause.