New Year Sale - Up to 30% Off
News
8 Minutes
15/12/2025
It’s officially the holiday season, filled with decadent treats and meals surrounded by people we love. But while we all gather together to celebrate, we can’t help but sometimes feel like we might be cancelling out all our hard work throughout the year in just one week. If you are someone who tends to experience acid reflux or abdominal discomfort from rich, high-fat, and high-sugar meals, this time of year may be especially difficult for you and your digestive system.
December also marks Constipation Awareness Month, which aims to normalise conversations around bowel health, highlighting that digestive discomfort is common and emphasising the importance of proactive gut support during a season filled with rich eating. The good news is that you don’t have to isolate yourself from food or be extremely restrictive to find digestive comfort.
The gut microbiome plays a central role in digestion, comfort, and resilience - and small, supportive habits can make a meaningful difference during the festive period.
Pillar 1: The Mechanical Secrets of Mindful Eating
Mindful eating is a term that gets thrown around a lot, but it is actually a powerful way of staying in control of digestive comfort without feeling cast out from those around you. Focusing on how you eat can reduce strain on the digestive system and help prevent common issues such as bloating and reflux.
Benefits of thorough chewing
Although it may seem simple, chewing is the first step in digestion. Some nutrients, such as vitamin B12 and vitamin D, can begin absorption in the mouth. Saliva also contains digestive enzymes that help reduce stress on the oesophagus and stomach, allowing food to be metabolised more efficiently.
Taking your time while chewing allows you to savour flavours and textures while supporting satiety cues. It can take around 20 minutes for the stomach to signal fullness to the brain, so conscious pacing helps reduce overeating and that “stuffed” feeling after meals.
A helpful habit to incorporate into your dining experience is putting your fork or spoon down between bites. This pause allows you to check in with hunger levels and ensures each mouthful is properly pre-digested.
Activating the ‘rest and digest’ system
When you are rushed or stressed - often a holiday staple - the body enters a ‘fight-or-flight’ (sympathetic) state, diverting blood flow away from the gut. To support digestion, it helps to intentionally activate the ‘rest and digest’ (parasympathetic) response.
Practising diaphragmatic breathing for 60 seconds before eating can help. Inhale deeply through the nose and exhale slowly through the mouth. This simple practice relaxes the body and mind, supporting digestion both chemically and neurologically.
Pillar 2: Fueling your inner garden
Building a resilient gut means supporting the millions of microbes that live in the digestive tract. These microbes thrive on variety. The more diverse the microbial community, the better it can handle temporary changes associated with rich festive foods.
The 30-plant challenge
The single most impactful thing you can add to your diet is variety. Gastroenterologists recommend aiming for 30 different types of plant foods each week. The Stride Microbiome test includes a checklist template to help you track your 30-plant intake in a week, along with guidelines and tips on how to improve your plant intake so I recommend using that as a quick guide.
The fibre and fermentation duo
To handle rich meals, you need strong internal infrastructure. Fiber provides the structure, and fermented foods provide the workforce.
Pillar 3: Immediate comfort and flow
When you feel heavy or bloated, you need tools that promote immediate relief and physical flow.
Hydration is your digestive partner
If you increase fiber intake without increasing water, you can actually worsen constipation. Water is mandatory for breaking down food and supporting nutrient absorption.
The habit to add: Aim for at least eight 8-ounce (240-250ml) glasses of water daily. Have one glass before your meal to prepare your stomach and sip water continuously throughout the day. This simple practice also helps manage acid reflux by diluting stomach acid .
Move it to move it
The most powerful prokinetic agent (substance that stimulates motility) is simple, gentle movement. Lying down too soon after a big meal facilitates acid reflux and stagnation.
The habit to add: Take a brisk 20-minute walk after your meal. This activity stimulates your entire digestive process, helping to expel gas, reduce bloating, and encourage food transit. If a walk isn't feasible, try a few gentle yoga stretches 30 minutes after eating:
Child’s Pose: A forward fold that gently massages the abdominal organs and promotes relaxation.
Cat-Cow Stretch: A rhythmic movement that stimulates gut motility and relieves trapped gas.
Your herbal aid kit
For immediate post-meal heaviness, specific herbs (chamomile, ginger, and peppermint) and spices (cinnamon, cloves) act as gentle, functional non-alcoholic digestifs. So you can add these to boiling water and create a warm herbal tea to be enjoyed after your meal.
Conclusion: A blueprint for enduring joy
This holiday season, think of the gut not as a system to restrict, but as an integral part of wellbeing to be supported.
Focusing on the above gentle, additive habits: chewing thoroughly, nourishing your microbiome with diverse plants, prioritizing water, moving your body, and using functional herbs; you are building true digestive resilience. This blueprint ensures that you can savor every bite, enjoy every celebration, and greet the new year feeling comfortable, vibrant, and full of festive joy.