How To Avoid A Thanksgiving Food Coma While Eating What You Want

The best advice for beating bloat.

After eating that enormous Thanksgiving meal, you may want to curl up on the couch (or a stretcher) and moan in belly agony while half-watching football on TV.

Experts estimate the average American consumes upwards of 4,500 calories on Thanksgiving, so it's no wonder a lot of us experience pain after the culinary pleasure. But be grateful for this: There are ways to abate the stomach misery without skimping on any of your favorite Thanksgiving foods. A lot of the discomfort will subside with time and patience (and stomach-settling foods on Black Friday), but certain activities and strategies -- like walking after dinner -- can speed up the process.

Meet this year's Thanksgiving with a plan of attack on bloat, so you can enjoy food, friends and family without any bellyaches to cloud your memories. We've designed your action plan below:

Before and during the meal:

Drink water.

Water can fill you up, and drinking a glass before you dig into the meal will help you pace yourself. The Mayo Clinic says water will also keep things moving, adding fluids to the colon and preventing any foods from, err, getting stuck. Keep refilling your cup throughout the meal. 

Slow down. 

Of course you want to get to the candied yams before Uncle Bert devours them all, but rushing won't be helpful in the end. Think about all of the work that went in to preparing the meal and savor it with gratitude. Eating too fast can lead to over-consumption and digestive problems like bloating. To slow it down, serve yourself smaller portions of your favorite dishes -- you can always go back for seconds (unless Bert gets to 'em). 

Skip the soda.

Carbonated drinks are hardly the best thing on the table, so don't bother your tastebuds with them. Health.com reports the bubbles fill your stomach with air and can make you gassy and uncomfortable -- yes, diet sodas, too. Stick to still water and let the food be the star of the Thanksgiving show. 

Don't add salt.

Keep the salt shaker far, far away. Chances are the food on the table has enough (if not too much) as is -- especially when you consider you may be ingesting close to 4,500 calories altogether. Consuming excess sodium will make you feel bloated because it causes fluid retention in the body. 

Go light on certain foods...

Thanksgiving only comes once a year, so you should eat everything you want to eat on this day. But if you're particularly concerned about stomach aches and pains, there are specific culprits you may want to keep off your plate. These include cruciferous veggies like broccoli, cabbage and kale, beans (duh) and dairy products. 

...And go heavy on others. 

Foods like cucumbers, bananas, avocado, white rice, asparagus and ginger are bloat-busters, says registered dietician Helen Agresti. If any of these are part of your Thanksgiving fare, eat up!

After you eat:

Go for a short walk.

You probably want to curl up on the couch without moving. But a little physical activity can effect your post-meal blood sugar levels and aid digestion. Researchers say that an after-dinner walk can help remove glucose from the bloodstream in part because more of it is taken up by the muscles. Rally your friends and family to join you -- you'll all benefit from the stroll. The goal here is not to burn off all those Thanksgiving calories (that'd be pretty rough), but to inspire the body to do its digestive job.

Sip on some peppermint and chamomile tea.

Peppermint and chamomile can calm stomach muscles and support the flow of bile the body uses to digest fat, according to the University of Maryland Medical Center. Drinking such tea helps make it easier for food to pass through the stomach.

Try some simple yoga poses.

You don't have to go to an actual studio to practice a couple of poses that'll soothe your busting belly. Little movements like bridge pose and knees to chest can help your stomach release gas and move the food along, and they won't make you work up a sweat. Check out some of the simple poses here

Happy holidays!

Related on HuffPost:

What to Eat When You Feel Bloated
Salmon(01 of06)
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If you're dealing with two or three pounds of PMS water weight, choose salmon for your next meal. Women who took 2 grams of an omega-3 fatty acid supplement per day -- about the amount found in a 3-ounce fillet -- were significantly less bloated than those popping a placebo, reports a 2013 study in Complementary Therapies in Medicine. Bonus: The study also revealed omega-3s can boost PMS-associated mood problems. Feel good and happy. (credit:Jacek Chabraszewski/iStock/Thinkstock)
Naturally Fruity Water(02 of06)
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After dousing sushi in a little too much soy sauce, the excess salt can leave you swollen. "Hydrating will help you restore the fluid balance in your body to help you let go of extra water weight," says Samantha Heller, MS, RDN, a senior clinical nutritionist at NYU Langone Medical Center. If plain water sounds too boring, take a page from your local spa and add chunks of melon, such as watermelon and cantaloupe, to your glass. Then eat them -- they're chock full of water. The two fruits are easily digestible, too, adds gastroenterologist Elizabeth Blaney, MD, clinical assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. Just stay away from carbonated water, since the bubbles will add air to your belly and make the problem worse. (credit:Jaroslav74/iStock/Thinkstock)
Flaxseed(03 of06)
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When your trips to the bathroom get less frequent, constipation may be to blame. But flaxseed can help act as a natural laxative to help you GI system work like it should. The tiny seeds are particularly good because they're rich in insoluble fiber. Research indicates they may be even better than psyllium husks (typically the go-to fiber supplement) for reducing bloating and pain. These fiber-rich seeds add bulk to your stool, making it easier for you to stay regular. Buy them ground and sprinkle a teaspoon in smoothies, on oatmeal and in yogurt. Chase with lots of water. (credit:anakondasp/iStock/Thinkstock)
Peppermint Tea(04 of06)
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Peppermint was all over the place in studies late last year, so let's start with something less familiar. The herbal brew "relaxes smooth muscles in the intestinal tract to ease discomfort and help your body release trapped gas in your colon," says Blaney. In fact, in a 2014 study on IBS patients, peppermint-oil capsules improved IBS symptoms and abdominal pain better than a placebo. (credit:Zsolt Simonyi/iStock/Thinkstock)
Fennel(05 of06)
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If you've ever eaten at an Indian restaurant, you know that many offer a small bowl of fennel seeds after the meal. Fennel has long been used as a digestive aid, says Heller. It may help increase digestive enzymes and help things move along your system to correct reflux, bloating and gas, suggests research published in the International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition. You can eat a few seeds if you like the taste, cook with them for your next meal or brew a cup of fennel tea. (credit:lucia_lucci/iStock/Thinkstock)
Yogurt(06 of06)
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If you feel as if you've blown up like a balloon, the culprit may be an imbalance of belly bacteria. "Research is showing that shifting your bacterial profile may be helpful," says Blaney, who sometimes recommends patients eat yogurt with live active cultures. Research in the Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology examined two specific strains of probiotics -- lactobacillus acidophilus and bifidobacterium lactis -- and found they lessened the severity of abdominal bloating compared with a placebo group within four weeks. Look for plain yogurt with active live cultures on the label (or sip kefir, a drinkable yogurt) and mix in your own fruit or honey for taste. (credit:Yelena Yemchuk/iStock/Thinkstock)

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