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Sadhguru reveals how many times you must chew each bite for better digestion

etimes.in | Last updated on - Nov 25, 2025, 12:08 IST
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Sadhguru reveals how many times you must chew each bite for better digestion

There are diet plans, digestive tablets, gut-health trends, and then there’s a piece of advice so simple that most people overlook it: chew your food properly. Sadhguru often talks about this in his discourses, and his explanation is surprisingly scientific, rooted in the yogic understanding of how the body processes food. He says that a person should ideally take around 24 small mouthfuls of food in a meal and chew each mouthful about 24 times. These numbers aren’t rules to stress over; they’re simply a reminder to slow down, stay present with your meal, and make digestion smoother and more efficient. Scroll down to read more...

2/5

Why “24 times” matters

According to Sadhguru, digestion doesn’t begin in your stomach; it starts in your mouth. Chewing is the first stage of breaking food down. When you chew slowly and thoroughly, your saliva mixes well with the food, and that saliva contains enzymes that kick-start digestion.

But he takes it a step deeper. He explains that when food is chewed into a paste, the body becomes fully aware of what you’re feeding it. Every cell, every system begins to “read” the incoming food. That internal registration is important because your body adjusts the digestive process based on the signals it receives.

When you rush through eating, swallow large chunks, and barely chew, the body doesn’t get a clear signal of what’s coming in. It’s like giving your digestive system half-finished instructions; everything slows down, feels heavier, and works much less efficiently.

3/5

The benefits you actually feel

This isn’t just philosophy. People who start chewing their food properly notice visible changes within days.

Better digestion - Food that arrives in the stomach in a semi-liquid state is easier to break down. This means less bloating, less heaviness, and fewer energy crashes after meals.

More nutrient absorption - The more thoroughly food is chewed, the better the enzymes can do their job. Your body absorbs nutrients with less effort, which shows up in energy levels and even skin clarity.

Steadier energy - One of Sadhguru’s key points is that when you chew slowly, you don’t feel the post-meal dullness that many consider “normal.” Meals stop feeling like a sedative.

A calmer mind - Slow chewing naturally slows the breath. Your body shifts into a relaxed mode. It becomes easier to stay alert without being tense - a state perfect for work, study or creative flow.

Better satiety - Eating slowly gives your brain time to register that you’re full. You often end up eating the right amount without force or restriction.

4/5

How to actually do it

The practice sounds simple, but we are so used to rushing meals that it needs a bit of awareness in the beginning.

Take smaller bites

Eating isn’t a race. Smaller mouthfuls make chewing easier and more natural.

Chew until the food becomes a paste

You don’t need to count every chew. The idea is to chew enough that the food almost melts in your mouth.

Don’t talk while eating

Sadhguru often highlights this, talking and eating together confuse the system. If something has to go in, something shouldn’t be coming out.

Sit down and sit still

Many digestive problems come simply from eating while walking around, scrolling, or being mentally scattered.

Create a small pause after swallowing

A moment of stillness between bites allows your body to settle into a steady rhythm.

5/5

Why this matters in daily Indian meals

Indian meals often combine multiple textures: sabzi, dal, roti, rice, curd, papad, all of which require proper chewing for the body to truly process them well. Rotis especially demand good chewing, yet most people chew them just two or three times and gulp them down with water.

Even soft foods like khichdi benefit from slow, mindful chewing because saliva is the invisible ingredient that decides the quality of your digestion.

Chewing well does not cost anything, does not need equipment, and does not require a schedule. It is a habit that improves digestion, enhances energy, supports nutrient absorption, and even sharpens mental clarity. In a world where people chase complex diets, sometimes the most powerful transformation begins with something as simple as slowing down and chewing each bite with full attention and presence.

Top Comment
U
User
190 days ago
I thought there are teeth in the stomach!
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Copyright © Jun 3, 2026, 02.27AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service