Gut Health
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The Gut Truth About Constipation: Why One Good Poo a Day Matters

The Gut Truth About Constipation: Why One Good Poo a Day Matters

Do you move your bowels at least once every day? Are they easy to pass? If not, your gut may need some attention. Constipation isn’t just uncomfortable—it’s a sign your digestion isn’t functioning at its best.

Why constipation is bad news

Your poo is the primary exit pathway for waste in your body. A significant part of the waste is toxins, like pesticides, drugs, chemicals, plastics, heavy metals, and excess oestrogen, poo is not just undigested food! The bowels can be thought of as perhaps the most important element of the body’s detoxification process.1

While we tend to think about liver health as being key for detoxification, remember that after the liver processes toxins, it deposits them into your intestines. If your bowel is stagnating, and your stools are spending a long time in the large intestine, the colon can re-absorb some of these toxins and so all the good work of the liver will be undone.2 If you’re not having a daily bowel movement, harmful bacteria can flourish as they over-ferment the food, waste products from these bacteria as well as the toxins from your liver can irritate and inflame the gut lining.

Causes of constipation

There are many factors that can contribute to a sluggish bowel, including:3-7

  • Dehydration
  • Poor diet that is low in vegetables and high in refined carbohydrates
  • Poor stomach acid production
  • Gut bacteria imbalance
  • Stress
  • Sedentary lifestyle
  • Poor position on the toilet (high level toilets make it hard to pass stools easily)
  • Underlying medical conditions, such as low thyroid function, diabetes, gallbladder problems.
  • Medications, especially pain medicines.

Tackling constipation

A diet rich in fresh vegetables and plenty of water should provide ample fibre and fluid for regular bowel movements.7 Are you having at least half of your plate made up of vegetables (at each meal)? Are you drinking plenty of water, or herbal teas? This is the first thing to do if you are not having daily bowel movements. Avoid fibre from grains, such as wheat bran, as these can actually worsen constipation.

Indeed, if you are already having a large amount of fibre in your diet, adding extra fibre can potentially worsen constipation.

If you need a little extra help, here are some practical tips to help things along:

  • Improve your gut bacteria, not only by increasing vegetables as already mentioned but by including probiotic foods in your diet.8
  • Flaxseeds and prune juice: Flaxseed adds fibre that feeds your gut bacteria and helps with bowel movement while prune juice contains a natural laxative:9
    • Put 2 heaped dessertspoons of ground linseeds in a small dish. Cover with half a cup of prune juice
    • Leave to soak for 12 hours (or overnight) in the fridge
    • Eat with a spoon, preferably before bed.
  • Exercise regularly. You may have heard of “runner’s trots” referring to diarrhoea as a problem for runners. This is testament to the power of exercise for getting things moving!5
  • Get plenty of magnesium. This is really important because magnesium is needed by the body to move food through the gut.10 Foods high in magnesium are halibut, almonds, spinach, cashews, and seaweed.
  • Eat plenty of healthy fats. Despite common myths otherwise, fat is not bad for you. In fact, a diet relatively high in healthy fat has been shown to be cardio-protective and helpful for body fat loss. Enjoy foods such as olive oil, coconut oil, avocados, wild salmon, walnuts, almond, pumpkin seeds, and eggs daily. Fats in the diet encourage bile production (bile is used to break up fats to ease their digestion) and bile can have a laxative effect.11 Fat in the diet can also soften stools making them easier to pass.
  • Include foods that can stimulate digestion: bitter foods like radicchio, rocket, endive, artichoke, and acidic foods like lemon juice or apple cider vinegar, some herbs and spices, such as ginger, and fennel, cumin and coriander seeds are all known to help digestion. A green salad with bitter leaves and a dressing of olive oil and lemon juice or apple cider vinegar would make a perfect starter or side dish!
  • Abdominal massage: You can do this colon massage lying down, using almond oil as a lubricant, or in the shower using a soap solution to slide your hand over your abdomen.
    • Start on the right side of your lower abdomen just above your leg crease. Use small circular movements and progress upward toward your rib cage. Apply gentle pressure at first, although you may want to increase your pressure in subsequent days.
    • When you reach your rib cage, massage diagonally down and to the left until you are just below your belly button.
    • Now massage diagonally up and to left until you are just below your outer left rib cage.
    • Massage straight down your left side toward your groin until you reach your leg crease.
    • Take 3-5 minutes to do this massage. As you massage your colon area, notice if you find areas that have a slight pain or tenderness. With areas of slight pain, you can work these areas and probably reduce the pain with daily massages. If you have deep pain, do not continue the massage.
  • Proper toilet positioning: The human body is meant to pass stools in a squatting position. Bringing your knees up using a toilet stool puts your body in an optimal squatting pose to encourage healthy efficient bowel movements.12 The best way to adapt your toilet to help you with this is to buy a “Squatty Potty” (or similar) available from Amazon and other online retailers.

Throwback: What your poo says about you

This video is a brilliant refresher on what your stools can reveal about your digestion, nutrient absorption, and microbial balance. If you're unsure what a healthy poo should look like—or why it even matters—this episode breaks it down with clarity and a bit of humour. It's a great watch for visual learners looking to understand the gut-brain-bowel connection in a whole new light.

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