The story we're about to tell is of stormy seas, acid rains, and dry,
desert-like conditions. It's an arduous journey that traverses long
distances and can take several days. It's one in which nothing comes
through unchanged. It's the story of your digestive system whose purpose
is turn the food you eat into some useful -- for your body!
Down the Hatch
It all starts with that first bite of pizza. Your teeth tear off that big
piece of crust. Your saliva glands start spewing out spit like fountains.
Your molars grind your pizza crust, pepperoni, and cheese into a big wet
ball. Chemicals in your saliva start chemical reactions. Seemingly like
magic, starch in your pizza crust begins to turn to sugar! A couple of
more chews and, then, your tongue pushes the ball of chewed food to the
back of your throat. A trap door opens, and there it goes, down your
gullet!
Next, your muscles squeeze the wet mass of food down, down, down a tube,
or esophagus, the way you would squeeze a tube of toothpaste. It's not
something you tell your muscles to do -- they just do it -- in a muscle
action called peristalsis. Then, the valve to the stomach opens and pizza
mush lands in your stomach!
Inside your stomach
Imagine being inside a big pink muscular bag -- sloshing back and forth in
a sea of half-digested mush and being mixed with digestive chemicals. Acid
rains down from the pink walls which drip with mucus to keep them from
being eroded.
Sound a little like an amusement ride gone crazy? Every time you think
you've got your equilibrium back, the walls of muscle contract and fold in
on themselves again. Over and over again, you get crushed under another
wave of slop. Every wave mixes and churns the food and chemicals together
more--breaking the food into even smaller and smaller bits. Then another
valve opens. Is the end in sight you ask, as the slop gets pushed into the
small intestine.
Inside the small intestine, chemicals
and liquids from places like your kidneys and pancreas break down and mix
up the leftovers. The small intestine looks like a strange underwater
world filled with things that resemble small finger-like cactuses. But
they're not cactuses, they're villi. Like sponges, they're able to absorb
tremendous amounts of nutrients from the food you eat. From the villi, the
nutrients will flow into your bloodstream.
But hold on! The story's still not over yet -- the leftovers that your
body can't use still have more traveling to do! Next, they're pushed into
the large intestine. It's much wider and much drier. You find that the
leftovers getting smaller, harder and drier as they're pushed through the
tube. After all, this is the place where water is extracted and recycled
back into your body. In fact, the leftovers that leave your body are about
1/3 the size of what first arrived in your intestines!
Where Food Turns Into Poop
Finally, the end of the large intestine is in sight! Now the drier
leftovers are various handsome shades of brown. They sit, at the end of
their journey, waiting for you to expel them -- out your anus. Of course,
you know the rest! A glorious,if slightly stinky, journey, don't you
think?