The esophagus is like a slide that helps your food go from your mouth all the way down to your stomach.
Imagine you're at a playground and you're on a slide. You climb up, then zoom down, that's how your food feels when it goes through your esophagus! Just like you need the slide to get from the top to the bottom, your body needs the esophagus to move food from your mouth to your tummy.
How It Works
Why It Matters
Without the esophagus, you’d have to chew your food really hard and hope it somehow finds its way to your stomach, not very fun! But with this special slide, eating becomes a smooth, happy ride.
Examples
- A child swallows a piece of candy, and it travels down their throat to their stomach.
- Imagine eating pizza without chewing, the esophagus helps move that whole slice down your throat.
- The esophagus is like a slide for food in your body.
Ask a question
See also
- How Does Anatomical Position and Directional Terms [Anatomy MADE EASY] Work?
- How Does Anatomical Orientation & Regional + Directional Terminology Work?
- How Does Anatomy of a Tire Work?
- How Does Layers of the epidermis mnemonic - Human Anatomy | Kenhub Work?
- How Does Cardiovascular System: Location of the heart Work?