Sugar Cravings
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I know it doesn’t directly make sense, but I crave sugar most when I’m not getting enough sleep. I’ll have a little coffee, if it’s still kinda early in the day, or take a mild sleeping aid and some tea in the evening.1
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Sunnybrooke99 wrote: »I know it doesn’t directly make sense, but I crave sugar most when I’m not getting enough sleep. I’ll have a little coffee, if it’s still kinda early in the day, or take a mild sleeping aid and some tea in the evening.
Yep, I'm exactly the same. Sometimes I find myself hunting out sugary foods in the evenings, unconsciously looking for a little energy boost when I start to feel tired. Now that I'm more aware of it, I try to skip the sweet stuff and just go to bed!3 -
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YepItsKriss wrote: »
It did work last time. How do you know it didn't work? I'm sorry your comment is confusing???
Didn't work 'cause you're here looking to do it again
I get what you are saying. But I regained my weight without ever having cut sugar. It happens a lot.3 -
YepItsKriss wrote: »
It did work last time. How do you know it didn't work? I'm sorry your comment is confusing???
Didn't work 'cause you're here looking to do it again
I get what you are saying. But I regained my weight without ever having cut sugar. It happens a lot.
Pav's point . . . missed4 -
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There's no such thing as "fake sugar".
Sugar is not addictive.
Cutting sugar doesn't magically mean you lose weight.7 -
YepItsKriss wrote: »
It did work last time. How do you know it didn't work? I'm sorry your comment is confusing???
Didn't work 'cause you're here looking to do it again
WRONG. It did work last year but then I ate sugar in the holidays cause family were over in summer. And I felt amazing and ALL my cravings went. I lost weight too. Clearly you don't know the struggle? If something is making me go over my calories and I cannot control my portions clearly I shouldn't be eating it? Anyway I know what I'm doing. I don't need your unempathic input.6 -
There's no such thing as "fake sugar".
Sugar is not addictive.
Cutting sugar doesn't magically mean you lose weight.
BAHAHAAA. ARE you for real? Go and get a degree in nutrition before commenting such ridiculous statements. Millions of people get addicted to sugar. It is addictive, but some people aren't addicted. It's those people that don't seem to understand how us sugar addicts feel
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2235907/
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YepItsKriss wrote: »Not only that but my entire point was lost as well... lol oh well cest la vie.
No you're point wasn't lost. You want me to have sugar in moderation etc but that's not working for me right now. Some people have trigger foods where they just can't control themselves. We are all unique human beings. What worked for you might not work for me. So stop trying to convince me to do something that doesn't work. Are all people on MFP really this dense?5 -
Sunnybrooke99 wrote: »I know it doesn’t directly make sense, but I crave sugar most when I’m not getting enough sleep. I’ll have a little coffee, if it’s still kinda early in the day, or take a mild sleeping aid and some tea in the evening.
Thank you for the kind input! I get more than enough sleep per night. Sleep isn't my issue, sugar is.3 -
There's no such thing as "fake sugar".
Sugar is not addictive.
Cutting sugar doesn't magically mean you lose weight.
BAHAHAAA. ARE you for real? Go and get a degree in nutrition before commenting such ridiculous statements. Millions of people get addicted to sugar. It is addictive, but some people aren't addicted. It's those people that don't seem to understand how us sugar addicts feel
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2235907/
Without trying to derail the conversation. In human models, they have not sugar addiction to be plausible, but rather that instances of hyperpalatable foods causes reactions. We have a long discussion about it in the below. Millions of people have disordered food issues. And the triggers are rarely just sugar, but specific foods.
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10226257/food-addiction-a-different-perspective/p16 -
There's no such thing as "fake sugar".
Sugar is not addictive.
Cutting sugar doesn't magically mean you lose weight.
BAHAHAAA. ARE you for real? Go and get a degree in nutrition before commenting such ridiculous statements. Millions of people get addicted to sugar. It is addictive, but some people aren't addicted. It's those people that don't seem to understand how us sugar addicts feel
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2235907/
Without trying to derail the conversation. In human models, they have not sugar addiction to be plausible, but rather that instances of hyperpalatable foods causes reactions. We have a long discussion about it in the below. Millions of people have disordered food issues. And the triggers are rarely just sugar, but specific foods.
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10226257/food-addiction-a-different-perspective/p1
I guess addiction is the real word here. Well I find high sugar foods like doughnuts, chocolate and sweets addictive as in I can't portion control with them. Also, I'm not losing out on anything by avoiding such foods for a few weeks so that I can stay under my calorie limit and lose weight. I'll definitely check out the link above. Losing fat is my main priority anyway...I have a wedding to go to in December!1 -
When I don’t have added sugar, I don’t crave it. The only way I can lose weight/avoid gaining weight is to count my calories, exercise, and to work on avoiding refined carbohydrates. I can do a 3 pm pear but not a 3 pm chocolate bar. It takes me about 24 hours to regain control if I have sugar.3
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There's no such thing as "fake sugar".Sugar is not addictive.Cutting sugar doesn't magically mean you lose weight.
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Sunnybrooke99 wrote: »I know it doesn’t directly make sense, but I crave sugar most when I’m not getting enough sleep. I’ll have a little coffee, if it’s still kinda early in the day, or take a mild sleeping aid and some tea in the evening.
I think it makes a lot of sense, and it's true for me too, although it's not specifically sugar but any quick sources of carbs. They provide energy which your body is low on, after all. If you understand why and do something else (like having caffeine) it can really help, or just eat something that will provide more stable energy (like nuts or greek yogurt). Although in this case a piece of fruit always seems desirable and would work too.1 -
There's no such thing as "fake sugar".
Sugar is not addictive.
Cutting sugar doesn't magically mean you lose weight.
BAHAHAAA. ARE you for real? Go and get a degree in nutrition before commenting such ridiculous statements. Millions of people get addicted to sugar. It is addictive, but some people aren't addicted. It's those people that don't seem to understand how us sugar addicts feel
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2235907/
Without trying to derail the conversation. In human models, they have not sugar addiction to be plausible, but rather that instances of hyperpalatable foods causes reactions. We have a long discussion about it in the below. Millions of people have disordered food issues. And the triggers are rarely just sugar, but specific foods.
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10226257/food-addiction-a-different-perspective/p1
I guess addiction is the real word here. Well I find high sugar foods like doughnuts, chocolate and sweets addictive as in I can't portion control with them.
Donuts and chocolate and many other sweets are high fat as well as high sugar (more calories in a donut are from fat than from sugar, as it's about half fat, half carbs and a lot of the carbs are flour).
My current favorite chocolate bar (Chocolove Xtreme 88%) has 180 cal but only 4 g of sugar in a serving.
Fruit is mostly sugar, almost no fat, unlike most "junk food," and yet is rarely something people have serious control issues (although I know some do). Like Ann, I find that when I'm having trouble with control over hyperpalatable things (which seems to relate to emotional eating for me), having more fruit can help (and having more fruit in my diet in general tends to make me a lot more picky about what other sweet things I want).
Anyway, while I don't find it applicable I understand some find that conceptualizing their difficulties with food (or sweet foods) as a "sugar addiction" is useful. If it helps, that's fine, whatever, but psulemon is right that the discussions of food addiction tend to focus more generally on hyperpalatable foods of all types (pizza scores very high, as does cheese), and I would say it's simply false to claim that "sugar withdrawal" in a physical sense, especially as in "just like drug addiction" (if you mean something like heroin) as was claimed above is not true.
Beyond that, I don't think it much matters what people call it, the question is what works to make things easier and that varies depending on the person.3
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