Craving Sugar?
dumb_blondes_rock
Posts: 1,568 Member
I have a horrible sweet tooth, which has def died down since I started eating healthier. It took about 4 days of headache withdrawals to actually be completely free of the once every hour craving. My dad told me he heard from either dr oz (I know I know.....everyone on here hates him it seems, but I actually like him) or the doctors that if you are having a horrible sugar craving to get just a cube of sugar and let it dissolve in your mouth, and you can even have 2 if you feel the need because a cube only has 15 cals and will ease that sweet monster inside your brain. He also said they suggested drinking a cup of orange juice, or eating an orange, because there is natural sugars in it that help as well.
Anyone else have any sugar craving tips?
Anyone else have any sugar craving tips?
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Replies
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Will power.0
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Will power.
I wish I had iron will power like some people on here! btw you look AH mazing!0 -
Dark choc. squares
sugar free jello dark chocolate mousse
sugar free fudge pops
are a few ideas0 -
Personally I like the brown packets of sugar in the raw. It's tastier than white sugar. I use them in place of glucose tablets when I have a hypoglycemic episode. It's only 4 grams of sugar each which is 2 percent of my daily carbohydrate intake and less than 1 percent of my total calories . It's insignificant, especially if you're active0
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Will power is definitely needed. Throughout life, my weakness has always been snacks but I have learned to say no after having a small amount each day. My favorite is a 170 calorie cocoa Swiss roll cake. Out of 2500 total calories, I learned that 170 is nothing to worry about.0
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I just find it easier to not eat sugar -- eat protein instead. Plenty of natural sugars in fruit, milk, etc. Sugar sets off craving in me, and I want more, like the sugar monster. I think we are all different in this regard. Sugar just doesn't work for me. Wish I could just eat a little. Interesting research on how sugar (and refined carbs in general) activate the dopamine pathways in the brain like alcohol and cocaine. So for me I just abstain. If I ate a sugar cube it would set me off like a drug.0
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Eat fruit! Stay away from drinks with sugar. I just read the list posted of the 5 things to stay away from and orange juice was one of them and concetrated juices. This was a video posted on here from a nutritionalist.0
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Will power.
Having said that, if I eat sugar, especially pure sugar like a sugar cube, I only want more. It only makes my craving so much worse and then my will power takes a nose-dive!
I also can't eat fruit alone, or I crave more sweet. However, if I eat some protein, such as a little cheese, with it, I'm fine. The protein makes all the difference in the world for me.0 -
Try to distract yourself. Tell yourself, I'll have that sweet after I finish (folding the clothes, making the beds, whatever...) A lot of times, the craving will be gone by the time you've finished whatever distraction you've given yourself. It's a battle, but the cravings actually do get less and less and less as you train yourself to distract/delay/replace what you're craving. This strategy is what worked for me. I almost never get sweet cravings any more.0
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When I get a sugar craving I eat ice cream. I'm particularly fond of Breyer's Girl Scout's Thin Mint, Rocky Road, Natural Chocolate, Cookies & Cream, Oreos, Moose Trax, and Reese's Peanut Butter Cup. Oh, I also like dark chocolate (75% and above), and Krispy Kreme donuts. Sometimes I even put a donut in my ice cream and smother it with Hershey's syrup and whipped cream.
Of course, I also make sure that the portion that I eat fits within my calorie and macros goals for the day.0 -
To the person that satisfies their sugar craving with ice cream -- so happy you can eat sugar and stay within your calorie and macro goals. But don't be naive. Not everyone is like you. Some people (and it isn't a question of will power because such people often have incredible will power in other areas of their lives) do not have your physiology and are not able to stop at one bowl, or one cookie, or one whatever. If you are confused what your physiology is just try controlled eating of sugar. If you find that a reasonable amount doesn't satisfy you but instead sets off your craving for more sugar, and you eat the box or carton instead of one, then maybe abstinence is the cure for you. That is my experience, and it usually takes a least 30 days for me to get over the craving, and then life gets simpler, and I can enjoy my weight loss, and feeeling healthier. I also find foods high in natural sugars (like pineapple or watermelon) set off craving and I don't eat them either. Love strawberries though. Who needs ice cream if I can have greek yogurt and frozen strawberries instead!0
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To the person that satisfies their sugar craving with ice cream -- so happy you can eat sugar and stay within your calorie and macro goals. But don't be naive. Not everyone is like you. Some people (and it isn't a question of will power because such people often have incredible will power in other areas of their lives) do not have your physiology and are not able to stop at one bowl, or one cookie, or one whatever. I
LOL! Thanks for the lesson in self delusion and excuses. Most people can develop their self control.
OP - seriously, focus on self control. If for whatever reason you can't exercise self control and enjoy a reasonable portion of something, then by all means cut it out of your diet entirely. I will say that portion control works, and if you want to live a normal life, eat normal food, and yet still be in great shape, it is absolutely essential.0 -
Will power plus once it out of your system you won't crave it as much. 85% or 90% chocolate is sweet to me now...0
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Sometimes I suck on hard candies...they have sugar, are sweet and can take a while to eat. Brachs is a good brand.0
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sugar free wether's original candy!0
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I let myself have a treat every once in awhile. Like on Tuesdays I go out with one of my friends and get some ice cream cause it is college night. Knowing that I will get the treat on Tuesday usually keeps me focused the rest of the week. I also really like Cascadia dark chocolate almond organic granola. It only has a little chocolate in it but it is very satisfying. I also recently found a recipe for chia seed "pudding." If you google it you will find recipes for it and chia seeds are great for you!0
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Wow! How I wish I could eat sugar in moderation! On too many occasions I've tried it "just this time" and end up eating a lot more than I intended. I knew I had to give up sugar once and for all when I ate one dozen Krispy Kreme donuts. (I deluded myself into thinking I was taking them home to my family?!) Believe it or not, that wasn't it.....I got a hot fudge sundae. Needless to say I was sicker than a dog the next morning and felt exactly like an alcoholic who went on a bender. "I'll never do that again," only to eat three cheese danish for at my birthday breakfast the next week.
Yes, I have come to the conclusion that I do not have willpower in this area of my life, even though I have it in a lot of other areas in my life. There is a line from the Big Book of Alcoholics which describes EXACTLY how I am with sugar and potato chips:
It is an ALLERGY of the body and an OBSESSION of the mind.
There are plenty that don't agree and that's just fine by me. God bless you, if you can eat sugar. I wish I could, but my life is in the toilet when I do. Now that I have not had a drop of sugar free for ten (10) days, the mental fog I was always under is finally lifting, and I feel better (mood and energy) than I have in 25 years!
Thank you for being here! Thank you for bring up the topic.0 -
sugar free double chocolate pudding with strawberries! tastes like chocolate dipped strawberries0
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To the person that satisfies their sugar craving with ice cream -- so happy you can eat sugar and stay within your calorie and macro goals. But don't be naive. Not everyone is like you. Some people (and it isn't a question of will power because such people often have incredible will power in other areas of their lives) do not have your physiology and are not able to stop at one bowl, or one cookie, or one whatever. I
LOL! Thanks for the lesson in self delusion and excuses. Most people can develop their self control.
OP - seriously, focus on self control. If for whatever reason you can't exercise self control and enjoy a reasonable portion of something, then by all means cut it out of your diet entirely. I will say that portion control works, and if you want to live a normal life, eat normal food, and yet still be in great shape, it is absolutely essential.
well this is my dilemma, I do plan on eating icecream and cake and all the other goodies, but right now I can't really do much cardio because im so out of shape! I do what I can, but its the burn of my muscles that gets to me. So for now, I can't eat back 500 cals that I burnt doing the elliptical or whatever because quite frankly I don't have the stamina to last that long aaand I can't just have the 2/3 cup portion size or 1/2 cup whatever it is portion size. BUT you better bet your bottom dollar that when I can spend an hour on my elliptical or even do a round of insanity that I will enjoy me some ben n jerrys.0 -
I know that like you, I'm needing to modify my sugar habits. Plus, it's everywhere. I noticed that tracking it on my food diary tool on MFP has really surprised me in a couple of ways. 1) How "little" we're supposed to eat per day 2) how quickly it adds up!
The fruit suggestion is a great one, that another person mentioned above. I've heard the best way to have sugar is the way nature intended (with fiber). Sugar in fruit is good as long as one is eating the fruit in Its natural state (ie not juiced) because it slows the spike in glucose and the volume of fiber fills the stomach.
Does aversion therapy work for you? Here's a great video lecture about how sugar (not fat) causes heart disease and obesity. It blew my mind when I saw it. I probably need to re-watch it as I had ice cream sandwiches tonight (ate within daily caloric range).
Here's a link to the video: Sugar the Bitter Truth
http://www.uctv.tv/shows/Sugar-The-Bitter-Truth-16717
Love to know what you all think...0 -
I know that like you, I'm needing to modify my sugar habits. Plus, it's everywhere. I noticed that tracking it on my food diary tool on MFP has really surprised me in a couple of ways. 1) How "little" we're supposed to eat per day 2) how quickly it adds up!
The fruit suggestion is a great one, that another person mentioned above. I've heard the best way to have sugar is the way nature intended (with fiber). Sugar in fruit is good as long as one is eating the fruit in Its natural state (ie not juiced) because it slows the spike in glucose and the volume of fiber fills the stomach.
Does aversion therapy work for you? Here's a great video lecture about how sugar (not fat) causes heart disease and obesity. It blew my mind when I saw it. I probably need to re-watch it as I had ice cream sandwiches tonight (ate within daily caloric range).
Here's a link to the video: Sugar the Bitter Truth
http://www.uctv.tv/shows/Sugar-The-Bitter-Truth-16717
Love to know what you all think...
Here, read this: http://www.alanaragonblog.com/2010/01/29/the-bitter-truth-about-fructose-alarmism/
Basically, Lustig is wrong on 95% of his facts, and completely ignores the incredibly important concept of dosage and context when he starts going on and on about how bad sugar is for you. Plus all of his data is skewed, as most of it comes from either extremely limited studies, flat out incorrect facts, or data sets that don't actually include adult humans.0 -
eat more fruit, preferably fresh, whole fruit. It takes longer to eat than other sweet foods (so it feels more satisfying as you have the sweet taste in your mouth for longer - eat it slowly and savour it to make this even more so), and has fewer calories (e.g. than sweets, cakes, etc) and it's chock full of micronutrients. win win win. The sugars in whole fruit are healthy.0
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Well, no. The sugars in whole fruits are just sugars. Biologically they are absolutely no different than any other sugars. The sugars in fruits just happen to come in a package that includes other nutrients, but if you are speaking specifically to sugar consumption, and have no nutrient deficiencies, the source of the sugar makes absolutely zero difference from a health standpoint. Glucose, fructose, galactose, etc. are all handled exactly the same in the body, whether it comes from eating an apple or a Snickers bar.0
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I would nibble two dates when I was 'transitioning' from eating too much sugar. Very sweet, with fibre.0
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I think I crave more sugary stuff when I am consuming a small amount of carbs. I've tried incorporating more in to my diet and I think it's helping.
I DEFINITELY have a sweet tooth... but yes, will power is required. I'm not the type that can have a couple of squares of chocolate... I have to devour the entire block once I get a taste of it! so I try not to keep anything sweet in the house. If it's not there then too bad so sad... however I do live over the road from a supermarket so that doesn't help >_>0 -
sugar free wether's original candy!
CANDICE SWANEPEOL!!!! lol sorry... I just love her! Her body is amazing!0 -
Oh yes and as for further motivation, I tell myself about how I don't want to end up diabetic and would rather not go to the dentist to get more fillings lol0
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Well, no. The sugars in whole fruits are just sugars. Biologically they are absolutely no different than any other sugars. The sugars in fruits just happen to come in a package that includes other nutrients, but if you are speaking specifically to sugar consumption, and have no nutrient deficiencies, the source of the sugar makes absolutely zero difference from a health standpoint. Glucose, fructose, galactose, etc. are all handled exactly the same in the body, whether it comes from eating an apple or a Snickers bar.
So zoo keepers could stop feeding other primates fruit and feed them snickers instead and that would be okay, because according to you they're the same...?
Sugar refined from fruit or refined from a snickers bar is still sugar, and in its *refined* form will be the same. However, fruit does not have the same GI as pure fructose (which means that if you eat 20g of fructose that's part of fresh, whole fruit, it will take a lot longer to get into your blood than if you ate 20G of refined fructose), therefore there absolutely *is* a difference. The water and fibre you eat along with the sugar that's in whole fruit make a difference, because the fruit has to be broken down by the body, which affects the rate at which nutrients are absorbed by the body. Additionally, combinations of nutrients can affect how easily they're absorbed, e.g. iron is absorbed more easily when vitamin C is present with it. once the sugar gets to the cells, it doesn't make a difference to the mitochondria whether it comes from sweets or fruit, so at that level what you say is correct, however the rate at which the sugars get from the digestive system into the blood and what nutrients are coming in with them makes a huge difference to how the sugar is handled prior to reaching the cells. It can make the difference between getting diabetes and not getting diabetes (to name just one of many issues).
In isolation, nutrients cannot be healthy or unhealthy. You can isolate pretty much any nutrient and in its pure form it won't do the same thing in the body as it would when it's still in the foods it came from. You can only start to talk about healthy or unhealthy in the context of the whole diet. i.e. a whole diet can be healthy, or unhealthy. Apples as part of a balanced diet won't harm you, and will give you micronutrients and carbs. Eat nothing but apples and you'll die from malnutrition. McDonalds burgers as part of a healthy balanced diet won't harm you and will give you protein, fat and carbs, but eat nothing but McDonalds and you'll probably die from heart disease. Fructose is a kind of sugar found in fruit, and many primate species have evolved to get carbohydrate and micronutrients from fruit, including humans. fruit is not unhealthy, nor is the sugar in fruit. If you refine fruit sugar and put it in other foods, that's different.
ETA: I'm an everything in moderation person, I eat ice cream, chocolate, all sorts (not snickers because I hate peanuts) - so i'm not approaching this from a hating of all junk food point of view, I don't believe any food should be demonised, healthy is about getting everything your body needs without harming it in the process. i.e. everything in moderation, toxic is dependent on dose.0 -
Will power? why suffer when you don't have to make life easier on yourself!
Here are some of the things I eat as part of my healthy diet that taste sweet
- banana and egg white pancake (can add truvia zero calorie sweetener)
- shape low fat low cal chocolate yogurts
- chocolate soya shake (Just devised a recipe to make it minty and lower fat: mix 150 ml of unsweetened almond milk, 100 mls of chocolate soya milk and then get an options hot cholocolate 11grams of powder in any flavour you want I use mint, then mix that with 50ml of hot water and then slowly sitr in to the other mixture and tada you have a a sweet and chocolatey 300ml milkshake for 130 calories, 6 grams of protein and 5grams of fat.
- sugar free marshmellows
- chocolate philladelphia spread (for usa people that's low fat cream cheese with some cadbury chocolate added)
- banoffee corn cracker - get some sort of low fat cracker (I use corn thins) top with 10grams carnation caramel, 10 grams half fat fromage frais and a few slices of banana. (about 70 cals)
- Chocolate mint creams (if you can just have one of two it's only about 60 calories and low fat coz it's mostly mint and not chocolate.
sugar free jelly - 10 cals
- fruit ice lolly
And before the health obsessives get on my back sweet taste is not your enemy they are all low fat, low cal treats and most of them have a healthy dose of protein and or fiber!0 -
I just find it easier to not eat sugar -- eat protein instead. Plenty of natural sugars in fruit, milk, etc. Sugar sets off craving in me, and I want more, like the sugar monster. I think we are all different in this regard. Sugar just doesn't work for me. Wish I could just eat a little. Interesting research on how sugar (and refined carbs in general) activate the dopamine pathways in the brain like alcohol and cocaine. So for me I just abstain. If I ate a sugar cube it would set me off like a drug.
Oh good grief this is me I thought it was only me and I had no self control it IS like a drug if I try a little bit I have to have more and more but when I fast I dont eat anything and I am fine. but I dare not fast for more than a couple of days in a week otherwise my loss would be too rapid0
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