Have you Quit Sugar?
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I have quit added sugars, yes. Well, excluding sugar alcohols as they do not count (0 calorie, 0g carb, no glycemic spike and you urinate it out). But if they are sugars naturally found in the food, I’ll consume it. But I keep my carb count below 20g net carbs a day anyway. The carbs I do consume primarily come from dietary fibers.0
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I've given up pretty much all added sugars, and I feel great. Never had more energy There's always going to be hidden sugars here and there, but I eat mostly whole foods so there's few surprises.0
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lemurcat12 wrote: »Sabine_Stroehm wrote: »lemurcat12 wrote: »mamapeach910 wrote: »I think over-consuming anything to the point that it's out of balance with the rest of your intake will tax your system to the point that it will cause sluggishness.
This is my experience too.
Yup. Agreed. And I would add there's a tendency to over do on some things but not on others.
But what those things are seems to differ person to person. Lots of people here seem inclined to overdo on pasta, but I'm way more likely to overdo on some rack of lamb. I mean, not anymore, normally, since I monitor portions, but I easily could!
(I seem to be posting about meat today.)
I can eat pounds of cherries if given opportunity.0 -
I've quit sugar as in the white grainy stuff, no more sugar in my coffee or cereals. But I still eat my fruits and on occasion sweet treats.0
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@Sabine_Stroehm all babies would agree that Goldfish outrank broccoli. Have you heard of the famous empathy experiment?
http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2013-02-01/features/sfe-sfp-empathy-develops-during-early-childhood_1_babies-and-toddlers-broccoli-empathy0 -
@Sabine_Stroehm all babies would agree that Goldfish outrank broccoli. Have you heard of the famous empathy experiment?
http://articles.sun-sentinel.com/2013-02-01/features/sfe-sfp-empathy-develops-during-early-childhood_1_babies-and-toddlers-broccoli-empathy
Smiles, I know the study, and others by the Berkeley team quite well. cheers!0 -
Have you read the book "I Quit Sugar"? It's wonderful! Very easy and very common sense. I think you might like it.
I followed what she said to do to break the sugar addiction, and it worked just like she said. I still eat sweet things that don't taste funky or gross, but I don't "need" dessert or sweets anymore. It's really been amazing.0 -
There is so much sugar hidden in all foods that it is almost impossible to remove all of it. But I have really reduced the amount of obvious sugar (cookies, cakes, chocolates) that I eat.] I feel good about that0
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I stay away from all simple refined sugar. I limit rice to occasionally plus portion control, and try to eat the brand type with the lowest GL index number. I eat fruit everyday, but try to stick to say 2-3 pieces and limit grapes, etc. I often fail on that score...I'm not a low carber but do avoid refined.
I've cut out sugar on 3 or 4 occasions, once for 1.5 years. I felt better and found I got sick, shakey like menopause if i broke my pattern. But after a handful of times, it gets easy to eat again and cravings start.
I truly believe giving up white death is one the biggest keys to health and wellbeing. I also feel much less compulsive about food when I avoid sugar. It's very hard at first on on occasions such as holidays, but it gets easier. I hope to do this for the rest of my life.
Try it...your body will thank you. Try 3 months on no refined sugar, no bread etc...then eat a cupcake. You'll see the stuff is poison.
There is much research and increasing consensus about the health risks of refined sugar. Even the WHO world health organization recommends limiting added sugar to 20g a day, that's 6 teaspoons. A store bought ice tea has more than that.
All my doctors agree you should limit at very least. It's true some people suffer no harm from eaying a lot of sugar, but these folks are few and far between.
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No, I haven't quit it, but I've always been mindful of it. I pay attention to added sugar vs. natural sugar. The majority of the sugar in my diet is natural. From fresh, raw fruit.0
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I stay away from all simple refined sugar. I limit rice to occasionally plus portion control, and try to eat the brand type with the lowest GL index number. I eat fruit everyday, but try to stick to say 2-3 pieces and limit grapes, etc. I often fail on that score...I'm not a low carber but do avoid refined.
I've cut out sugar on 3 or 4 occasions, once for 1.5 years. I felt better and found I got sick, shakey like menopause if i broke my pattern. But after a handful of times, it gets easy to eat again and cravings start.
I truly believe giving up white death is one the biggest keys to health and wellbeing. I also feel much less compulsive about food when I avoid sugar. It's very hard at first on on occasions such as holidays, but it gets easier. I hope to do this for the rest of my life.
Try it...your body will thank you. Try 3 months on no refined sugar, no bread etc...then eat a cupcake. You'll see the stuff is poison.
There is much research and increasing consensus about the health risks of refined sugar. Even the WHO world health organization recommends limiting added sugar to 20g a day, that's 6 teaspoons. A store bought ice tea has more than that.
All my doctors agree you should limit at very least. It's true some people suffer no harm from eaying a lot of sugar, but these folks are few and far between.0 -
I have not given up sugar, but I have decided to eat less of it. I do not think I will keep this up for long because I do not think there is much of a benefit for doing so.0
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Your diet will be naturally limited in sugar if you just start eating balanced meals with whole foods. If you get sugar in this manner it will mostly come from fruits.0
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I laughed at the phrase "white death"
All things "white" cause death.... eeeewwww! I may die before the weekend is up, so this may be my last post!..0 -
After watching a documentary about sugar I am really considering quitting altogether.
Has anyone else done this and what was your experience??
I think you're a bit confused-if you're thinking of quitting sugar, you'll be eliminating some major things from your diet like fruit. It might be a good idea to do a bit more research, and get a better understanding of how your body breaks food down etc. Also-be very wary when it comes to 'nutritional' documentaries-they all are spinning a certain woe as the only way to eat for optimal health, but they're all pretty biased (and many of them are just trying to sell something). Pretty sure I've seen the documentary that you watched and yeah, just take it with a grain of salt0 -
I stopped putting sugar in my tea (I drink 5-8 cups a day). But I still add it to pancakes, porridge, and other recipies... I do not cook such food often though, couples times a month...0
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I'm eating a lot less sugar than I used too. I don't miss it at all, or haven't so far. I feel great, it's a small part of a lot of other changes I had to make. But I don't feel tired or like I'm missing anything.
Many foods have natural sugars in them I wouldn't cut all those foods, maybe think about limiting added sugars.0 -
DedRepublic wrote: »Your diet will be naturally limited in sugar if you just start eating balanced meals with whole foods. If you get sugar in this manner it will mostly come from fruits.
This is basically how I think about it. Focusing on specific foods (or ingredients) like sugar seems misplaced. If you just focus on eating healthy balanced meals within your calories and not eating a bunch of extra stuff, you simply won't be overeating sugar.
Now, I like sweet things, so do continue to eat the occasional sweet treat when I have room in my day and have generally met my other nutrition goals. When I'm exercising a lot that can mean I have ice cream (but a reasonable size) pretty regularly. I've never wasted calories on stupid stuff like sugary sodas or iced teas (I make my own unsweetened iced tea which I like far better), so people freaking out about the sugar in them and using scare terms like "white death" just make me laugh.0 -
No. I am eating less of it as I'm making choices that mean I'm not hungry in my cal limit. Eg less sweets, chocolate etc0
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LOL @ "white death"...
Fearmonger much?0 -
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http://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/10665/149782/1/9789241549028_eng.pdf?ua=1
Here's the sugar guidelines by the WHO.
There's 2 main reasons they recommend limiting sugar: it decreases total calorie intake and thus leads to less weight gain and better nutrition in people who don't really pay attention to their intakes and because of caries.
And they don't recommend limiting sugar to 20g a day, they recommend it being less than 10% of your total calories. So unless your intake is under 800 that'll be over 20g.0 -
Nope. I have 1.5tbsp brown sugar in my coffee (3 cups @ 1/2tbsp each) plus eat fruit so I get the sugars from them. I have cut out cookies, sweets, etc.0
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I don't go out of my way to limit my sugar intake, however, a lot of the foods that I normally eat are low in sugar.0
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herrspoons wrote: »No. It's pointless.
By all means cut down, but exclusion diets are hard to maintain and unnecessary for most people.
^^^This...
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lemurcat12 wrote: »When I'm exercising a lot that can mean I have ice cream (but a reasonable size) pretty regularly.
Sugar can be great after an intense weight training workout. I have been known to eat donuts on leg day...
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I stay away from all simple refined sugar. I limit rice to occasionally plus portion control, and try to eat the brand type with the lowest GL index number. I eat fruit everyday, but try to stick to say 2-3 pieces and limit grapes, etc. I often fail on that score...I'm not a low carber but do avoid refined.
I've cut out sugar on 3 or 4 occasions, once for 1.5 years. I felt better and found I got sick, shakey like menopause if i broke my pattern. But after a handful of times, it gets easy to eat again and cravings start.
I truly believe giving up white death is one the biggest keys to health and wellbeing. I also feel much less compulsive about food when I avoid sugar. It's very hard at first on on occasions such as holidays, but it gets easier. I hope to do this for the rest of my life.
Try it...your body will thank you. Try 3 months on no refined sugar, no bread etc...then eat a cupcake. You'll see the stuff is poison.
There is much research and increasing consensus about the health risks of refined sugar. Even the WHO world health organization recommends limiting added sugar to 20g a day, that's 6 teaspoons. A store bought ice tea has more than that.
All my doctors agree you should limit at very least. It's true some people suffer no harm from eaying a lot of sugar, but these folks are few and far between.
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This discussion has been closed.
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