Cutting Sugar?

I seem to be struggling with cutting my sugar intake appropriately. I tend to be very close to on par or slightly above (with 10-15 grams) which of course, isn't ideal. Does anyone have any feasible, reasonable tricks for cutting it a bit? I've been trying to eat more fruit but that hasn't exactly been helping the sugar :(
«13

Replies

  • arditarose
    arditarose Posts: 15,573 Member
    Do you have a medical reason to reduce sugar? Otherwise it does not matter for weight loss. I have not tracked sugar in over a year.
  • ninerbuff
    ninerbuff Posts: 48,964 Member
    15 grams of sugar is 60 calories. You can burn that off just walking for 10 minutes. While it's fine to reduce sugar intake, one doesn't need to go to the extreme to do it. Especially since glycogen is much more easily derived from sugars than fat and glycogen is your first source of energy in physical activity.

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    9285851.png
  • umaarte
    umaarte Posts: 4 Member
    I eat a lot of fruits though for sugar, that's a healthy sugar there rather than anything from refined sugar, process food.
  • pollypocket1021
    pollypocket1021 Posts: 533 Member
    umaarte wrote: »
    I eat a lot of fruits though for sugar, that's a healthy sugar there rather than anything from refined sugar, process food.

    What is different about the fructose is fruit that makes it healthier than the fructose in soda?
  • Sugar is not evil. If you don't have a medical reason to watch it, I wouldn't worry about it. I don't track sugar, because, I don't feel like there's a reason for me to.
  • lorrpb
    lorrpb Posts: 11,463 Member
    Look at your log and figure out where your sugar is coming from now. Cut some of those things and add protein. There are health benefits to reducing sugar even if you gong have a formal medical diagnosis.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    umaarte wrote: »
    I eat a lot of fruits though for sugar, that's a healthy sugar there rather than anything from refined sugar, process food.

    What is different about the fructose is fruit that makes it healthier than the fructose in soda?

    Nothing, but fruits are different from soda, and come with more micros and fiber. It makes sense to think of foods as a whole and not just sugar or macros, IMO, beyond getting enough.

    This is also why I wouldn't worry about the sugar limit. Who credible says that 15% of calories in total sugar in a deficit calorie amount that has enough protein, fiber, healthy fat, and is satiating and overall a healthy balanced diet, is too much?
  • bright_fit
    bright_fit Posts: 6 Member
    Keeping your sugar in check is super important!! When you eat starchy or sugary foods your blood sugar spikes and then drops quickly and your body wants to raise the blood sugar again hence the cravings. The less sugar you eat the less hungry you'll feel!

    Took me years of dieting and mfp to pay attention to how sugar was making me gain weight - not just from the calorie side of things, but from a mental health cravings side of things. Of course I have been addicted to sugar (yes it is a DRUG) since I was a kid - family food was very sugary, packaged. Its a hard battle, really hard to control but the less sugar you invite in the less you'll crave food period.

    If you're struggling with cravings read the labels and have a no sugar day or week and tell me you don't feel better!
  • VykkDraygoVPR
    VykkDraygoVPR Posts: 465 Member
    edited December 2015
    bright_fit wrote: »
    Of course I have been addicted to sugar (yes it is a DRUG) since I was a kid - family food was very sugary, packaged.

    Can't tell if trolling, or ...

    Sugar most definitely isn't a drug, either way. That's a pretty ridiculous thing to claim. I mean, if you're being serious... I don't even...



    @LittleRainbow123 Unless you need to cut it for medical reasons, or you're specifically trying a low carb way of eating, then don't sweat it. Fruits are tasty, and packed full of good stuff. Sugar won't hurt.
  • PinkPixiexox
    PinkPixiexox Posts: 4,142 Member
    If your goal is simply to lose weight, it isn't necessary to worry too much about sugar intake! Count your calories and make sure you aren't going over your allowance, of course - but don't over complicate it when you don't need to :)

    I lost 40 lbs and I am now in maintenance (and actually still losing here and there!) and I was 'over' my sugar 'allowance' almost every single day.

    Unless there is a medical reason to keep an eye on your sugar intake, I wouldn't worry!
  • Sued0nim
    Sued0nim Posts: 17,456 Member
    I seem to be struggling with cutting my sugar intake appropriately. I tend to be very close to on par or slightly above (with 10-15 grams) which of course, isn't ideal. Does anyone have any feasible, reasonable tricks for cutting it a bit? I've been trying to eat more fruit but that hasn't exactly been helping the sugar :(

    I swapped out sugar tracking for fibre tracking over a year ago

    I find it much more useful

    but then I have no medical need to track sugar, it may be different for you

    if you're not hitting your macro (specifically protein and fats) and micro-nutrients then I would suggest concentrating on upping those rather than worrying unduly about sugar content .. by hitting a widespread of nutritional vegetables, lean proteins, dairy and carbs to tastes
  • percolater
    percolater Posts: 55 Member
    bright_fit wrote: »
    Keeping your sugar in check is super important!! When you eat starchy or sugary foods your blood sugar spikes and then drops quickly and your body wants to raise the blood sugar again hence the cravings. The less sugar you eat the less hungry you'll feel!

    Took me years of dieting and mfp to pay attention to how sugar was making me gain weight - not just from the calorie side of things, but from a mental health cravings side of things. Of course I have been addicted to sugar (yes it is a DRUG) since I was a kid - family food was very sugary, packaged. Its a hard battle, really hard to control but the less sugar you invite in the less you'll crave food period.

    If you're struggling with cravings read the labels and have a no sugar day or week and tell me you don't feel better!

    Agree 100%. I track two numbers, calories and sugar. If the sugar goes too high, even from fruit, I get overly hungry and binge. Sugar causes insulin to flood your system and insulin is a hunger hormone. Watch Dr. Lustig's videos on you-tube if you need motivation to cut sugar.

  • Sued0nim
    Sued0nim Posts: 17,456 Member
    percolater wrote: »
    bright_fit wrote: »
    Keeping your sugar in check is super important!! When you eat starchy or sugary foods your blood sugar spikes and then drops quickly and your body wants to raise the blood sugar again hence the cravings. The less sugar you eat the less hungry you'll feel!

    Took me years of dieting and mfp to pay attention to how sugar was making me gain weight - not just from the calorie side of things, but from a mental health cravings side of things. Of course I have been addicted to sugar (yes it is a DRUG) since I was a kid - family food was very sugary, packaged. Its a hard battle, really hard to control but the less sugar you invite in the less you'll crave food period.

    If you're struggling with cravings read the labels and have a no sugar day or week and tell me you don't feel better!

    Agree 100%. I track two numbers, calories and sugar. If the sugar goes too high, even from fruit, I get overly hungry and binge. Sugar causes insulin to flood your system and insulin is a hunger hormone. Watch Dr. Lustig's videos on you-tube if you need motivation to cut sugar.

    Not true -

    and please - avoid Lustig on you-tube the man has been debunked, over and over again

    want a killer? protein results in insulin spikes too

  • stevencloser
    stevencloser Posts: 8,911 Member
    Insulin is not a hunger hormone. Leptin is increased by insulin and leptin is the thing that reduces your hunger.
  • umayster
    umayster Posts: 651 Member
    arditarose wrote: »
    Do you have a medical reason to reduce sugar? Otherwise it does not matter for weight loss. I have not tracked sugar in over a year.

    Please stop suggesting that a medical reason is the only allowable or valid reason to minimize sugar. People need to discover through trial and error what dietary goals work best for their own body. Don't discourage perfectly valid experimentation.
  • Sued0nim
    Sued0nim Posts: 17,456 Member
    umayster wrote: »
    arditarose wrote: »
    Do you have a medical reason to reduce sugar? Otherwise it does not matter for weight loss. I have not tracked sugar in over a year.

    Please stop suggesting that a medical reason is the only allowable or valid reason to minimize sugar. People need to discover through trial and error what dietary goals work best for their own body. Don't discourage perfectly valid experimentation.

    she said "it does not matter" and it doesn't

    whether it suits you is something different

    people come to this site having believed the current hype and the current media hype is noooooo sugarrrrr baddddd

    please stop suggesting that others have some kind of pro-sugar agenda because you have an anti-sugar one
  • ericGold15
    ericGold15 Posts: 318 Member
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    15 grams of sugar is 60 calories. You can burn that off just walking for 10 minutes. While it's fine to reduce sugar intake, one doesn't need to go to the extreme to do it. Especially since glycogen is much more easily derived from sugars than fat
    Glycogen is not made from fat.

  • Hornsby
    Hornsby Posts: 10,322 Member
    ericGold15 wrote: »
    ninerbuff wrote: »
    15 grams of sugar is 60 calories. You can burn that off just walking for 10 minutes. While it's fine to reduce sugar intake, one doesn't need to go to the extreme to do it. Especially since glycogen is much more easily derived from sugars than fat
    Glycogen is not made from fat.

    No one said "made". He said "derived" which is a different word with a different meaning. Assuming he is talking about gluconeogenesis...
  • sijomial
    sijomial Posts: 19,809 Member
    umayster wrote: »
    arditarose wrote: »
    Do you have a medical reason to reduce sugar? Otherwise it does not matter for weight loss. I have not tracked sugar in over a year.

    Please stop suggesting that a medical reason is the only allowable or valid reason to minimize sugar. People need to discover through trial and error what dietary goals work best for their own body. Don't discourage perfectly valid experimentation.

    Avoiding unnecessary stress by tracking something that may well be pointless to track is also a valid experiment.
    Personally I don't worry about carbs let alone a subset of carbs.
  • ericGold15
    ericGold15 Posts: 318 Member
    rabbitjb wrote: »
    and please - avoid Lustig on you-tube the man has been debunked, over and over again
    I am skeptical, well very skeptical of Lustig, but I think it more true to say that his ideas have not been proven because of methodological errors in his work.

    At this point he is a fad, and fads have a way of disappearing. He is not however at this time debunked.

  • stevencloser
    stevencloser Posts: 8,911 Member
    umayster wrote: »
    arditarose wrote: »
    Do you have a medical reason to reduce sugar? Otherwise it does not matter for weight loss. I have not tracked sugar in over a year.

    Please stop suggesting that a medical reason is the only allowable or valid reason to minimize sugar. People need to discover through trial and error what dietary goals work best for their own body. Don't discourage perfectly valid experimentation.

    OP clearly and explicitly said she was struggling reducing her sugars.
    IT IS NOT A GOAL THAT WORKS BEST FOR HER.
  • vivmom2014
    vivmom2014 Posts: 1,649 Member
    bright_fit wrote: »
    Took me years of dieting and mfp to pay attention to how sugar was making me gain weight - not just from the calorie side of things, but from a mental health cravings side of things.

    No. Sugar does not make you gain weight. Eating in a caloric surplus makes you gain weight.

  • Sued0nim
    Sued0nim Posts: 17,456 Member
    ericGold15 wrote: »
    rabbitjb wrote: »
    and please - avoid Lustig on you-tube the man has been debunked, over and over again
    I am skeptical, well very skeptical of Lustig, but I think it more true to say that his ideas have not been proven because of methodological errors in his work.

    At this point he is a fad, and fads have a way of disappearing. He is not however at this time debunked.

    There is enough of what he has promoted that has been called in to question for me to happily consider him debunked, or at the very least an unreliable source of any information .. which to me is debunked

    it might be a simplistic approach but I'm all for simplicity
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    umayster wrote: »
    arditarose wrote: »
    Do you have a medical reason to reduce sugar? Otherwise it does not matter for weight loss. I have not tracked sugar in over a year.

    Please stop suggesting that a medical reason is the only allowable or valid reason to minimize sugar. People need to discover through trial and error what dietary goals work best for their own body. Don't discourage perfectly valid experimentation.

    Right, I have no medical reason to reduce sugar yet reducing baked goods and eating at about 40% carbs, 30% protein and 30 % fat makes it much easier for me to stay in a calorie deficit.

    That said, @LittleRainbow123, are you talking about 10-15 grams of sugar per day? That seems really low.
  • snickerscharlie
    snickerscharlie Posts: 8,578 Member
    umaarte wrote: »
    I eat a lot of fruits though for sugar, that's a healthy sugar there rather than anything from refined sugar, process food.

    Sugar is sugar, regardless of its source. Your body doesn't differentiate between the two, therefore nor should you. :)
  • zoeysasha37
    zoeysasha37 Posts: 7,088 Member
    Op- unless you have a medical condition there is no need to fear sugar.
    I see a lot of bad info in this thread. Please don't believe the hype. Sugar doesn't cause one to gain weight , a calorie surplus does.
    Lustig is a quack and laughable, its almost asinine to talk about because I thought that was clear already to most people .


  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    edited December 2015
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    umayster wrote: »
    arditarose wrote: »
    Do you have a medical reason to reduce sugar? Otherwise it does not matter for weight loss. I have not tracked sugar in over a year.

    Please stop suggesting that a medical reason is the only allowable or valid reason to minimize sugar. People need to discover through trial and error what dietary goals work best for their own body. Don't discourage perfectly valid experimentation.

    Right, I have no medical reason to reduce sugar yet reducing baked goods and eating at about 40% carbs, 30% protein and 30 % fat makes it much easier for me to stay in a calorie deficit.

    That said, @LittleRainbow123, are you talking about 10-15 grams of sugar per day? That seems really low.

    I thought perhaps she meant over by 10-15 g.

    If someone has a low calorie level they will get a low sugar goal that can be easily exceeded without baked goods (or with only small amounts of them) if you also eat lots of fruit, veg, dairy, etc. Or even not that much if you are at 45 g.

    OP seems to assume that exceeding her sugar is unhealthy (she says "not ideal") which is an assumption a lot of people make from the existence of the sugar goal or the unfortunate extremist rhetoric surrounding sugar ("it's a drug!") that seems to cause many new posters to worry even about consuming fruit. Therefore, I think it's important to put it in context. The WHO and other common recommendations are based on added sugar and are because it's easy to exceed calories if you eat lots of added sugar or avoid filling your diet with nutrient-rich foods. If someone eats a good balanced diet and gets enough of other things (like protein) and isn't hungry, sugar isn't a concern, and I personally think it's a really rare person who needs to worry about sugar from fruit (probably Freelee gets too much of it, in that her diet is otherwise unbalanced).

    Now, sure, if you are hungry or regularly exceeding calories and see you are eating lots of low nutrient sweet treats, cutting those down some is a no-brainer, but since people usually get that I think it's rare that that's what they are referring to when they ask about how to cut sugar unless they indicate that they are having trouble with cravings or such.
  • kgeyser
    kgeyser Posts: 22,505 Member
    I seem to be struggling with cutting my sugar intake appropriately. I tend to be very close to on par or slightly above (with 10-15 grams) which of course, isn't ideal. Does anyone have any feasible, reasonable tricks for cutting it a bit? I've been trying to eat more fruit but that hasn't exactly been helping the sugar :(

    LittleRainbow123, I snooped your profile and you mentioned that you are trying to lose some weight but you are also concerned about T2D. Are you currently dealing with insulin resistance that impacts your sugar/carb goal for the day, or are you just looking for ideas to help cut back on sugar-heavy foods you tend to overeat/which lead to overeating through cravings (or some combination of the two)?
  • blankiefinder
    blankiefinder Posts: 3,599 Member
    I seem to be struggling with cutting my sugar intake appropriately. I tend to be very close to on par or slightly above (with 10-15 grams) which of course, isn't ideal. Does anyone have any feasible, reasonable tricks for cutting it a bit? I've been trying to eat more fruit but that hasn't exactly been helping the sugar :(

    My trick is that I stopped tracking sugar, so I didn't have to worry about it. I used the default MFP settings, and focused on making sure I hit the protein macro that it set as my goal. I reached goal weight just over 6 months later, and have been in maintenance for 9 months this way.