I have a suger addiction

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Some days I Eat great. I can say most days I eat well. But I always ruin it because I constantly crave so much suger. :s Cakes, cookies, Cheesecake. Saying no Is much easyer said than done. If Anyone have any tips or suggestions it will be greatly appreciated.
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  • queenliz99
    queenliz99 Posts: 15,317 Member
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    How is it that you have those things around? Do you buy it?
  • TeaBea
    TeaBea Posts: 14,517 Member
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    In the past I eliminated "added" sugar when I was on a diet. The problem for me was that was not something I intended to continue when I got to goal. So, of course, I gained the weight back.

    This time, there is no elimination. I manage my added sugar intake. I allow myself a sweet treat every day. That way I portion control ALL foods, not just diet ones. I save my treat until later in the day. I pick the thing that I'm really craving. I keep single portion sizes available: an ice cream bar, individual chocolate squares, 100 calorie pack cookies. You may find there is something you can't keep in the house (I rarely make Toll House cookies....then I will bring them somewhere). I make it a point to have that thing once in awhile.
  • cityruss
    cityruss Posts: 2,493 Member
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    If moderation is completely out of the question, just don't have them in the house.

    This does not mean eliminating anything, but if you fancy some cake, you can purchase a size on the fly to suit your needs, or if you fancy a donut you can buy one, not have a box laying around.

    I can moderate most things, but I have to employ the above tactics with ice cream or else it's all out carnage.
  • fitpal661
    fitpal661 Posts: 7 Member
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    Fruit has less calories. Think of healthier choices. I need to not even start snacking on sugar or I'll overdo. Also I need to ask if I'm really hungry or just thirsty. Eat real food.
  • Spliner1969
    Spliner1969 Posts: 3,233 Member
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    Don't bring them in the house. That's the only thing that saves me. If we buy them, we eat them. Problem is supermarkets pile these stupid boxes of them up by the cash registers so you can grab a box or 4 on the way out. I do pretty good if I keep that in mind when at the store. I know if I buy it, i'll eat it. Sometimes we have family gatherings and will buy chips and snacks for the kids/grandkids. I make sure to send it home with them so it gets it out of the house lol. Over a period of time it gets easier to resist. Also, even if sugar doesn't bother you (as in diabetic/insulin resistance) consider switching to a natural sweetener like Stevia. I still have sugar in a few things, like some things I cook (chili for one, and other things it simply brings out the flavor a bit more) but I don't add it to things like coffee/drinks any more, I reach for a Stevie packet or two first. I also now buy things that are "no sugar added" or are "sugar free". I've never been diabetic but the sugar free or no-sugar added stuff has a bonus.. it's lower in calories. Good luck!
  • adamyovanovich
    adamyovanovich Posts: 163 Member
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    Try eating the flavored yogurts. Lower calories, but have the same taste. Might be an option.
  • PinkSuede
    PinkSuede Posts: 49 Member
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    The struggles with sugar addiction are real. First thing I can suggest is to get the sugar out of the house. Out of sight out of mind. I personally have horrible self control when surrounded by sugar. I had to get it out of my house. I took it so far as to clean both my fridge and pantry of every single product with added sugar with the exception of honey and bottled/canned products with less than 2g per serving like my pasta sauce and of course my wheat bread . Next I found myself some low sugar foods I could substitute for dessert that feel like a treat but easily fit into my plan and don't contain added sugar or contain minimal amounts of added sugar. For me those were super dark chocolate (85%+), whole yogurt that I blend with fresh fruit, rice crackers with a small amount of cream cheese and fresh fruit on top, or Ruby Rockets Pops. Basically I tried to switch my main source of sugar to whole fruits. So far doing this Im very happy with my progress. Some days I am still over my sugar goals but theyre usually from fruit and I am ok with that. It hasnt slowed my weight loss at all. It might sound extreme, and I know it's especially hard to do if you have other family members are home but for me... this is what it takes to keep me off the sugar. If and when my BF does bring something sweet home I literally make him hide it. I have no shame. lol
  • elphie754
    elphie754 Posts: 7,574 Member
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    fitpal661 wrote: »
    Fruit has less calories. Think of healthier choices. I need to not even start snacking on sugar or I'll overdo. Also I need to ask if I'm really hungry or just thirsty. Eat real food.

    Fruit is still sugar... So you replace sugar with sugar??
  • queenliz99
    queenliz99 Posts: 15,317 Member
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    elphie754 wrote: »
    fitpal661 wrote: »
    Fruit has less calories. Think of healthier choices. I need to not even start snacking on sugar or I'll overdo. Also I need to ask if I'm really hungry or just thirsty. Eat real food.

    Fruit is still sugar... So you replace sugar with sugar??

    OP's examples were really hyperpalatable sugar/fat combo's, not just sugar. I used to think I had a sugar issue until I had to go on a low fat diet (gallbladder problems) and realized that it's not the sugar, it's the high reward combo of sugar and fat together.

    I eat plenty of fruit, maple syrup on oats, PB2 with added sugar, and even plain old white sugar, and I have no trouble moderating them. I also know lots of low carbers who use butter, coconut oil, and other fats with no control issues whatsoever. It's when you put them together that they become a problem for some people.

    Almost everyone who thinks they are addicted to carbs or sugar, (or who thinks dietary fat is making them fat) when giving examples of the foods they can't stop eating, lists carb-fat combinations. Pizza, buttered bread, cake, cookies, pasta with olive oil or rich sauces...

    I've yet to hear of anyone "addicted" to apples or cantaloupe.

    But pineapples! yum, seriously hard to stop.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
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    queenliz99 wrote: »
    How is it that you have those things around? Do you buy it?

    This is a good question. (Not saying there's not perhaps a good answer -- I can't prevent sweets from being around me, so have to come up with other strategies.)

    I always think the first step with problems like this is to really think about the specifics:

    (1) How many calories are you eating? (Related to this, what are your stats and how active are you?) Purpose of this question -- are you letting yourself get too hungry.

    (2) When are you finding your ability to resist temptation lowest? When are you eating the foods at issue? (This includes how long before/after another meal and what was eaten at the prior meal.) Purpose of this--maybe it's meal timing or some situational trigger.

    (3) What are your macros and how are they spread out over your meals/snack (this is protein/fat/carbs).

    (4) How do you feel before you give in to temptation?

    (5) How do you feel afterwards -- are you telling yourself they are bad foods or everything is ruined or feeling shame or guilt?

    (6) How much do you eat? If more than planned, what leads you to keep eating?

    (7) How much are you sleeping?

    (8) Is there a particular location where you eat these foods?

    (9) Are you trying to cut them out entirely? Have you tried working them in in smaller amounts with structure? Telling yourself you can have them later?

    (10) Do you enjoy your current diet.

    I'm sure there are many others, but I'd start by thinking about stuff like this. If you want to share, we may have better and more helpful ideas for you than just talking about our own specifics (although I bet you get good advice from that stuff too, if you accept that it will be contradictory and focus on what speaks to you the most).
  • silverfiend
    silverfiend Posts: 329 Member
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    sugar addict here too. The major part of the addiction is the mental aspect. You have to train yourself to stay away from it on a constant basis. No drug is "good" or "bad", but in how much you use that causes problems.

    1- don't buy it and bring it home to sit there tempting you.
    2- when you go to the grocery store and see those trigger foods, tell yourself you don't need them
    3- don't go to the store hungry!!!!!

    I loooooove me some sugar in all forms. cake, pie, icecream, cookies, donuts..... but I know that eating them continually is really bad. So I let myself have some, in limited quantities, on special occasions. Train your brain to eat reasonable amounts infrequently. Forbidden things only become more desireable, so never say never.
  • silverfiend
    silverfiend Posts: 329 Member
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    queenliz99 wrote: »
    elphie754 wrote: »
    fitpal661 wrote: »
    Fruit has less calories. Think of healthier choices. I need to not even start snacking on sugar or I'll overdo. Also I need to ask if I'm really hungry or just thirsty. Eat real food.

    Fruit is still sugar... So you replace sugar with sugar??

    Because a donut or a serving of ice cream does not equal a pear, that's why. Both in terms of calories, and in terms of health.

    Sugar is sugar, you gut cannot tell the difference.

    Addiction is far less about the body and much more about the mind. It's the smell, the feel, the taste that draws us back. Even though I know I would gain weight and feel like complete *kitten* for a week, I would LOVE to go eat a whole peach cobbler right now.
  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
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    If you absolutely need sugar, stick with hard candy and have it slowly dissolve in your mouth. That's your sugar without all the fat that makes "sugary" items high in calories. As a bonus, you are less likely to overeat them because your mouth will be sore before you manage to eat enough hard candy to equal the calories of a slice of cake.
  • Nikion901
    Nikion901 Posts: 2,467 Member
    edited August 2016
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    I have found that I cannot have a sugary food item as a snack. It has to be as the dessert to a full meal, and the portion needs to be small.

    PS ... and that goes for most fruit as well. If I do have a fruit as a snack, it would be something like a 4 ounce apple with 1 tablespoon of peanut butter or 1 ounce of hard cheese with it, but never on it's own.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
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    elphie754 wrote: »
    fitpal661 wrote: »
    Fruit has less calories. Think of healthier choices. I need to not even start snacking on sugar or I'll overdo. Also I need to ask if I'm really hungry or just thirsty. Eat real food.

    Fruit is still sugar... So you replace sugar with sugar??

    OP's examples were really hyperpalatable sugar/fat combo's, not just sugar. I used to think I had a sugar issue until I had to go on a low fat diet (gallbladder problems) and realized that it's not the sugar, it's the high reward combo of sugar and fat together.

    I eat plenty of fruit, maple syrup on oats, PB2 with added sugar, and even plain old white sugar, and I have no trouble moderating them. I also know lots of low carbers who use butter, coconut oil, and other fats with no control issues whatsoever. It's when you put them together that they become a problem for some people.

    Almost everyone who thinks they are addicted to carbs or sugar, (or who thinks dietary fat is making them fat) when giving examples of the foods they can't stop eating, lists carb-fat combinations. Pizza, buttered bread, cake, cookies, pasta with olive oil or rich sauces...

    I've yet to hear of anyone "addicted" to apples or cantaloupe.

    This is exactly right.

    And sugar IS sugar, which is the problem with claiming sugar is the issue. When people realize it's that they have difficulty controlling the calories they are consuming from certain highly-palatable and high cal trigger foods (both sugar/fat and salt/starch/fat, often), THEN suggestions like "eat fruit instead" can make sense (as I think they often do). Fruit is different from a cupcake in lots of ways (ways making the fruit often a better choice). Sugar isn't one of those ways.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
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    queenliz99 wrote: »
    elphie754 wrote: »
    fitpal661 wrote: »
    Fruit has less calories. Think of healthier choices. I need to not even start snacking on sugar or I'll overdo. Also I need to ask if I'm really hungry or just thirsty. Eat real food.

    Fruit is still sugar... So you replace sugar with sugar??

    OP's examples were really hyperpalatable sugar/fat combo's, not just sugar. I used to think I had a sugar issue until I had to go on a low fat diet (gallbladder problems) and realized that it's not the sugar, it's the high reward combo of sugar and fat together.

    I eat plenty of fruit, maple syrup on oats, PB2 with added sugar, and even plain old white sugar, and I have no trouble moderating them. I also know lots of low carbers who use butter, coconut oil, and other fats with no control issues whatsoever. It's when you put them together that they become a problem for some people.

    Almost everyone who thinks they are addicted to carbs or sugar, (or who thinks dietary fat is making them fat) when giving examples of the foods they can't stop eating, lists carb-fat combinations. Pizza, buttered bread, cake, cookies, pasta with olive oil or rich sauces...

    I've yet to hear of anyone "addicted" to apples or cantaloupe.

    But pineapples! yum, seriously hard to stop.

    I have to admit to the same problem!
  • Trish1c
    Trish1c Posts: 549 Member
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    I agree with a lot of what has been said.

    If you can't just have a little -- like 2 cookies -- don't keep the stuff in the house. At the very least get it off the counter and up on a high shelf.

    I was always a sweets junk food junkie -- cake, cookies, ice cream, & gallons of regular Pepsi etc. We still have ice cream in the house but now I eat the correct portion -- 1/2 cup not a giant bowl which is more like 2-3 cups. When I'm "bad" and eat a whole cup, I take a walk around the block after.

    Eating more fruit has helped me. Yes, a calorie is a calorie & sugar is still sugar especially if you are diabetic, but I feel less guilty after eating the fruit because unlike the cake cookies etc the fruit has other nutritional value & more importantly it helps me to feel fuller longer.

    If you can't go cold turkey don't. Simply start by eating less. Baby steps still represent forward progress.
  • gonetothedogs19
    gonetothedogs19 Posts: 325 Member
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    If you absolutely need sugar, stick with hard candy and have it slowly dissolve in your mouth. That's your sugar without all the fat that makes "sugary" items high in calories. As a bonus, you are less likely to overeat them because your mouth will be sore before you manage to eat enough hard candy to equal the calories of a slice of cake.

    Dum Dum lollipops are pretty good. Each one has 25 calories. Just brush your teeth when you are finished.