Sugar and carbs question
micaelacookie
Posts: 15 Member
I'm trying to cut down on both sugar and carbs for weight loss, but should I be focusing more on not eating sugars, or carbs?
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Replies
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You should be focusing on eating less calories. Calories are king when it comes to weight loss, not sugar/carbs.
All sugars are carbs. And all carbs are metabolized into simple sugars after you eat them.8 -
Your body breaks carbohydrates down into sugars in your body.
But complex carbs (whole grains, starches, veggies, beans) have the nice bonus of fiber and extra nutrients, and that fiber content is more filling and takes longer to digest.
So I personally would focus on cutting out simple carbs, which most often is sugary stuff. They don't keep you full for long (they are rapidly digested).3 -
Well, from my perspective as a diabetic, I look at both. Cutting sugar (like candy, soda) will naturally cut carbs. But I have to look at the entire amount of carbs. Processed carbs like white bread, pasta, and rice really spike my blood sugar. Better to make sure any carbs you eat are more complex whole grains and such. I mean, I cut carbs and lost almost 30 lbs and didn't really calorie court without exercising so cutting carbs will help you lose weight. But I think that was also because a lot of the food I cut out was high in calories so also naturally reduced my calorie intake.4
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I hardly ever eat enough calories to begin with. I just noticed that on my nutrition I eat way too many sugars/ lots of carbs. Thank you all for answering my question though it was helpful!2
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The macro targets on MFP can be considered minimums. if you are not balancing them well, just add more proteins and fats, and the carbs will come down naturally because youll run out of calories for them.
There's nothing wrong with eating carbs, they are what fuels your body. You really only need to limit them if you are diabetic.
Weight loss requires calorie deficit, nutrition requires moderation and balance.1 -
micaelacookie wrote: »I'm trying to cut down on both sugar and carbs for weight loss, but should I be focusing more on not eating sugars, or carbs?
Focus on getting enough protein and healthy fats -- if you are over on carbs and still not hitting calories, you may be missing out on these. After that, I'd focus on nutrition and what makes a diet sustainable for you. Some foods with sugar (vegetables and fruit and dairy) are extremely nutritious, all carbs break down to sugar (starches are just sugars linked together). If there are some things you love that contribute sugar/carbs that you would miss a lot, but are crowding out other things you need, maybe cut down on those.
How low are you on calories? You should generally try to hit calories.1 -
micaelacookie wrote: »I'm trying to cut down on both sugar and carbs for weight loss, but should I be focusing more on not eating sugars, or carbs?
It's calories for weight loss.
But I try to manage "added" sugar. When I'm fat; I eat too much added sugar. If I'm going to stay thin.....I can't go back to my usual routine. Management is not the same thing as elimination....that backfires for me.
I don't manage carbs (no medical issues).....but instead focus on meeting protein & fat goals. I don't want carbs crowding these macros out.1 -
lemurcat12 wrote:
Focus on getting enough protein and healthy fats -- if you are over on carbs and still not hitting calories, you may be missing out on these. After that, I'd focus on nutrition and what makes a diet sustainable for you. Some foods with sugar (vegetables and fruit and dairy) are extremely nutritious, all carbs break down to sugar (starches are just sugars linked together). If there are some things you love that contribute sugar/carbs that you would miss a lot, but are crowding out other things you need, maybe cut down on those.
How low are you on calories? You should generally try to hit calories.
A lot of times when I log for the day it'll tell me I'm not eating enough, but I eat 3x a day and feel full. Maybe I'm just not eating the right foods.
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Good sources of protein: pork chops, eggs, cottage cheese, milk, eggs, fish, lean beef.
Also broccoli and green leafy veggies.
Add some snacks or make your three meals a little bit bigger.
If you are low on calories, look at this list for suggestions:
http://community.myfitnesspal.com/en/discussion/10142490/a-list-of-calorie-dense-foods/p1avocado
cheese
full fat dairy
Greek yogurt
ice cream
peanut butter (or other nut butters)
dark chocolate
less lean cuts of meat (including beef, pork, sausage, etc.)
seeds (chia, flax, sunflower, etc.)
nuts
olive oil
coconut oil
butter
beans and lentils
protein shakes, bars, and smoothies
hummus
beef jerky
cornbread
tuna
full calorie condiments
full calorie sauces & dressings
sour cream
guacamole
whole grain pasta
rice
bacon
whole eggs
quinoa
fruit and fruit juices
pretzels
bananas
scones
muffins (bran, blueberry, banana nut, etc.)
potatoes (sweet, red, gold, purple, white, etc.)
dried fruit (raisins, apricots, plums, dates, etc.)
granola
coconut
salmon
edamame
olives
honey
molasses
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micaelacookie wrote: »I'm trying to cut down on both sugar and carbs for weight loss, but should I be focusing more on not eating sugars, or carbs?
Neither.
Focus on calories. Pay attention to nutrition and enjoy your treats/favourites.0 -
micaelacookie wrote: »I hardly ever eat enough calories to begin with. I just noticed that on my nutrition I eat way too many sugars/ lots of carbs. Thank you all for answering my question though it was helpful!
If you aren't eating enough calories then you aren't eating too many carbs.
IMHO it's a bit pointless recording sugars separately at all unless you have a specific medical condition - they are just a subset of carbs.
Maybe start by thinking what you should INCLUDE in your diet rather than what to exclude?4 -
There's a lot of oversimplification in these replies. There's lots of research to say sugar, in particular fructose, is addictive, and encourages overeating.That's completely different from other carbs, although the more processed they are, the worse. Check out the work of Sarah Wilson and David Gillespie on this.
Adult women should have no more than 25g a day (6 teaspoons) of sugar, including fruit, according to the World Health Organisation, and the benefits aren't just weight loss - fructose has been implicated in a host of metabolic and other disorders. 25g is just a couple of pieces of fruit all up. Check out some labels and see how much is in fruit juice and 'diet' foods for example, where the fat has been replaced with sugar.
So pay attention to sugar in your stats. You'll probably find that when you stop eating excess fructose, your cravings for other foods will disappear after a few days, or weeks, of some quite painful withdrawal symptoms, and weight loss will be much easier when the cravings are gone.1 -
There's a lot of oversimplification in these replies. There's lots of research to say sugar, in particular fructose, is addictive, and encourages overeating.That's completely different from other carbs, although the more processed they are, the worse. Check out the work of Sarah Wilson and David Gillespie on this.
Adult women should have no more than 25g a day (6 teaspoons) of sugar, including fruit, according to the World Health Organisation, and the benefits aren't just weight loss - fructose has been implicated in a host of metabolic and other disorders. 25g is just a couple of pieces of fruit all up. Check out some labels and see how much is in fruit juice and 'diet' foods for example, where the fat has been replaced with sugar.
So pay attention to sugar in your stats. You'll probably find that when you stop eating excess fructose, your cravings for other foods will disappear after a few days, or weeks, of some quite painful withdrawal symptoms, and weight loss will be much easier when the cravings are gone.
You are misrepresenting the position of WHO.
Their statements regarding sugar are in reference to added sugars:MARCH 2015 ¦ GENEVA - A new WHO guideline recommends adults and children reduce their daily intake of free sugars to less than 10% of their total energy intake. A further reduction to below 5% or roughly 25 grams (6 teaspoons) per day would provide additional health benefits.
Guideline on sugars intake for adult and children
Free sugars refer to monosaccharides (such as glucose, fructose) and disaccharides (such as sucrose or table sugar) added to foods and drinks by the manufacturer, cook or consumer, and sugars naturally present in honey, syrups, fruit juices and fruit juice concentrates.
http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2015/sugar-guideline/en/3 -
There you go OP - your gold standard as recommended by WHO is to eat no more than 25g or 6tsp of sugar a day. If you aren't aware of the sugar content of most processed foods already, have a look at a label on ketchup, for example, or even a packet of chips. And do check out Gillespie and Wilson.1
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There's a lot of oversimplification in these replies. There's lots of research to say sugar, in particular fructose, is addictive, and encourages overeating.
Maybe you should focus on OP's specific question. She is undereating. Her problem, probably, is that she needs more calories, and specifically more protein and fat. If she gets enough protein and fat, she may not have too many carbs, but at this point we have absolutely no reason to assume that she is having an issue with overeating fructose.
And no, it's not addictive, or why do Americans consistently eat less fruit -- an excellent source of fructose -- than is recommended?
Fructose is also never found alone, so the focus on it is weird.Adult women should have no more than 25g a day (6 teaspoons) of sugar, including fruit, according to the World Health Organisation
This is just a lie. Where did you find it? The WHO recommends no more than 10% of total calories (200 calories if one is on a 2000 cal diet, or 50 g) from ADDED sugar, and further recommends no more than 5% if that is feasible (or 25 g). BUT, this does not, absolutely does not, include fruit, and their explanation is due to the extra calories (often from fat as much as sugar) found in foods with lots of added sugar.
Edit: to add to this, OP is likely on a 1200 cal goal, so over sugar for her means more than 45 g, and given that she can't go above 1000 calories much of the time, from what she said, my guess is that that includes fruit sugar, at least. So lecturing her on cutting sugar is misplaced given what we currently know.7 -
micaelacookie wrote: »Focus on getting enough protein and healthy fats -- if you are over on carbs and still not hitting calories, you may be missing out on these. After that, I'd focus on nutrition and what makes a diet sustainable for you. Some foods with sugar (vegetables and fruit and dairy) are extremely nutritious, all carbs break down to sugar (starches are just sugars linked together). If there are some things you love that contribute sugar/carbs that you would miss a lot, but are crowding out other things you need, maybe cut down on those.
How low are you on calories? You should generally try to hit calories.
A lot of times when I log for the day it'll tell me I'm not eating enough, but I eat 3x a day and feel full. Maybe I'm just not eating the right foods.
That means you are eating under 1000, and for you to be full eating that way (when high on sugar/carbs) is concerning and suggests to me that you are at the least missing out on fat and protein. You also don't seem to be eating particularly filling foods (unless fiber is also quite high?), so I wonder about the lack of appetite. Any chance you can open your diary or tell us how long it's been?1 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »There's a lot of oversimplification in these replies. There's lots of research to say sugar, in particular fructose, is addictive, and encourages overeating.
Maybe you should focus on OP's specific question. She is undereating. Her problem, probably, is that she needs more calories, and specifically more protein and fat. If she gets enough protein and fat, she may not have too many carbs, but at this point we have absolutely no reason to assume that she is having an issue with overeating fructose.
The specific question I saw was: "I'm trying to cut down on both sugar and carbs for weight loss, but should I be focusing more on not eating sugars, or carbs?"
I overlooked her second post, so if she's not hitting her calories, then you're right, she probably isn't overeating, and there's good reason for concern there. OP, please hit your calories with a mix of your choice of high-quality sources of protein, vegetables, legumes, dairy and fruit!And no, it's not addictive, or why do Americans consistently eat less fruit -- an excellent source of fructose -- than is recommended?
There is sound evidence to suggest fructose acts on the brain in the same way as other addictive substances, but you can research that yourself, and your comment about Americans and fruit, fruit not being addictive, and fructose not being found alone suggests you need to read some more about this, so I'll let you Google. Glucose = not addictive (is fuel for body and brain, as we know). Fructose = addictive.
As for Americans, I'll ignore the fact that packaged convenience foods are available every 10 paces and point out that because fruit is packaged with fibre and water, it's difficult to overeat (except grapes and other very sweet fruits are very easy to pop like candy). There is the fructose of 3-4 apples in 8oz of juice, for example. Who's going to eat 3 apples at once?Adult women should have no more than 25g a day (6 teaspoons) of sugar, including fruit, according to the World Health Organisation This is just a lie. Where did you find it? The WHO recommends no more than 10% of total calories (200 calories if one is on a 2000 cal diet, or 50 g) from ADDED sugar, and further recommends no more than 5% if that is feasible (or 25 g). BUT, this does not, absolutely does not, include fruit, and their explanation is due to the extra calories (often from fat as much as sugar) found in foods with lots of added sugar.
You're right, I put "including fruit", when I was thinking of Wilson's stance on fructose, not WHO's (Wilson approves of the guidelines but generally recommends to include fruit in the totals, since it does contain fructose). (Also, lol, you suggest I'm lying to advance an evil healthy-eating agenda and suggest ways to try and improve someone's health after they've asked for it? How dastardly of me.)
But I'm not going to war over 2 pieces of fruit (roughly 25g sugar). We eat far too much fructose. Think of how sweet apples are these days compared to the tart, now heritage varieties available several hundred years ago. We're engineering our fruit to be sweeter, and we're hardwired to crave sugar because it's the best way to store fat, and there's no appetite off switch for fructose. What I've said here are excellent guidelines for everyone to follow in general daily life, so if anyone else has been introduced to this topic, I definitely recommend reading Gillespie & Wilson, and checking out the fabulous That Sugar Film which makes our global fructose problem approachable and fun. Good luck OP.0 -
Fructose does the same thing to your brain that petting puppies and hugging a child does, so if all of that is addictive I need to seriously get some counseling.
OP, my humble suggestions:- Make sure you are logging accurately. What is your weight doing right now? If you are not losing weight, and you have been eating this way for more than a couple of weeks, you are probably eating more than you think. This is really common.
- Make sure you are using accurate entries in the database, many are user entered and really wrong.
- If you really are undereating and losing weight, please do back to @RodaRose post and start getting yourself up to your calorie goal.
- As others have mentioned, it's easier to work on adding good stuff into your diet rather than cutting out bad. If you focus on adding more protein, healthy fat, and fiber into your diet it will naturally start to crowd out the other stuff until you get your numbers where you want.
- I don't pay any attention to my sugar number, I focus on hitting my protein and fiber goals. And all the other numbers kind of work themselves out (most of the time). If for whatever reason you want to eat less sugar, there's no harm in that, but don't stress out over it or undereat in order to do it, cause that's not healthy either.
Good luck!1 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »There's a lot of oversimplification in these replies. There's lots of research to say sugar, in particular fructose, is addictive, and encourages overeating.
Maybe you should focus on OP's specific question. She is undereating. Her problem, probably, is that she needs more calories, and specifically more protein and fat. If she gets enough protein and fat, she may not have too many carbs, but at this point we have absolutely no reason to assume that she is having an issue with overeating fructose.
The specific question I saw was: "I'm trying to cut down on both sugar and carbs for weight loss, but should I be focusing more on not eating sugars, or carbs?"
I overlooked her second post, so if she's not hitting her calories, then you're right, she probably isn't overeating, and there's good reason for concern there. OP, please hit your calories with a mix of your choice of high-quality sources of protein, vegetables, legumes, dairy and fruit!And no, it's not addictive, or why do Americans consistently eat less fruit -- an excellent source of fructose -- than is recommended?
There is sound evidence to suggest fructose acts on the brain in the same way as other addictive substances, but you can research that yourself, and your comment about Americans and fruit, fruit not being addictive, and fructose not being found alone suggests you need to read some more about this, so I'll let you Google. Glucose = not addictive (is fuel for body and brain, as we know). Fructose = addictive.
As for Americans, I'll ignore the fact that packaged convenience foods are available every 10 paces and point out that because fruit is packaged with fibre and water, it's difficult to overeat (except grapes and other very sweet fruits are very easy to pop like candy). There is the fructose of 3-4 apples in 8oz of juice, for example. Who's going to eat 3 apples at once?Adult women should have no more than 25g a day (6 teaspoons) of sugar, including fruit, according to the World Health Organisation This is just a lie. Where did you find it? The WHO recommends no more than 10% of total calories (200 calories if one is on a 2000 cal diet, or 50 g) from ADDED sugar, and further recommends no more than 5% if that is feasible (or 25 g). BUT, this does not, absolutely does not, include fruit, and their explanation is due to the extra calories (often from fat as much as sugar) found in foods with lots of added sugar.
You're right, I put "including fruit", when I was thinking of Wilson's stance on fructose, not WHO's (Wilson approves of the guidelines but generally recommends to include fruit in the totals, since it does contain fructose). (Also, lol, you suggest I'm lying to advance an evil healthy-eating agenda and suggest ways to try and improve someone's health after they've asked for it? How dastardly of me.)
But I'm not going to war over 2 pieces of fruit (roughly 25g sugar). We eat far too much fructose. Think of how sweet apples are these days compared to the tart, now heritage varieties available several hundred years ago. We're engineering our fruit to be sweeter, and we're hardwired to crave sugar because it's the best way to store fat, and there's no appetite off switch for fructose. What I've said here are excellent guidelines for everyone to follow in general daily life, so if anyone else has been introduced to this topic, I definitely recommend reading Gillespie & Wilson, and checking out the fabulous That Sugar Film which makes our global fructose problem approachable and fun. Good luck OP.
Sugar doesn't make you permanently store excess fat outside of the context of caloric intake. That is a complete misunderstanding of physiology. Excess calories from any macro lead to the net storage of excess fat.
That Sugar Film is not a good source for anything other than misinformation and fear mongering.
What you've said here are not excellent guidelines for people to follow, because you are demonizing fruit, a perfectly healthy, nutritious food and you are imparting misinformation that is not based on a real understanding of how the human body works.3 -
lemurcat12 wrote: »There's a lot of oversimplification in these replies. There's lots of research to say sugar, in particular fructose, is addictive, and encourages overeating.
Maybe you should focus on OP's specific question. She is undereating. Her problem, probably, is that she needs more calories, and specifically more protein and fat. If she gets enough protein and fat, she may not have too many carbs, but at this point we have absolutely no reason to assume that she is having an issue with overeating fructose.
The specific question I saw was: "I'm trying to cut down on both sugar and carbs for weight loss, but should I be focusing more on not eating sugars, or carbs?"
I overlooked her second post, so if she's not hitting her calories, then you're right, she probably isn't overeating, and there's good reason for concern there. OP, please hit your calories with a mix of your choice of high-quality sources of protein, vegetables, legumes, dairy and fruit!And no, it's not addictive, or why do Americans consistently eat less fruit -- an excellent source of fructose -- than is recommended?
There is sound evidence to suggest fructose acts on the brain in the same way as other addictive substances, but you can research that yourself, and your comment about Americans and fruit, fruit not being addictive, and fructose not being found alone suggests you need to read some more about this, so I'll let you Google. Glucose = not addictive (is fuel for body and brain, as we know). Fructose = addictive.
As for Americans, I'll ignore the fact that packaged convenience foods are available every 10 paces and point out that because fruit is packaged with fibre and water, it's difficult to overeat (except grapes and other very sweet fruits are very easy to pop like candy). There is the fructose of 3-4 apples in 8oz of juice, for example. Who's going to eat 3 apples at once?Adult women should have no more than 25g a day (6 teaspoons) of sugar, including fruit, according to the World Health Organisation This is just a lie. Where did you find it? The WHO recommends no more than 10% of total calories (200 calories if one is on a 2000 cal diet, or 50 g) from ADDED sugar, and further recommends no more than 5% if that is feasible (or 25 g). BUT, this does not, absolutely does not, include fruit, and their explanation is due to the extra calories (often from fat as much as sugar) found in foods with lots of added sugar.
You're right, I put "including fruit", when I was thinking of Wilson's stance on fructose, not WHO's (Wilson approves of the guidelines but generally recommends to include fruit in the totals, since it does contain fructose). (Also, lol, you suggest I'm lying to advance an evil healthy-eating agenda and suggest ways to try and improve someone's health after they've asked for it? How dastardly of me.)
But I'm not going to war over 2 pieces of fruit (roughly 25g sugar). We eat far too much fructose. Think of how sweet apples are these days compared to the tart, now heritage varieties available several hundred years ago. We're engineering our fruit to be sweeter, and we're hardwired to crave sugar because it's the best way to store fat, and there's no appetite off switch for fructose. What I've said here are excellent guidelines for everyone to follow in general daily life, so if anyone else has been introduced to this topic, I definitely recommend reading Gillespie & Wilson, and checking out the fabulous That Sugar Film which makes our global fructose problem approachable and fun. Good luck OP.
There is so much nope, and so much irony in this post, I'm not sure where to start.
You start off by suggesting that OP please hit your calories with a mix of your choice of high-quality sources of protein, vegetables, legumes, dairy and fruit!
There is no sound evidence supporting any of the claims you've made that sugar in any form, is physiologically addictive. It is you who needs to do more research, but rather than randomly googling things or watching agenda driven propaganda like That Sugar Film, perhaps try looking at Google Scholar for peer reviewed literature which supports the claims you are making. Oh and make sure while you are at it that you find studies on humans that support the claim that sugar is physiologically addictive...
You wrap up then by suggesting that we are consuming far too much fructose, after the initial suggestion that OP eat more fruit. Oh and I love the sneering at genetic modification thrown in for fun - good work!
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I overlooked her second post, so if she's not hitting her calories, then you're right, she probably isn't overeating, and there's good reason for concern there. OP, please hit your calories with a mix of your choice of high-quality sources of protein, vegetables, legumes, dairy and fruit!
She said she's getting the message that comes with eating under 1000, and in her first message she said she was under calories. Many people high on sugar and under calories are exceeding 45 g with fruit, so jumping to cut down is IMO not appropriate without asking follow up questions and focusing on what she's not getting (which is the other reason, besides calories, that the WHO says to limit added sugar).There is sound evidence to suggest fructose acts on the brain in the same way as other addictive substances, but you can research that yourself
No, there is not. There is evidence that the brain reacts to sugar and fat (which there are good evolutionary reasons for) and especially the combination as it reacts to other things that cause pleasure. This has nothing to do with fructose specifically.
Your saying to google suggests to me that know you you cannot respond. Where are we consuming all this fructose on its own and why is it different from the fructose in fruit?
As for juice, I don't drink it (except for rare occasion), but I seriously doubt juice is the main player in the obesity epidemic.You're right, I put "including fruit", when I was thinking of Wilson's stance on fructose, not WHO's (Wilson approves of the guidelines but generally recommends to include fruit in the totals, since it does contain fructose). (Also, lol, you suggest I'm lying to advance an evil healthy-eating agenda and suggest ways to try and improve someone's health after they've asked for it? How dastardly of me.)
No, I thought you were copying from a source that was lying. Thank you for admitting it was incorrect, and that it is inapplicable in all likelihood to OP's question.
I said nothing about an evil healthy-eating agenda. An anti fruit agenda, perhaps, but that's not IMO healthy.
Who is "Wilson" and why should we care about his anti fruit stance?We eat far too much fructose.
Eh, I don't.
Americans in general eat too much sugar (not specifically fructose), too much fat -- both leading to too many calories -- some would say too much protein too, although I don't particularly think so. We also (more significantly) on average tend to get fat and sugar from the wrong sources (probably the same amount of both as a percentage of calories would be 100% fine if it came from better sources).checking out the fabulous That Sugar Film which makes our global fructose problem approachable and fun.
Oh good lord.
Can we get back to OP's actual question now?2 -
sugar is a carb...0
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...and checking out the fabulous That Sugar Film which makes our global fructose problem approachable and fun....
That Sugar Film isn't a documentary, it's a pseudoscientific fearmongering hack job. Damon Gameau is an actor, not a nutritionist, and Gary Taubes is a whack job whose "work" has been widely discredited by actual credible nutrition experts. Incidentally, Taubes is nothing more than an author who has no formal training or education in nutrition. But he sure sells a lot of books about his uneducated woo.0 -
On the fructose thing, I am wondering if you think that HFCS is pure fructose. It is not, it is about 55% fructose, vs. sucrose (table sugar) which is about 50%. I don't agree that everyone eats lots of HFCS or that it is more addictive than table sugar or fruit sugar (or fat or petting puppies). I am a huge snob about my sweets (and what packaged foods I eat). While this is on the whole not an admirable quality, I did manage to get fat not consuming HFCS for the most part.
I did occasionally consume apples (still do), and the sugar in them is 56% fructose. I like this example of an apple (medium) and a chocolate cookie recipe in my recipe box. The cookie has about 200 calories, the apple about 80. The sugar has sucrose, about 12 g (so broken down about the equivalent of 6 g fructose), and the apple has about 16 g total, 9 g fructose.
Would I find it more difficult not to overeat the cookie? Sure, although I could manage it.
How can that be, given less fructose?
It's because I'm reacting to the combination of ingredients in the cookie, including a large amount of butter (the single largest source of calories)!0 -
Thank you everyone. My problem here is that on a typical weekday I eat about 1050 calories yet I'm full and I'm still heavy. I've been heavy since I was a kid. That's why I figured sugar was the problem. IMO I don't eat that much junk so it's just frustrating that I'm not losing weight0
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micaelacookie wrote: »Thank you everyone. My problem here is that on a typical weekday I eat about 1050 calories yet I'm full and I'm still heavy. I've been heavy since I was a kid. That's why I figured sugar was the problem. IMO I don't eat that much junk so it's just frustrating that I'm not losing weight
If you are consistently eating 1,050 calories and not losing weight, I suspect the issue is that you are eating more than you think you are. Sometimes there are common logging errors that cause this -- using measuring cups instead of a food scale, choosing generic/homemade entries from the database, picking database entries with incorrect information. If you open your diary, we may be able to help you identify the problem.1 -
What are your stats...ht/wt/age? How long have you been eating so low? Also, can you make your diary public. With that information we can help you out more.
To me it sounds like there is some inaccurate logging. There's no way that if you really were eating as low as 1050 calories per day you wouldn't be losing weight unless you're 4'2" or something. I'm not saying you're lying, just that however you're getting your estimate doesn't seem to be accurate.0
This discussion has been closed.
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