Hi, My name is Melissa and I am addicted to sugar.

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Replies

  • Barbellsandthimbles
    Barbellsandthimbles Posts: 205 Member
    Hello Melissa, I'm a Sugar Addict as well. The only way for me to beat it was to give it up, completely for 2 weeks. It was incredibly hard (but you've alreay done that with smoking!) but so worth it. I'm going on 3 months now and am finally at a place where I can have 1 piece of candy or a few bites of cake and not go hog wild. But, I have to stop at that point or I'm back to square one.
  • DieVixen
    DieVixen Posts: 790 Member
    I quit smoking cigarettes July 2011 after smoking for 26 years and literally watching my mother die of cancer. That was an addiction.
    I've had friends die from heroin overdoses and friends destroy their lives over meth. That's an addiction.
    Sugar is yummy. That's not the same thing.

    Actually, research is finding it is addictive in the same way that drugs and alcohol are addictive... and completely toxic in the same way. And I do understand the severity of drug addiction.
    http://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-skinny-on-obesity-with-robert-lustig-concludes-all-episodes-now-available-on-uctv-primes-youtube-channel-2012-05-31

    I see people all the time turning tricks to support their sugar addiction:laugh:
  • Kebby83
    Kebby83 Posts: 232 Member
    I quit smoking cigarettes July 2011 after smoking for 26 years and literally watching my mother die of cancer. That was an addiction.
    I've had friends die from heroin overdoses and friends destroy their lives over meth. That's an addiction.
    Sugar is yummy. That's not the same thing.



    Cigarettes are yummy.
    Meth is mind blowingly yummy to a meth addict.

    Everyone is at a different level. Everyone is entitled to their problems and learning how to solve them and if someone is 360lbs and finds they cannot stop eating sugar - sugar is their drug of choice. They have 12 step programs for people who over-eat. It is ruining their lives. I'm sorry you can't imagine and sympathize and try to give supportive comments.
  • nyteyz82
    nyteyz82 Posts: 43
    I truly think there can be an addiction to sugar.
    It always hits me towards the end of the day, mostly when I am at work.
    I get antsy and fidgety, maybe a little moody.
    And then I cave in a buy me go to bag of peanut M&M's. Not the small bag.
    But the bag that is meant for sharing. But of course I don't share.
    As soon as I put the first M&M in my mouth I can actually feel a sense of relief come over me.
    Just like when I used to smoke.

    If I can quit smoking surely I can quit sugar.

    I need ideas of what I can put in my pocket when I am work. I was thinking about a couple of jolly ranchers.
    Sweet and they last long. Or would that not be helpful at all.

    Get some fruit and nut mix, 1/4 cup, all natural sugars and protein, 120 calories.
  • nyteyz82
    nyteyz82 Posts: 43
    Also something else i have if i feel like a sugar fix is a cup of green tea, no milk with 1/4 - 1/2 teaspoon of honey for sweetness, works a treat.
  • If you really need sugar, drink a fresh/frozen fruit smoothie when you get off work. They are easy to make and so much better than any sugary snack. My craving goes away anytime I drink one. I don't think those cravings really fully go away if you just stop eating sugary things. I don't eat candy or snacks really at all anymore but I still get sugar cravings.
  • kalesi
    kalesi Posts: 2
    So...all this talk about sugar is making me want to reach for those Nutter Butters across the room!
  • Yep, sugar gives your brain that "good feeling" just like many other things, Are you sure it's sugar or is it chocolate?
    Either way, try having some sugar free candy on hand. Mints help me, but I've also discovered some good sugar free chocolate. You can retrain your taste buds away from sugar to sugar substitutes. Though I'm not a fan of sugar substitutes, try a granola bar. 100-120 calories that offer fiber and some nutrients is better than candy.
    You CAN do it, You quit smoking after all ;) (which I wish I could!!)
    best of luck!!
  • sisierra
    sisierra Posts: 659 Member
    I have the same problem, and am still working on a solution. But I think a good idea is to brush your teeth whenever you have cravings, I hate eating food when i have that fresh teeth feeling lol
  • graelwyn
    graelwyn Posts: 1,340 Member
    The problem in trying to lower sugar, by switching to low sugar or sugar free things, is that low sugar and sugar free things are usually filled with artificial sweeteners and chemicals, which is just as bad. So what is the real solution ?
  • EricNCSU
    EricNCSU Posts: 699 Member
    I quit smoking cigarettes July 2011 after smoking for 26 years and literally watching my mother die of cancer. That was an addiction.
    I've had friends die from heroin overdoses and friends destroy their lives over meth. That's an addiction.
    Sugar is yummy. That's not the same thing.

    Actually, research is finding it is addictive in the same way that drugs and alcohol are addictive... and completely toxic in the same way. And I do understand the severity of drug addiction.
    http://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-skinny-on-obesity-with-robert-lustig-concludes-all-episodes-now-available-on-uctv-primes-youtube-channel-2012-05-31
    Seriously? You're using a Lustig reference as evidence? :laugh:

    *applause* You're my hero. :)
  • elg3et
    elg3et Posts: 3
    I have been addicted to alcohol and cigarettes and successfully quit both but food is different. I feel the same way you do about sugar, especially in the afternoons around 3pm. I absolutely LOVE chocolate peanut M&M's. I just see the yellow package and I get a high feeling. They are the best and they make me feel so calm. I try to tell myself I can have some later when I have a lot of extra calories left over or when I exercise alot instead of allowing it right now. Some times this works!
  • kuger4119
    kuger4119 Posts: 213 Member
    Just a thought, but if it is specifically M&M's that you crave, it could just as easily be the chocolate that has got you hooked. Just a thought.
  • ShareeMorty
    ShareeMorty Posts: 324 Member
    I quit smoking cigarettes July 2011 after smoking for 26 years and literally watching my mother die of cancer. That was an addiction.
    I've had friends die from heroin overdoses and friends destroy their lives over meth. That's an addiction.
    Sugar is yummy. That's not the same thing.

    Actually, research is finding it is addictive in the same way that drugs and alcohol are addictive... and completely toxic in the same way. And I do understand the severity of drug addiction.
    http://www.marketwatch.com/story/the-skinny-on-obesity-with-robert-lustig-concludes-all-episodes-now-available-on-uctv-primes-youtube-channel-2012-05-31
    Seriously? You're using a Lustig reference as evidence? :laugh:

    *applause* You're my hero. :)

    Hear hear! Magazine articles and tv shows are not research, get back to me when you have read multiple papers on sugar and it's addictive powers written by actual academics.
  • elg3et
    elg3et Posts: 3
    i'm definately addicted to chocolate!
  • elg3et
    elg3et Posts: 3
    I have abstained from sugar and found my cravings get less. But I don't know if I am willing to live without it completely and forever...?
  • mabug01
    mabug01 Posts: 1,273 Member
    bump for later
  • aleks80
    aleks80 Posts: 7
    Interesting research from a group of psychologists at Princeton:

    "Abstract

    [Avena, N.M., Rada, P., Hoebel B.G., 2007. Evidence for sugar addiction: Behavioral and neurochemical effects of intermittent, excessive sugar intake. Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews XX(X), XXX-XXX]. The experimental question is whether or not sugar can be a substance of abuse and lead to a natural form of addiction. "Food addiction" seems plausible because brain pathways that evolved to respond to natural rewards are also activated by addictive drugs. Sugar is noteworthy as a substance that releases opioids and dopamine and thus might be expected to have addictive potential. This review summarizes evidence of sugar dependence in an animal model. Four components of addiction are analyzed. "Bingeing," "withdrawal," "craving" and "cross-sensitization" are each given operational definitions and demonstrated behaviorally with sugar bingeing as the reinforcer. These behaviors are then related to neurochemical changes in the brain that also occur with addictive drugs. Neural adaptations include changes in dopamine and opioid receptor binding, enkephalin mRNA expression and dopamine and acetylcholine release in the nucleus accumbens. The evidence supports the hypothesis that under certain circumstances rats can become sugar dependent. This may translate to some human conditions as suggested by the literature on eating disorders and obesity."

    I can only speak from my personal experience, and I think sugar is highly addictive, much more so for me than cigarettes, alcohol, etc. Even back in my student days I experimented with different recreational drugs, but didn't become dependent on any of them. I think anyone that claims that sugar is not addictive is purely talking about their own situation, rather than empathising with those who do have a weakness for it.