Sugar addiction
Replies
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Some good ideas here that I will have to try. I sometimes eat a few squares of dark chocolate and that can help curb my cravings, however it's not always successful - last nights sugar 'hit' was a bit of a shocker!0
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I had this same problem and I too could not just have a little bit of sweets. In fact, I can't eat a little bit of anything. So, what I finally did was this... I slowly weaned myself off of sweets. I started off by having sweets every other day. Then I went to every three days and so on. I still have a once a week or every two weeks sweet treat. Also, my wife became skilled in baking with applesauce and Splenda. Chocolate chip cookies with Splenda actually taste good. However, most of us can't just go from sugar to Splenda overnight. Just slowly and gradually work your way from sugar to alternatives. Then, you'll find your sweet tooth is gone. In fact, I cannot eat a lot of sweets at all now without my stomach aching and feeling horrible afterwards. I hope this helps.0
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Change to sugarfree and get your satisfaction that way.. getting too much sugar won't let you make much progress....
Just get started and stay on it..0 -
What type of juices did you drink? I just purchased a juicer, and I want to do a detox for the same issues.0
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i have a big sweet tooth to and i find that if u want it buy it small, im a big cake person so what i do is i buy the single serving cakes at walmart so that i get my gratifcation but its not in the house, gl girl feel free to invite me if u want.0
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ive tried the brushing the teeth thing and if the craving is bad ill it eat anyways sometimes its not taste its habit0
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Just have a small treat daily! I feel sad if I don't get a treat daily!0
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Before I get *****ed at for mentioning Atkins diet, that promotes high cholesterol and heart disease, I want to mention that after reading the book, he brings a good point about the "induction stage". This is exactly where you need to be for 2 weeks and absolutely not touch a gram of refined sugar/bread/pasta, etc... He is saying 2 weeks is enough for your body to "forget the cravings". Worked for me.
After 2 weeks you begin to introduce carbs back into your diet, while measuring your ketosis levels every day. I don't crave chocolate anymore, but at the same time I enjoyed one when I got one as a gift on Father's day0 -
I am too a sugar addict. I fight it every day much like an alcoholic fights drinking, but it can be done. I have found I have several sugar triggers. The biggest sugar trigger for me is artificial sugar. If I drink a diet coke and "save" 200 calories over regular pop, I will eat at least double if not triple that in some kind of sugar binge. The second is processed carbs, cookies, bread, crackers, cereals ect, They all cause a sugar craving in me. When I stick to whole natural foods, my sugar cravings go down. I have also found I'm better at abstaining than giving into a little. I don't have the mechanism to stop. I try never to eat sugar early in the day, because a cookie if the morning will lead to a day of craving sugar. I do reward myself on Sunday evenings with one desert I've been craving all week. Everyone is different,so track your food and find your triggers and avoid them. BTW if you go cold turkey on sugar, you will feel like poo for about 3 days then better than you have in a long time.0
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I hear you. My therapist says sugar binges are basically self-medicating anti-depressants (with a nasty rebound!). I LOVE chocolate. Like the other posters, I switched to dark chocolate. I don't know why, but I can eat a LOT more milk chocolate without feeling sated, but dark chocolate satisfies me sooner. I buy the good stuff, and eat it 1/3 to 1/2 bar at a time. Some nights just a square or two hits the spot. If you're new to dark chocolate, start out in the 60-70% range, then work your way up as your taste buds adjust. Lindt makes a WONDERFUL 70% bar that has the creamiest texture--it's amazing.
The longer you give your body a chance to detox from sugar overload, the better you'll feel on a regular basis, and the more you'll notice what sugar does to you when you DO over-indulge. I still eat dark chocolate, dark-chocolate-covered almonds, and I'm totally addicted to cookies, so my control is not keeping them in the house and only getting them when I can control the portion size. If I bake cookies, they go straight to my neighbors or office, so that I don't have a ton around me -- because I WILL happily eat them all.
So far that's working out for me, although I have no solutions for when the Girl Scouts come knocking with their Thin Mints. I am helpless before a tube of Thin Mints.
*edit* when eating dark chocolate, bite off a tiny, tiny piece. The flavor is so much more concentrated than in milk chocolate -- I easily get 4-6 bites out of a single square -- that if you just let a tiny bit melt in your mouth, it's a flavor explosion. Probably why it's so much more satisfying.
Buy the good stuff. You may get sticker shock, but it goes a lot further than milk chocolate, so really isn't any more expensive.
Also, if you are a Thin Mint fan like myself, once you get used to dark chocolate, try Green & Black's chocolate mint bar. Their stuff is a tad more dry than Lindt, so might not be the best place to start, but I sure love it now!0 -
The second is processed carbs, cookies, bread, crackers, cereals ect, They all cause a sugar craving in me. When I stick to whole natural foods, my sugar cravings go down.0
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Another fantastic book on sugar cravings and healthy lifestyle:
http://www.amazon.com/Stop-Your-Cravings-Balanced-Increasing/dp/07432170550 -
Change to sugarfree and get your satisfaction that way.. getting too much sugar won't let you make much progress....
Just get started and stay on it..0 -
Chocolate's fairly good for you, provided it's actually chocolate. (many US candy bars use what's called "mockolate" these days, basically the ingredients are full of stuff like palm kernel oil and things that don't make it real chocolate)
You might try finding low-calorie hard candies. They're not filling, but if you want something sweet it gets the job done. I have a tin of what's called "fruit drops" from La Vie de La Vosgienne that I found in a fairly upscale market. They were cheap and it's 12 calories for 3 of them. I keep them on my desk since it's easier to reach for them than get my lazy butt up and find a cookie or a candy bar in the kitchen.0 -
Change to sugarfree and get your satisfaction that way.. getting too much sugar won't let you make much progress....
Just get started and stay on it..
Agreed, the artificial sweeteners can, a lot of times, be worse for you than real sugar. Many people have reactions like headaches and "the runs" to them. Plus, most aren't even that much lower in calorie count than the real thing.0 -
I needed to read this post today! I'm struggling really bad with sugar and carbs in general and just can't seem to get back on track with a healthy lifestyle. And I can so relate to not being able to have just a little bit. When I'm on this cycle, if I try to have just a small portion, I will drive myself crazy thinking about having more. I have done low carb before and it did help with the cravings. For you guys that have found success by utilizing a low carb diet, do you eat whole grains like whole wheat pasta and bread? Do those trigger the same reaction that processed carbs do? Thanks!
- Cut out anything white (I'm talking bread, not cauliflower).
- Buy whole-grain deli flats for sandwiches instead of bread. The bulk of your sandwich should be the filling, not the shell.
- If the first ingredient (if you didn't know, ingredients are listed in order of quantity) isn't whole grain, don't buy it.
- Don't confuse multi-grain and whole-grain. If you can get both, great, but whole-grain is more important.
- Look at what you use rice and pasta for, and how much you use. The stuff is kind of flavorless, yet so many people will use a ton of it. Switch up your ratios so that your veggies comprise a larger part of the dish than the rice or pasta.
- When you want rice or pasta, go for long-grain brown rice and whole-wheat pasta. But think about other options as well -- would beans work just as well? I used to put rice in a lot of my soups; now I add lentils or chickpeas instead.
- Explore other whole-grain options, like quinoa. Just as easy to cook as rice, and is a pretty good protein source. Is also a great salad base.
The whole point is not so much about cutting carbs because carbs are evil, but rather actively looking at your food and deciding if the nutrients it will feed your body are worth the calories it's bringing with it.
*edit* Ha! I got distracted and forgot my point -- which was, yes, I do feel a lot better eating this way, and sugar overall is now MUCH easier to resist. I have no problems passing up sweets I would have caved for a few months ago. But I still have my demons (damn you, Thin Mints!).0 -
I cut cold turkey to beat my sugar addiction. Now, most things with sugar (refined / processed) in it i cannot stand.0
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First off, I'm starting to allow myself sweets when I want them, as long as I have the calories. Secondly, I tell myself the sweets will always be available tomorrow if I want more.
A couple things have happened since I've starting doing this:
1) I'm happier and more tolerable
2) I eat less sweets because I can have them at anytime
3) I'm realizing alot of the sweets I binged on before I don't really like all that much. The binges usually ocurred when I would be starting a restrictive diet the following day, which happened often.
I have this co-worker who takes days to eat a small bag of peanut M&M's. I never could understand it b/c I would polish off a bag in minutes. I now understand b/c I no longer feel guilty for eating them and don't have to stuff the whole bag down my throat since the M&M's aren't going anywhere.
Sorry for the rambling......0 -
I needed to read this post today! I'm struggling really bad with sugar and carbs in general and just can't seem to get back on track with a healthy lifestyle. And I can so relate to not being able to have just a little bit. When I'm on this cycle, if I try to have just a small portion, I will drive myself crazy thinking about having more. I have done low carb before and it did help with the cravings. For you guys that have found success by utilizing a low carb diet, do you eat whole grains like whole wheat pasta and bread? Do those trigger the same reaction that processed carbs do? Thanks!
- Cut out anything white (I'm talking bread, not cauliflower).
- Buy whole-grain deli flats for sandwiches instead of bread. The bulk of your sandwich should be the filling, not the shell.
- If the first ingredient (if you didn't know, ingredients are listed in order of quantity) isn't whole grain, don't buy it.
- Don't confuse multi-grain and whole-grain. If you can get both, great, but whole-grain is more important.
- Look at what you use rice and pasta for, and how much you use. The stuff is kind of flavorless, yet so many people will use a ton of it. Switch up your ratios so that your veggies comprise a larger part of the dish than the rice or pasta.
- When you want rice or pasta, go for long-grain brown rice and whole-wheat pasta. But think about other options as well -- would beans work just as well? I used to put rice in a lot of my soups; now I add lentils or chickpeas instead.
- Explore other whole-grain options, like quinoa. Just as easy to cook as rice, and is a pretty good protein source. Is also a great salad base.
The whole point is not so much about cutting carbs because carbs are evil, but rather actively looking at your food and deciding if the nutrients it will feed your body are worth the calories it's bringing with it.
*edit* Ha! I got distracted and forgot my point -- which was, yes, I do feel a lot better eating this way, and sugar overall is now MUCH easier to resist. I have no problems passing up sweets I would have caved for a few months ago. But I still have my demons (damn you, Thin Mints!).0 -
Hi I think you crave what you eat, like if I eat fritos I want them the next day and it takes a few days for the craving to stop, damn I shouldn't have typed Frito's either ... must get some... I know it sucks but dont eat sweets or diet soda. I dont eat fast food any more and when I drove to PA for a funeral stopped at burger king, sonic and taco bell and threw my food out because it tasted like crap. My rule, in general, i had fried chicken yesterday who knows if it has polysaturated monoglycerides..I try not to think about it is dont eat anything with more than three syllables artificial 4 natural 3 raspberry, strawberry, banana all three dingleberry 4 syllables dont eat them so most chocolate is processed if you got dark charcolate with no bad juju not as sweet either and could stick to alittle great otherwise drop - good progree so far on ur weight loss0
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I have a sugar addiction as well, and it only gets worse if you don't control it. I am having quite a bit of relief from using artificial sweeteners in doctored-up healthy smoothies. Didn't think it would satisfy me but I was WRONG! The old protein-powder / ice / unsweetened baking cocoa / milk / Splenda thing....it tastes GOOOOD. I also throw in about 20 raw almonds and that gives it richness. Yum. Eat it in a long-stemmed glass with a spoon and you're having "ice cream".
Experiment around with low-cal or fat-free foods like cool whip or instant pudding or look for low-carb recipies for "desserts" online. It's not a cure-all but boy, does it help in the tough spots.0 -
It takes two weeks of not eating "bad sugars", from cookies, cakes, etc.. for your body to get past the addiction or craving that sugar rush. Amazingly enough, if you do something for two weeks consistently, like excercising everyday for two weeks, that becomes your new "habit". As hard as it is, because I have a really sweet tooth, try stopping eating all that enriched sugar, and get your taste buds to enjoy fruits in season. I know you mentioned that you didn't find it very helpful to stop that craving by eating fruit. Sometimes when I'm craving dessert, and I love dessert. I get a plain skimmed yoghurt, add whatever fruit is in season, like chopped mangos, or blueberries, and add a touch of cinnamon (that helps control glucose in your blood, helps to stabilize it), and a touch of honey if I really want something sweet. I don't know if that was helpful or not.....good luck.0
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I needed to read this post today! I'm struggling really bad with sugar and carbs in general and just can't seem to get back on track with a healthy lifestyle. And I can so relate to not being able to have just a little bit. When I'm on this cycle, if I try to have just a small portion, I will drive myself crazy thinking about having more. I have done low carb before and it did help with the cravings. For you guys that have found success by utilizing a low carb diet, do you eat whole grains like whole wheat pasta and bread? Do those trigger the same reaction that processed carbs do? Thanks!
- Cut out anything white (I'm talking bread, not cauliflower).
- Buy whole-grain deli flats for sandwiches instead of bread. The bulk of your sandwich should be the filling, not the shell.
- If the first ingredient (if you didn't know, ingredients are listed in order of quantity) isn't whole grain, don't buy it.
- Don't confuse multi-grain and whole-grain. If you can get both, great, but whole-grain is more important.
- Look at what you use rice and pasta for, and how much you use. The stuff is kind of flavorless, yet so many people will use a ton of it. Switch up your ratios so that your veggies comprise a larger part of the dish than the rice or pasta.
- When you want rice or pasta, go for long-grain brown rice and whole-wheat pasta. But think about other options as well -- would beans work just as well? I used to put rice in a lot of my soups; now I add lentils or chickpeas instead.
- Explore other whole-grain options, like quinoa. Just as easy to cook as rice, and is a pretty good protein source. Is also a great salad base.
The whole point is not so much about cutting carbs because carbs are evil, but rather actively looking at your food and deciding if the nutrients it will feed your body are worth the calories it's bringing with it.
*edit* Ha! I got distracted and forgot my point -- which was, yes, I do feel a lot better eating this way, and sugar overall is now MUCH easier to resist. I have no problems passing up sweets I would have caved for a few months ago. But I still have my demons (damn you, Thin Mints!).0 -
Because I can't just eat a bit of it! I end up wanting more after one bar and will go out and buy it once I have the taste for it, I'm like an alcoholic I can't just stop at one!
I soooooo totally understand what you are saying!!:grumble: This is what has helped me more than anything else. A lower carb diet. I eat LOTS of veggies and protein and good fats (and usually a small amount of fruit each day 1-2 servings) When I eat this way.....the cravings for anything sweet, carb loaded totally go away and the sweets do not even appeal.......truly! For me it is a miracle:bigsmile: ..........but anytime I go off plan, like I did on the 4th of July, I struggle again to get back. Today I am finally back and soooooo grateful to be rid of the cravings again. I wish you well! Hugs, Dyanna:flowerforyou:
I also agree with the above quote. I tried the South Beach diet and it totally helped wean me off sugar.......0 -
I was watching Dr oz and he mentioned that miracle berry. So I tried a tablet called frooties since I couldn't find the actual berry & I gotta say it made sour and bitter stuff like lemons and grapes etc taste sweet. I have a major sweet tooth. Like I'm a regular at sees candy sweet tooth. so I'm wondering if those
Miracle berries might help me with this0
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