"Hi, my name is Kristyn. And I'm addicted to sugar."
"I could quit if I wanted to!!"
"I only need a little bit every day, then I'm good."
"There are worse things I could be addicted to: cigarettes, drugs."
Yup. Those are things I've been saying for a long time. Several years ago I realized I had a true physical addiction to sugar when I tried to stop eating refined sugar for a week. I lasted about 4 of the most miserable days I've ever had (and the most miserable days Jeff has ever had) because I was so incredibly grumpy, cranky, and irritated. I can remember eating a bowl of strawberries (the least satisfying strawberries have ever been, probably) after dinner one night and glaring at him for no reason, and the look of fear on his face. I didn't realize at the time exactly what was happening, but I was going through withdrawal.
Disclaimer - I understand this sounds a little #firstworldproblems to be complaining about sugar addiction (poor me with this abundance of sweets available to me), but it is actually way more serious than I realized now that I've been looking into it a bit further. Disclaimer 2 - I'm in the early days of my research, so sharing only my limited understanding of this issue.
Refined white sugar was never a key part of a human diet - only showing up about 200 years ago. Our bodies are equipped to deal with the breakdown of a small amount of a wide variety of natural sugars (e.g. fructose in fruit, lactose in milk, honey (pillaged from bees)), and have absolutely no idea what to do with the deluge of sucrose, fructose, maltose, etc. being barraged at us daily. I have read some disgusting statistics about average folks eating 50 kg of sugar per year. EWWWW!!! That's crazy!
Sugar can be found in nature, for sure. But the processing required to distill out a highly concentrated portion of a plant is comparable to how they get cocaine out of the coca plant. And in the end: a fine white powder that in both cases alights the senses and leaves people craving more, in an endless cycle. The damage done to our bodies by both is, sure, minimal each time, but over time can launch a cumulative assault that can eventually be deadly.
Where sugar comes from: sugar cane and sugar beet |
Where cocaine comes from: coca plant |
This seems like a reasonable amount of cookies, no? |
It's embarrassing too. Agh, that's hard to admit. I've always done such a great job of owning and loving that I'm a sweet person, not a salty one, that sugar satisfies me like nothing else can, and that I just adore it. But honestly, when you've been with me in public and I've ordered that massive dessert in a restaurant, or eaten one too many cookies from the platter that were supposed to be for everyone, trust me, it's embarassing. Because, like a drug addict, I really don't have control over my actions, which is mortifying. I'm an autonomous adult - why can't I control what I put in my mouth!?!!! I recognize it's not like I'm alone in this in the world, and obviously I have SOME control over what I put in my mouth otherwise I'd be 400 lbs. But I'm tired of letting my urges and instincts control me. I want to be controlled by rational thought - wouldn't that be nice!!
Again, this seems like a reasonable quantity of chocolate cake... |
I sometimes stand in front of the chocolate bars at a convenience store and can't believe this is allowed in this world. Probably how a trying-to-quit smoker feels staring at the wall of cigarettes, or an alcoholic in the LCBO. "Why is (insert name of massive corporation producing product) allowed to make this largely unhealthy product, and tempt us like this? Don't they know they're actually killing some of us with these offerings?!" But of course it's not "their" fault. It's our inability to control our impulses. I would do very well in a temptation free world, though. Honestly, I would. I'd nibble on my dark chocolate daily and get by. This is what I do in the controlled environment of my home. But the second there is a dish of candy or plate of cookies on the kitchen table at work, it's a constant struggle to stay out of them - every single time I walk past them, they call my name. If I make the mistake of picking up the "healthy" ice cream sandwiches at the grocery store, I spend a lot of time at home convincing myself why I shouldn't have more than 2 a day, and often finish that train of thought licking my fingers from the third one. If I'm at a social event, all bets are off. If the sweet stuff is near me, I am in the sweet stuff. Back and forth between my seat and the sweet stuff like a wasp at a BBQ in August. If only temptation wasn't there, this would be SO MUCH easier. But it is there, and I certainly don't want to stop seeing my friends and family, or going to work for that matter, so I need to figure out some workarounds.
Temptation, thy name is a convenience store |
To my girls, who won't be surprised, but may feel sad for me: I ate the whole box of Katie's Christmas chocolates in one sitting. I was SO SAD afterwards. I did that thing I do, where I feel stressed, because I wasn't feeling well (massive headache), and then I ate all the chocolates in an effort to "feel better" (sidenote: Kate, they were delicious!). I emerged from a chocolate haze wondering who I was, and what the heck I was doing. To the masses - can you imagine eating 7 truffles in a row, essentially chain-smoking truffles??? Most people likely wouldn't be able to stomach it. My former coworker would have lost her mind! I, however, took it like a champ. That kind of sugar binge is no big deal for me - my body can handle it. And that's a bit scary.
That brings me back to gut flora (ah gut flora - it's exactly what you wanted to be thinking about, right?). After some chats with a coworker over my squares of dark chocolate after lunch the other day, I was floating my musings about quitting sugar, and she was telling me about new research she'd read regarding the differences in gut microbiota (the lil guys that live in all our guts that help us extract nutrients from our food and digest away) between sugar eaters and non-sugar eaters, between obese people and thin people, and how it can take a concerted effort to really change the make-up of who's hanging out in your insides. If I starve the refined-sugar loving gut bacteria, they are going to wig out and send me lots of cues - cravings for sugar, headaches, dizziness... but eventually they're going to starve, not be able to reproduce, and start to die off. The plan is that I'd be concurrently feeding some of the good guys down there (I do occasionally eat vegetables..) and encouraging them to reproduce and take up some of the real estate of the baddies, and eventually all I'll hear from my lower half is: "dang girl, get me a salad!" (wouldn't that be nice. :))
You almost thought it was a picture of Goodies licorice candy, but instead it was gut bacteria... |
I don't know that I don't ever want to bake again. My granny's chocolate chip cookie recipe is a legacy!
I don't know that I don't ever want an ice cream after a long hot day in the field again.
I don't know that I want chia seeds on my daily yogurt instead of granola.
I don't know if I could ever enjoy my morning oatmeal without the teaspoon of brown sugar.
I don't know if I can resist the social pressure of people foisting sugar on me; noting that this IS the world we live in. Dessert comes after dinner!
However.
I don't know if I want to ravage my body with this drug anymore.
I don't know if I want to die years earlier from the damage I've done to myself by eating so much sugar all the time.
I don't know if I want to develop type II diabetes when my body eventually gives up the good fight and can't regulate my insulin anymore.
I just don't know if I want to be ruled by something OTHER than my rational brain anymore.
To be continued....
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