Sunday, 2 February 2025

Consider These Four Steps To Cut Down Sugar In Your Diet

 


It seems that we are hearing more and more how sugar is having a detrimental affect on our health. The article I've linked to below talks about the average American adult, but I really think you could add the UK, Australia, France .. in fact almost any country ... plus include children too! Many of us are still eating too much sugar!

If you are trying to cut down on your sugar intake you may find the tips in the article helpful.

"The average American adult consumes the equivalent of about 32 teaspoons of sugar per day. Sugar is really the number one food additive: it is added to drinks, often in the form of high-fructose corn syrup, to bread, sauces, dressings, and to all kinds of processed foods including many low-fat products.

Cutting down sugar in your diet may be one of the best actions you can take to improve your health and your weight. And you don't need to have tremendous amounts of willpower or to go cold turkey (unless you want to do this, of course).

Here are four steps to help you cut down sugar in your diet. You'll want to follow the steps in order, except for step four which can be taken whenever you want.

1. Give yourself 30 days (or more)
There is mounting evidence that sugar can be addictive. But if you have strong cravings and you feel you're addicted to sugar, don't get discouraged.

Many people will try to convince you that breaking an addiction is very hard because of hormones and neurotransmitters in your brain, but this attitude can actually be quite disempowering. In fact, breaking an addiction is perfectly doable with the right approach. I have personally helped quite a few women do it with great success.

Your best bet is to use a gentle, step-by-step process that gives your body and your taste buds time to adapt. The mistake many people make when they decide to get off sugar is they want to be perfect from day one, so they go cold turkey and cut out sugar completely from the beginning.

While this may work for people with a very strong addiction, in my real-world practice with women who have a rather mild sugar addiction, I've seen that a compassionate, gentle approach works far better.

Start by believing that you can do it and make a commitment to give it all you've got over a period of time that feels realistic to you.

2. Identify your #1 source of sugar and start there
Think about everything you eat and drink and identify your main source of sugar. Usual suspects are sodas or other sweetened beverages, sugar you add yourself, and processed baked foods.

It may be you're drinking a lot of commercial fruit juices, carbonated sodas, or hot sweetened beverages. Or it may be you're adding four teaspoons of sugar to your tea or coffee and you eat sugary snacks, sweetened yogurt or dessert at every meal. Or it may be you're eating processed bread, cakes and cookies several times a day.

Once you know what to cut down, make a plan. If you've been adding three teaspoons of sugar to your tea or coffee, gradually reduce to two within a week, then one within the next two weeks.

If you are currently drinking at least two large bottles of soda a week, start by cutting down to one and a half bottle, then one bottle the next week, then half a bottle, and see if you are comfortable with cutting out soda entirely.

The key is to be excited about cutting down your consumption and not experiencing it as frustration and deprivation or making a point of reaching an imaginary level of perfection.

Once you've cut down your main source of sugar, you may already enjoy some improvement in your weight and your energy levels.

3. Eat more real food
Sure, the list of processed foods is a never-ending one. And sugar often hides in cakes, cookies, candy bars, ice cream, popcorn, pretzels, granola or fruit bars, energy bars, dressings, sauces, and condiments.

"Low-fat" or "no-fat" foods are often marketed as healthy but most of the time they have also been processed and fat has been replaced by hidden sugars or artificial sweeteners.

If you eat a lot of junk food and processed foods, start by replacing them with real food, one step at a time. If you cook and prepare your food yourself, you'll dramatically cut your sugar intake over time. Do this over thirty days or more, following the same gentle approach as mentioned earlier.

Once you've cut down processed foods, you may realize that your sugar cravings are gone and that you've even managed to kiss your sugar addiction goodbye.

4. Sleep your cravings away
Whenever someone tells me she needs to eat six times a day and she has strong sugar cravings, the first question I ask her is how many hours she sleeps at night. Many times, the answer is less than five or six hours.

So what would sleep have to do with cutting down sugar? Well, it will help by reducing your cravings for sugar as well as processed foods that contain sugar.

Different studies have found that sleep deprivation of two hours or more of the recommended seven to nine hours of sleep leads to overeating and junk food cravings.

Sleep deprivation also leads to sweet foods being more appealing to adolescents, with a consumption of sweet/dessert servings up to 52% higher, and to an increased intake of food in men as well as cravings for calorie-dense foods in adults.

This is why a proper amount of sleep can be a great way to curb cravings, which will also help you cut down sugar in your diet over time."

Article taken from here

For me the key point is number three 'eat more real food' what do you think?

Please note
Articles / studies within this blog are provided for general information only, and should not be treated as a substitute for the medical advice of your own doctor or any other health care professional. If you have any concerns about your general health, including medication, you should contact your Doctor/local health care provider.

All the best Jan

29 comments:

  1. Good advice here Jan, thank you.

    Tina

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  2. Great ways to reduce sugar cravings. I get frustrated though by being told to sleep more when insomnia keeps me from doing exactly that. I'd love to sleep 8 hours a night but it doesn't ever happen.

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  3. Gracias por los consejos. Te mando un beso.

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  4. REPLY TO
    Granny Marigold who as part of her comment mentioned insomnia ...

    Many thanks for your comment.
    I do think many have problems with insomnia and the more we think about it the worse it can sometimes get!
    I don't know if this article from the NHS may be helpful for you.
    This is the link:-
    https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/insomnia/

    All the best Jan

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  5. Good tips. We're working on the real food here, less processed. The sleep part is interesting!

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  6. Good advice tganks -Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com

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  7. Good article and read, Jan. Icecream my downfall.

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  8. I realise sleep deprivation really triggers my craving

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  9. I'm the same as Granny Marigold, as I rarely get enough sleep. So even though I've cut back in many areas, now and again I still get cravings for something sweet.
    Great advice, Jan. Xx

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  10. Useful information that activates us.
    Lately I have been trying, and I can say with success, to reduce sugar in my diet.
    I started with coffee and tea without sugar.
    I'm used to them and thus I save 4 teaspoons of sugar a day without much effort!
    Thank you for the Sunday reminder!!

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  11. I did a one semester course on basic nutrition and it was a real eye opener on hidden sugar! Thank you for this reminder. Debbie

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  12. Great post, Jan! I am afraid of processed food, sugary snacks and sweetened yogurt.
    As you mentioned in the 1st point, many people would like to cut all sugar since the first day. On the contrary, we have to decrease sugar step by step. That's a good advice!
    Interersting point about insomnia and the importance of our brain in decreasing sugar.

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  13. Great post and advice. Take care, have a great day and a happy new week.

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  14. I am working so hard to get off the sugar

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  15. Good advice, as ever, Jan. Thank you.

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  16. These are good steps to cut it out. I am trying to cut my sugar intake down too!

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  17. Remarkable post dear Jan
    I add a quarter teaspoon to my two cups of daily tea intake
    I admit I am unable to quit it completely but I know I can if I really want to (yes,embarrassing)
    Hubby has moved to total reduction from decreasing amount and I am proud of him 😊

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  18. Good advice. I stopped eating packaged foods and switched over to sugar substitutes.

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  19. That sounds like a lot of sugar for one day!
    Great advice.

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  20. I deff.like the fourth post 👌Sleep your cravings away..This year I will healthier and sleep more💖

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  21. Thanks for this information! I've worked on reducing sugar for about six months and reading labels is so important! Once I saw how much sugar and salt are in processed foods I changed my habits to get rid of those. Better to spend some quality time making bread!

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  22. I'm trying so hard to get more sleep. Sigh...

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  23. Thank you for the helpful advice, Jan. I also find that if I get busy with another activity my sweet craving is forgotten, at least for a while.

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  24. These are excellent hints. So smart to give yourself time too.

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  25. No suelo tomar mucha azúcar. Gracias.

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  26. I do believe cutting down a little at a time can be more helpful, and I do allow myself to have a little something every now and then, I found if I say never again I just end up wanting it even more and get depressed. I do feel that giving up soda has been the best thing for me, it messed me up awful.

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The best of health to you and yours.

Eddie