As Addictive as Cocaine: Study Shows the Body’s Reaction When It Goes 10 Days Without Sugar


You may not remember the alarm raised about fat and the diseases it causes, from expanding waistlines to a heart attack. The media coverage swamped us with ‘facts’ about blocked arteries and the early death faced if we continued with our bacon and eggs breakfast.

Now, it has become increasingly noticeable that the havoc wreaked on our bodies is in fact caused by sugar, not fat. Yes, fat is not recommended, but health issues like heart disease, type 2 diabetes and even cancer are caused by the refined sweet taste of sugar.

Almost all our processed foods are now laced with sugar, and our ever-expanding waistlines have only worsened since food manufacturers replaced fat with sugar. The sweet poison that is prevalent in our diets every day is making us very, very sick.

Luckily, the damage caused by sugar can be reversed. Cutting back on sugar or even eliminating it completely can have almost instant, positive effects on our health.

One suchĀ study supports these findings. Targeting children, the researchers saw dramatic results in only 10 days. This is good news, as most diets take months to show results.

What the Study Found After 10 Days

The study was conducted over 10 days on a group of children aged 8 to 18. Each child suffered from obesity and had at least one other co-morbidity such as hypertension, glucose or insulin issues. None of the children were diabetic.

Dr Robert Lustig and his researchers from the University of California had the participants consume a diet of protein, fat and carbohydrates, but reduced dietary sugar from 28 percent to 10 percent and used starch as a substitute.

In just 10 days, a reduction in diastolic blood pressure, heart rate, cholesterol and triglycerides were noted. Weight also reduced despite efforts by researchers to maintain it.

What This Means

The results explain themselves. In just 10 days, health improved in the participants. Imagine the results in 30 days, 60 days or a year.

Sugar does not (DOES NOT) add any nutritional value to our diets. Unfortunately, marketing campaigns have put a spin on sugar, promoting it as ā€˜fat freeā€™ or low calories, when in fact sugar calories differ from ā€˜real foodā€™ calories.

Millions are spent on advertising to convince us of their marketing ploy. What they donā€™t say is that the sugar consumed is stored as fat, and only a small amount at a time can be processed by a healthy liver.

According to the Heart and Stroke Foundation, an average diet should not contain more than 12 grams of sugar. A can of soda equates to 85 percent of the recommended intake of sugar.

The Foundation also lists the tricks used by the food industry to lure you into thinking a product is ā€˜healthyā€™ or sugar-free by listing sugar under another name:

Lucose, fructose, dextrose, maltose, corn syrup, maltodextrin, dehydrated cane juice, and sucrose are just a few of the misleading names used.

According to another study, sugar is as addictive as cocaine, triggering a part of your brain just as hard drugs do.

But that doesnā€™t mean you canā€™t quit sugar. To reduce your intake:

Donā€™t ā€œdrink your calories.ā€ Keep it basic to water or plain coffee over your mocha. Add cinnamon instead of sugar for extra flavor.

Try whole foods that limit the amount of processing they go through. Fresh and frozen vegetables, fish, whole grains, and cheeses are great alternatives.

Snack wisely with nuts, plain yogurt, crackers, vegetables and dips. Limit the chocolate intake and reduce baked goods.

And next time you go shopping, take a list with you minus the items with no nutritional benefits. Your body will thank you in the long run and so will your wallet.

3 comments

  1. Going without sugar for ten days is very difficult indeed, because – as you said, processed ‘sugar’ is in almost everything. ā€¦but then, even the ‘natural’ sugars also play a part. šŸ˜¦

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  2. Here I am in February 2024. It looks like I made it this far.
    Yes, I’m still hooked on sugar, BUT – not nearly as much as I once was.

    Like I said, it’s very difficult (especially here in the US of A) to escape the sugary destruction.
    It’s everywhere
    It’s everywhere

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Now, I’ve switched to zero sugar soda/pop/coke (not “diet,” mind you).
    Yeah, it’s not great… baby steps, you know?
    I have given up energy drinks. I went cold turkey.
    It’s been over two months now. Gooo me!

    Liked by 1 person

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