Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the PP. I will also add that I grew up in a household with a very relaxed approach to food, so I was allowed to eat as much junk as I wanted. That only served to intensify my sweet tooth. I advise you to stop buying your kids unhealthy snacks.
I don't. DH does. I've talked to him about this, and he says they shouldn't suffer because I can't stop eating.
Well, he is harming them long term. I wish my parents didn't allow me to eat refined carbs every day (especially considering they know our family's history with diabetes). My sister doesn't have a sweet tooth so she's fine, but it was really painful for me to cut out refined carbs--cake and donuts bring me actual joy. If I hadn't grown up in a household with a relaxed attitude about food, maybe my sugar craving wouldn't have developed the way it did.
Fortunately-unfortunately, they are all very healthy athletes with normal weight. They need some carbs to participate in their sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am someone with an extreme sugar addiction, as in I would stop by Krispy Kreme and get three donuts to satisfy my sweet tooth. I have a very high risk of diabetes (both parents type 2 and I have high post meal glucose numbers even though a1c is good) and was forced to cut sugar. Only one thing worked for me, which I know goes against current discourse on food: I shamed myself for indulging in donuts and cake. Literally would berate myself every time I did it. Finally, in January the guilt and shame got so bad that I just stopped! My daily trips to Wegmans to get two slices of cake stopped! I am so happy and so proud of myself.
Unfortunately I already have extremely low self-confidence, so shaming would be the worst thing for me.
I have very low confidence too, and am even in therapy for that. But what I accomplished in changing my eating habits has made me feel empowered and really good about myself. So yes, I did shame myself quite a bit but the outcome is very much worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am someone with an extreme sugar addiction, as in I would stop by Krispy Kreme and get three donuts to satisfy my sweet tooth. I have a very high risk of diabetes (both parents type 2 and I have high post meal glucose numbers even though a1c is good) and was forced to cut sugar. Only one thing worked for me, which I know goes against current discourse on food: I shamed myself for indulging in donuts and cake. Literally would berate myself every time I did it. Finally, in January the guilt and shame got so bad that I just stopped! My daily trips to Wegmans to get two slices of cake stopped! I am so happy and so proud of myself.
Unfortunately I already have extremely low self-confidence, so shaming would be the worst thing for me.
Give it a shot. It will help.
But more importantly, join something like a CrossFit gym. This worked for me AND for my wife. The group workouts and community are fun, everyone is very encouraging. And you quickly enter a cycle where when you start to reach for the donut, you recognize what it's going to cost you during tomorrow's workout. So it's way easier to eat a banana instead. Seriously--fighting this with diet alone is the absolute hardest way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am someone with an extreme sugar addiction, as in I would stop by Krispy Kreme and get three donuts to satisfy my sweet tooth. I have a very high risk of diabetes (both parents type 2 and I have high post meal glucose numbers even though a1c is good) and was forced to cut sugar. Only one thing worked for me, which I know goes against current discourse on food: I shamed myself for indulging in donuts and cake. Literally would berate myself every time I did it. Finally, in January the guilt and shame got so bad that I just stopped! My daily trips to Wegmans to get two slices of cake stopped! I am so happy and so proud of myself.
Unfortunately I already have extremely low self-confidence, so shaming would be the worst thing for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the PP. I will also add that I grew up in a household with a very relaxed approach to food, so I was allowed to eat as much junk as I wanted. That only served to intensify my sweet tooth. I advise you to stop buying your kids unhealthy snacks.
I don't. DH does. I've talked to him about this, and he says they shouldn't suffer because I can't stop eating.
Well, he is harming them long term. I wish my parents didn't allow me to eat refined carbs every day (especially considering they know our family's history with diabetes). My sister doesn't have a sweet tooth so she's fine, but it was really painful for me to cut out refined carbs--cake and donuts bring me actual joy. If I hadn't grown up in a household with a relaxed attitude about food, maybe my sugar craving wouldn't have developed the way it did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the PP. I will also add that I grew up in a household with a very relaxed approach to food, so I was allowed to eat as much junk as I wanted. That only served to intensify my sweet tooth. I advise you to stop buying your kids unhealthy snacks.
I don't. DH does. I've talked to him about this, and he says they shouldn't suffer because I can't stop eating.
Anonymous wrote:I am the PP. I will also add that I grew up in a household with a very relaxed approach to food, so I was allowed to eat as much junk as I wanted. That only served to intensify my sweet tooth. I advise you to stop buying your kids unhealthy snacks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am someone with an extreme sugar addiction, as in I would stop by Krispy Kreme and get three donuts to satisfy my sweet tooth. I have a very high risk of diabetes (both parents type 2 and I have high post meal glucose numbers even though a1c is good) and was forced to cut sugar. Only one thing worked for me, which I know goes against current discourse on food: I shamed myself for indulging in donuts and cake. Literally would berate myself every time I did it. Finally, in January the guilt and shame got so bad that I just stopped! My daily trips to Wegmans to get two slices of cake stopped! I am so happy and so proud of myself.
Unfortunately I already have extremely low self-confidence, so shaming would be the worst thing for me.
Anonymous wrote:I am someone with an extreme sugar addiction, as in I would stop by Krispy Kreme and get three donuts to satisfy my sweet tooth. I have a very high risk of diabetes (both parents type 2 and I have high post meal glucose numbers even though a1c is good) and was forced to cut sugar. Only one thing worked for me, which I know goes against current discourse on food: I shamed myself for indulging in donuts and cake. Literally would berate myself every time I did it. Finally, in January the guilt and shame got so bad that I just stopped! My daily trips to Wegmans to get two slices of cake stopped! I am so happy and so proud of myself.