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Four realistic steps to end a dangerous, health-robbing sugar addiction at your own pace without debilitating detox symptoms or discomfort.
Sugar addiction is a very real and growing problem that has the potential to steal your health just as much as other more high profile dependency issues. Check out this email from Regina asking for help.
Dear Sarah, I’m sure you get lots of emails every day but I sure hope you can give me some advice. I’m 52 years old and a horrific sugar addict. At six weeks old, my mother started me on chocolate milk and other than very short periods of time, I don’t think I have been without sugar. It doesn’t matter what form it is in…just have sugar. This morning I told a friend that I could be rolled in chocolate and be happy!
So, you see my problem. Please help me get off sugar. Even typing that makes me start shaking and looking for my next fix!! I’m working very hard to change our eating habits. We grow almost all of our food…veggies, beef, pork, eggs, chicken, milk. This week I started making our butter, yogurt, etc. and hope to be making hard cheeses soon. Can you help a middle-aged, over weight, grandmother improve her health? Thank you so much, Regina
Regina, I can relate to your situation. I used to be a pretty dedicated sugar junkie myself back in my 20’s. I was the gal who was scarfing down the Snickers bar (King Size, no less!) at 3 pm every day at my desk while I worked a stressful, travel packed, restaurant loaded corporate lifestyle.
A box of donuts on the conference room table was my idea of a good start to the day!
Even after I had the good sense to quit that career and start working from home in 1996, I still had trouble conquering the sugar monster.
Not surprisingly, I was hypoglycemic from the misguided but supposedly “healthy” low-fat lifestyle I was following. Despite eating organic fruits, veggies, and meats much of the time, all that sugar made me a nervous wreck not to mention incredibly moody from seesawing blood sugar.
I’m happy to say that my sugar addiction days are long behind me and while I do still look longingly at a box of Dunkin Donuts, I pass them by. While I do give in and eat one bite-sized munchkin from time to time, I have found the hard way (refined sugar gives me such a nasty headache!) that choosing to eat none at all is far easier than indulging even just a bite or two!
So, how did I do it? How did I slay the sugar monster and keep it at bay for so many years?
Here’s the protocol for slaying a sugar addiction for good without any nasty detox symptoms taking your down for a week. I’m sure there are other approaches that would work just fine too. Here’s what worked for me and has enabled me to stay sugar addiction-free for many years.
How to End Sugar Addiction for GOOD
Below are the four steps for ending a sugar addiction for the long haul. It is important to note that how long each step takes is completely up to you. There is no hard and fast schedule for completion.
The point is to continue to make progress even if one step takes a bit longer than the others. And, if you have a setback, that isn’t the end of the world. You can continue to move forward. Progress, not perfection is the ultimate goal!
Step 1: Replace ALL Refined Sugar with Natural Sweeteners
This step means exactly what it says. You must get rid of all the white sugar and high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) in your home wherever it may lurk and replace it with natural, whole forms of sugar like honey, maple syrup, coconut sugar and sucanat (whole cane sugar). Do not use agave as it is highly processed.
Don’t forget condiments .. they are a big source of HFCS. Replace them with condiments from the health food store that taste just as good and don’t have some form of refined sugar as the main ingredient.
Not ready to get rid of soda entirely? Then buy soda only from the health food store! There are brands available there that use unrefined cane sugar instead of HFCS. These sodas taste terrific. You won’t miss a thing taste and satisfaction-wise by drinking them, I can assure you.
Stir sucanat or coconut sugar into your tea or coffee instead of white sugar. Only whole, unprocessed sweeteners make the cut here.
Replace those candy bars with healthfood store versions that use whole cane sugar instead of refined white sugar as the sweetener.
Whatever you do, DON”T replace the refined sugars with artificial sweeteners.
Studies have shown that folks who consume artificial sweeteners have more sweet cravings than folks who just eat the sugar in its natural form!
Be aware that you are going to have to start reading labels to complete this step. Refined sugar is hidden everywhere in processed foods!
The goal in this step is not to reduce sugar consumption but simply to replace it with a more nutritious, unprocessed, whole form of sugar.
When you have accomplished this significant step forward, CONGRATULATIONS! You are now ready to proceed…
Step 2: Increase the Amount of Whole, Unprocessed Fats in Your Diet
The sugar cravings many of us experience are due to the lack of enough healthy, whole fats in our diet. Dietary fat stabilizes blood sugar .. sweet cravings become overwhelming on dips in blood sugar.
I used to think that it was a lack of willpower that was preventing me from succeeding in getting my sugar cravings under control. As it turned out, it wasn’t a lack of willpower at all. It was my low-fat diet that was the primary problem.
Once I switched from skim milk to whole milk (preferably unprocessed directly from the farm), the whole yogurt from low-fat or fat-free yogurt, and butter from vegetable oil and butter substitutes, I noticed my sugar cravings rapidly diminished!
As part of this step, be sure to clear out of your pantry any item that features a “reduced-fat” or “fat-free” marketing line on the package.
Fat is your friend when you SLAY the sugar monster!
So go ahead and load up on butter – the best quality your budget can afford. Eat that delicious fat that surrounds your grass-fed steak. It tastes great for a reason! It is full of nutrition and it is a huge asset in stabilizing your blood sugar.
Don’t worry that your triglycerides will shoot to the moon and that you will drop dead of a heart attack. It is the factory fats that are so dangerous to your cardiovascular health, not whole unprocessed fats in milk, cream, eggs, and butter. Doctors and nutritionists who tell you otherwise are not up on their research.
Definitely avoid transfats, partially hydrogenated fats, interesterified fats, and any other rancid, cheap vegetable oils that are used in processed foods. But welcome with open arms cream, butter, egg yolks, coconut oil, and other forms of traditional, nourishing fats.
As you increase the whole fats in your diet, most people find the introduction of a therapeutic strength probiotic and homemade fermented foods to be of great benefit.
Probiotics will help to rebalance gut bacteria to a favorable ratio and keep candida under control. There are dozens of recipes on this blog that show you how to make all kinds of fermented foods and fermented drinks that will keep those pathogenic yeasts in your gut under control that are a big contributor to out of control sugar cravings. Homemade kombucha is an excellent choice for this purpose (NOT store brands that are high in sugar!).
Step 3: Remove All Forms of Processed, Whole Sugars From Your Home
Once you have abandoned the low-fat lifestyle and embraced traditional fats in your home, you are ready for the next step. Get rid of all processed sugar foods in your home even if made with organic, whole natural sweeteners.
That’s right, lose the natural sodas, organic cookies, pop tarts, organic chocolate, and any other organic junk food that you started buying when you switched from refined sugar to natural sugars in step one above.
This may seem difficult but wait…let me explain.
You can still eat as much natural, whole sugars as you want. Examples include maple syrup, sucanat, coconut sugar, and date syrup.
Inconvenience Factor
The catch is that now you can’t buy them…you have to make them yourself.
So if you want chocolate chip cookies, have at it. You must make them yourself using a cookie recipe using whole sweeteners. You can’t just walk to the pantry and pick up a bag of Newman’s Organic Chocolate Chip Cookies.
What this step introduces is the inconvenience factor.
When something is inconvenient, most of the time, you will just skip doing it, am I right?
For example, if I have a bag of organic chocolate chip cookies in the pantry and a very stressful event occurs suddenly out of the blue, the chances that I am going to walk to the pantry and eat some, or more likely, the entire box of cookies is rather high.
At least it is for me.
If, on the other hand, I don’t have any prepackaged, easy to munch organic cookies in my pantry at all, the chances that I will whip out the mixing bowl and make some chocolate chip cookies myself are much much lower.
In this step, you are still allowed to drive to the store and buy some organic cookies if your craving is overwhelming. But, when you walk through your front door, whatever you haven’t eaten in the car gets thrown in the trash (or given away). That’s right – they hit the circular file.
Only homemade sweets made with natural sugars are allowed in your home from this step forward. You can make as many homemade sweets as you like and consume as many as you like. But, they must be made by hand.
This step is where the rubber meets the road. Can you do it? You absolutely can if you are eating lots of whole fats in your diet! Eating lots of whole, unprocessed fats is your ace in the hole because your cravings will never be overwhelming as your blood sugar will be stable the majority of the time.
Step 4: No More than 3 TBL (36 grams) of Natural Sugars per Day
Congratulations are in order if you have made it this far to the fourth and final step. You are now 90% of the way to slaying the sugar monster in your life!
The final step involves a gradual reduction in the amount of natural sugars you consume to a safe level of no more than 36 grams per day. According to Tom Valentine in his classic anthology Search for Health, significant immune system suppression begins to occur above 36 grams of sugar from all sources on any given day.
This is the amount for adults, by the way. It would be about half (18 grams) for children. This is the amount you must try to refrain from exceeding in any given day. Note that the natural sugar in fresh or dried fruit counts toward this daily total.
How long should this step take? As long as is necessary. For some, it will take one week. Others may find it takes several months. The point is to keep moving forward and don’t give up if you fall off the wagon on occasion. Just get up, dust yourself off, and keep going!
Ideally speaking, some of your days should not include any sweets at all after a while. Having a goal of no sweets ever is not realistic, however. I suggest not going there mentally. It sets you up for failure.
Our culture is sugar-saturated so sometimes you are simply going to indulge. Don’t worry about it or feel guilty about it for even one moment when it happens.
If you have slain the sugar monster in your home by transitioning to only natural sugars, eating more whole fats, forbidding organic junk food from finding a regular home in your pantry, and eating homemade sweets only on an occasional basis, then you have absolutely accomplished your goal!
You are now eating natural, whole sweets in moderation and enjoying them in a safe manner that will not threaten your long term health.
Well done, my friend!
Where To Find Wholesome, Natural Sweeteners
These are the wholesome sweeteners I use in my home. Once you transition to unprocessed sugars, you won’t ever go back to white sugar or high fructose corn syrup laden products ever again!
Sarah
Hello, I love the steps! We are somewhere in the middle right now before even reading this post. My question to you is concerning step 2. I am all for whole unprocessed fats. I have avoided the low-/no-fat foods for years, yuck! But what would you recommend for part-time vegetarian/vegans? We do eat some meat/fish and dairy at times, but our consumption has been greatly reduced for health/sensitivity/ecological reasons. When we do eat these they are all-natural or organic and moderate-high fat content. How can we increase our healthy fat intake if we are not looking to really increase our meat or dairy intake?
Maria
Have you tried coconut oil?
cindy schueneman
don’t forget nuts and seeds also a source of protein for vegans and very portable to carry in a bag for emergencies when you are away from home longer than planned or are trapped in a small room somewhere with goodies.
Jennifer
I have ‘Truvia’,that I have for my coffee. Is this not stevia?
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Truvia is a genetically modified version of Stevia and should be avoided. I blogged about it last year:
https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/2010/01/soda-for-kids-yes/
Thor
My way of taming the sugar monster is to quit cold turkey. I have successfully done 7 one-month stints of no sugar diets! Also, I did a 3 month no sugar diet once!!
I have encouraged many family and friends to come along with me on these months without sugar. To my delight and surprise, many did participate with me.
For me, I would not substitute natural sugars in my diet. I cut out everything: white sugar, corn syrup, honey, agave nectar, maple syrup, etc. The experience is very difficult for the first few days. The first time I went a month without sugar was the worst! I became tired, hungry, dizzy and cranky. My tongue became white with toxins. Yuck.
Typically, after each month without sugar I have been less and less enticed by sweets. These days I am in control of my (former) sweet tooth. It does not control me. When I want a sweet on occasion I have it. Very rarely is there a compulsion to hog down on sweets.
Jennifer
the package is from Florida Crystals, and it says ‘organic evaporated cane juice’….a tan color, not as dark as regular brown sugar.
thanks for getting back to me.
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Hi Jennifer, what you describe is processed organic sugar. Most of the minerals have been removed from the Florida Crystals stuff. You need sucanat or rapadura where all the minerals from the sugar cane are still present.
Jennifer
gotcha! And here I thought I was doing ‘better’ by buying ‘organic sugar’ over the conventional kind. thanks!
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
You are doing better .. but you can do better still and still have a delicious sweetener with no minerals missing! 🙂
Jennifer
I have organic sugar in the house. Is that considered refined sugar or a natural sugar?
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Hi Jennifer, if it’s white or colorless, it is refined. Real sugar (just dried cane juice) is very dark brown.
Kelly the Kitchen Kop
Wow, Sarah, this topic hit a nerve! It’s funny that a lot of people are saying the same thing and I have to say it, too: this is exactly how I decreased my sugar cravings. Now I often go many days without sugar, but when I do indulge, I don’t always stay under 3T! If I do have a sweet, I’ll always have it with a lot of butter or other healthy fat since it helps to reduce the blood sugar spike.
Kelly
Chris
Man, this post was right on target! I’ve never seen it broken down so well, explained so thoroughly, or made out so easy.
Our family has already done this – and our kids don’t even ask for sugary snacks. I see that we followed your exact protocol, but we came to it naturally – just following our instincts led us down that road.
Now we do have a nice ginger beer on occasion …
Brenda
I was excited to begin reading your article, then quickly became sad. I am diabetic, and I can’t eat regular sugar. Do you have any ideas for us? Artificial sweeteners satisfy my sweet tooth, but they ARE addictive . . .
Katie @ Wellness Mama
Great post. I think you hit the nail on the head that for most people, difficulty following a diet has nothing to do with willpower and everything to do with too many sugars/processed foods and not enough good fats to keep them from being hungry.
Sherry
Sarah, thanks for the post. I have learned so much from your blogs and videos.
You said that liquid stevia is highly processed. It is one of the sweeteners that I am presently using. Could you please tell me where you got your information so I can research it a bit more?
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Hi Sherry, I was told about the high processing of the liquid stevia from Sally Fallon, President of the Weston A. Price Foundation in an email a few months back. I do not have a direct source for you, only what she advised me personally.
Sherry
Thanks for the response. I thought I had found a good sweetener, sounds like I will have to start using something else : (
Melissa
stevia herb is green. If liquid stevia is anything but green, assume it has been refined in some way.
Anna@GreenTalk
You took the words out of my mouth. I grow stevia and yes it is green. I always wondered if I could use the flowers in some way? Anyone know?