La lecture à portée de main
Vous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage
Découvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement
Je m'inscrisDécouvre YouScribe en t'inscrivant gratuitement
Je m'inscrisVous pourrez modifier la taille du texte de cet ouvrage
Description
Sujets
Informations
Publié par | eBookIt.com |
Date de parution | 26 février 2015 |
Nombre de lectures | 0 |
EAN13 | 9781456607005 |
Langue | English |
Poids de l'ouvrage | 2 Mo |
Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,1000€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.
Extrait
Introduction
My story
Are you ready to quit?
Four Ways to Track Your Progress
The 8-Week Program
- Week 1: Cutting back.
- Week 2: “Operation Quit” and replace sugar with fat.
- Week 3: How much sugar are we eating? Know your labels.
- Week 4: Clean Week. Dealing with cravings.
- Week 5: Dealing with doubts from others and eating out.
- Week 6: Add some sweetness back in.
- Week 7: Coping with lapses and some scary sugar factlets.
- Week 8: Refining and moving forward.
I Quit Sugar 8-Week Program Essentials Kit
By Dan Buettner National Geographic Fellow and New York Times bestselling author of The Blue Zones: Lessons for Living Longer from the People Who’ve Lived the Longest.
I’ve spent over a decade studying what centenarians eat to be 100 and I can tell you a few things for sure. First is that evolution provides important cues for helping us decide what to eat. Think about what your grandparents ate, the quantity, the level of processing, the freshness, and you can get a pretty good idea of what humans have been eating for the past few centuries. Second, we all need to experiment and find out what works for our lifestyle and our particular body chemistry. I believe that vegetables are good for you but if I eat eggplant – and I don’t know why eggplant – the roof of my mouth swells like a sea anemone. Third, if we eat what we like we’re going to probably eat it for long enough to make a real difference in our health – for better of for worse.
Which is why I like Sarah Wilson’s approach to eating, and particularly this eBook. Sarah is a food explorer of the highest order. She began her deep dive into the science of eating not because she wanted to sell books, but because she had an intrinsically personal and authentic motive: she needed to heal herself. She then proceeded with journalistic rigor and Machiavellian resolve to get primary sources of dietary information. She’s personally interviewed the top scientists and/or has metabolised their research to produce a powerful understanding of how food impacts our wellness. Then she travelled the world in search of recipes that match her best practices.
My advice: Take a Sarah Wilsonesque expedition of your own through the pages of this book and watch wellness ensue!
Dan Buettner
I ’d played with the idea many times before, talked about it and felt guilty about not doing it. But what started out as just a New Year experiment became something more. Giving up sugar was easier than I thought, and I felt better than ever, so I just kept going and going.
I consulted dozens of experts and did my own research as a qualified health coach. I experimented, using myself as a guinea pig, and eventually assembled a wealth of techniques that really worked. Then I got serious and committed. I chose. These things are always a matter of choosing. And committing.
We have a deep-rooted resistance to quitting sugar. We grow up with an emotional and physical attachment to it. Just the idea of not being able to turn to it when we’re feeling happy or want to celebrate, or when we’re feeling low or tired, terrifies us.
If not a sweet treat, then what? Well, I’ll tell you what: a mind and body that’s clean and clear.
I soon learned that when you quit sugar, you can feel very much on your own. Our modern food system is set up around sugar, and seductively so. A muesli bar can contain more sugar than a donut, everyday barbeque sauce more than chocolate topping. You try to do the right thing, sugar wise, only to find low-fat yoghurt contains more sugar than ice cream. You feed your kids “wholegrain” cereal in the morning with some juice and pack their lunchbox with “healthy” snacks, such as raisins and fruit. By lunch, they’ve eaten their way through a Mars-Bar-and-cola-can-worth of sugar.
Don’t try taking refuge in a health food shop – they’re little dens of fructose-dressed-up-as-healthy-food stuffs. Some of the highest fructose snacks I’ve encountered were found in health food shops, usually festooned with “low fat”, “gluten free”, “100 per cent natural” and even “no added sugar” labels. It also doesn’t help that the nutritional bodies we rely on to advise us as to what to put in our mouths are more often than not funded by – you guessed it – the sugar industry. More on this later.
Just about everything we eat is laced with sugar. I found breakfast became a minefield and trying to grab a healthy, sugar-free snack on the run was virtually impossible. I had to get clever and creative. So I spent the next 12 months inventing new fructose-free snacks and meals, both sweet and sweet diverting. You can find all these recipes in a neat little eCookbook, here .
This book will show you how to take sugar out of your diet and get well. It’s a step-by-step, 8-Week Program full of tips, tricks and techniques that will help you eliminate the white stuff for good.
For me, eating sugar free has become incredibly easy, efficient, economical, sustainable and... right. For the first time in decades, I eat exactly what I want. That’s what going sugar free does – it recalibrates your appetite. I don’t think about restricting my intake. Ever. And eating has become even more joyous and deeply, wholly satiating.
I’m no white-coated expert. But I did succeed in ridding my life of sugar and I did experience first hand what worked and what didn’t. Now I want to share what I found and help as many people as I can make the leap to healthy, sugar-free living.
I wish you luck and a whole stack of wellness,
Why I had to quit
I was a sugar addict. I didn’t look like one. I didn’t drink cola or put sugar in my coffee. I’ve never eaten a Krispy Kreme donut, and ice cream bores me.
But here’s the thing: I was a covert addict. I hid behind the so-called “healthy sugars” like honey, dark chocolate and fruit. Which made things harder in some ways because first I had to face my denial.
Growing up on a semi-subsistence property, we ate very naturally. My attachment started when, as a teenager, I moved into town from the country. A cocktail of girl hormones, newfound access to malls and convenience stores, as well as a kid-in-candy-store delight with foods I’d previously been denied meant I went sugar crazy.
I remember at university not being able to function if I didn’t have a cinnamon scroll at 10am. I loved the pink icing blob in the middle. And I convinced myself the dried currants made it healthy.
Over time this wasn’t enough. I’d then eat an apple pie after lunch. And some chocolate. Soon, I was a riding a horrible rollercoaster of sugar highs and lows. I was bingeing. Then, feeling guilty, I would starve myself the rest of the day.
I got sick off the back of this reactionary eating – very sick. I developed mood disorders and sleep problems, and finally I developed adrenal issues and my first autoimmune disease – Graves, or overactive thyroid. Ever since, I’ve had stomach problems linked to poor gut balance.
Over time I swapped my processed sugary carbs for “healthy” sugary treats. And, yeah, I ate less sugar overall. But all the symptoms still continued. I didn’t put it down to sugar completely. But I knew it was a major player.
For the past 13 years I’ve eaten very well. But up until three or so years ago I was still eating sugar every day. After every meal. I was still addicted.
Here’s a snapshot: I was eating three pieces of fruit a day, a handful of dried fruit in my porridge, a teaspoon or two of honey in my tea, a small (35 grams) bar of dark chocolate after lunch and, after dinner, honey drizzled on yoghurt, or dessert (if I was out).
A conservative day would see me consume about 25-plus teaspoons of sugar, just in that rundown of snacks above. That’s not counting the hidden sugar in things like tomato sauce, commercial breads and other everyday foodstuffs.
I told myself I ate “good” sugar and convinced myself I didn’t have a problem. But sugar is sugar. Sure, the other ingredients mixed in with the sugar in, say, a muesli bar or a piece of fruit were good for me. But the chemical composition of sugar – whether it’s in a mango or a Mars Bar – remains the same. And it is highly addictive.
It was time to face the facts
I was eating way more sugar than we’re designed to eat.
Even though I was eating much less sugar than the average Australian, and many would say my diet looked very healthy, I was still consuming too much sugar.
The American Heart Association recommends that women consume no more than 100 calories a day from added sugar and men take in no more than 150 calories per day. That translates into about six teaspoons for women and nine teaspoons for men, inclusive of hidden sugars.
Australian guidelines differ and are hazy when it comes to defining “added sugar” and the amounts vary from 85–110 grams a day, which is up to 26 teaspoons. From my research over the past three years, I found that those who espouse eating sugar at the levels we used to before the “invention of sugar” and its related chronic diseases tend to suggest 20 grams (five teaspoons) a day as a maximum. Which isn’t much.
I was addicted.
Yes, this was an undignified problem. If someone put a cheesecake in front of me or a family-sized block of chocolate, and I was having a weak moment, I’d damn well eat the lot. Once I got a taste, I couldn’t control myself.
Autoimmune disease (or adrenal issues or an excitable personality) + sugar = bad.
I suspect my autoimmune disease was linked to my life-long sugar habit. And it is certainly made worse by sugar. Anyone with a compromised system simply cannot afford to have their stress hormones (adrenaline and cortisol), their neurotransmitter levels (dopamine), or their insulin levels tipped off balance by sugar. A hard, cold, but oddly motivating fact!
I wanted to lose weight.
I’d put on weight (12kg) from thyroid disease a few years back and hadn’t been able to shift it. It wasn’t a core issue for me but it playe