100 Reasons Why Sugar is Ruining Your Health

100 Reasons Why Sugar is Ruining Your Health

  1. Sugar can suppress your immune system.
  2. Sugar upsets the mineral relationships in the body.
  3. Sugar can cause juvenile delinquency in children.
  4. Sugar eaten during pregnancy and lactation can influence muscle force production in offspring, which can affect an individual’s ability to exercise.
  5. Sugar in soda, when consumed by children, results in the children drinking less milk.
  6. Sugar can elevate glucose and insulin responses and return them to fasting levels slower in oral contraceptive users.
  7. Sugar can increase reactive oxygen species (ROS), which can damage cells and tissues.
  8. Sugar can cause hyperactivity, anxiety, inability to concentrate and crankiness in children.
  9. Sugar can produce a significant rise in triglycerides.

10.  Sugar reduces the body’s ability to defend against bacterial infection.

11.  Sugar causes a decline in tissue elasticity and function – the more sugar you eat, the more elasticity and function you lose.

12.  Sugar reduces high-density lipoproteins (HDL).

13.  Sugar can lead to chromium deficiency.

14.  Sugar can lead to ovarian cancer.

15.  Sugar can increase fasting levels of glucose.

16.  Sugar causes copper deficiency.

17.  Sugar interferes with the body’s absorption of calcium and magnesium.

18.  Sugar may make eyes more vulnerable to age-related macular degeneration.

19.  Sugar raises the level of neurotransmitters: dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine.

20.  Sugar can cause hypoglycemia.

21.  Sugar can lead to an acidic digestive tract.

22.  Sugar can cause a rapid rise of adrenaline levels in children.

23.  Sugar is frequently malabsorbed in patients with functional bowel disease.

24.  Sugar can cause premature aging.

25.  Sugar can lead to alcoholism.

26.  Sugar can cause tooth decay.

27.  Sugar can lead to obesity.

28.  Sugar increases the risk of Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis.

29.  Sugar can cause gastric or duodenal ulcers.

30.  Sugar can cause arthritis.

31.  Sugar can cause learning disorders in school children.

32.  Sugar assists the uncontrolled growth of Candida Albicans (yeast infections).

33.  Sugar can cause gallstones.

34.  Sugar can cause heart disease.

35.  Sugar can cause appendicitis.

36.  Sugar can cause hemorrhoids.

37.  Sugar can cause varicose veins.

38.  Sugar can lead to periodontal disease.

39.  Sugar can contribute to osteoporosis.

40.  Sugar contributes to saliva acidity.

41.  Sugar can cause a decrease in insulin sensitivity.

42.  Sugar can lower the amount of Vitamin E in the blood.

43.  Sugar can decrease the amount of growth hormones in the body.

44.  Sugar can increase cholesterol.

45.  Sugar increases advanced glycation end products (AGEs), which form when sugar binds non-enzymatically to protein.

46.  Sugar can interfere with the absorption of protein.

47.  Sugar causes food allergies.

48.  Sugar can contribute to diabetes.

49.  Sugar can cause toxemia during pregnancy.

50.  Sugar can lead to eczema in children.

51.  Sugar can cause cardiovascular disease.

52.  Sugar can impair the structure of DNA.

53.  Sugar can change the structure of protein.

54.  Sugar can make the skin wrinkle by changing the structure of collagen.

55.  Sugar can cause cataracts.

56.  Sugar can cause emphysema.

57.  Sugar can cause atherosclerosis.

58.  Sugar can promote an elevation of low-density lipoproteins (LDL).

59.  Sugar can impair the physiological homeostasis of many systems in the body.

60.  Sugar lowers enzymes ability to function.

61.  Sugar intake is associated with the development of Parkinson’s disease.

62.  Sugar can increase the size of the liver by making the liver cells divide.

63.  Sugar can increase the amount of liver fat.

64.  Sugar can increase kidney size and produce pathological changes in the kidney.

65.  Sugar can damage the pancreas.

66.  Sugar can increase the body’s fluid retention.

67.  Sugar is the number one enemy of the bowel movement.

68.  Sugar can cause myopia (nearsightedness).

69.  Sugar can compromise the lining of the capillaries.

70.  Sugar can make tendons more brittle.

71.  Sugar can cause headaches, including migraines.

72.  Sugar plays a role in pancreatic cancer in women.

73.  Sugar can adversely affect children’s grades in school.

74.  Sugar can cause depression.

75.  Sugar increases the risk of gastric cancer.

76.  Sugar can cause dyspepsia (indigestion).

77.  Sugar can increase the risk of developing gout.

78.  Sugar can increase the levels of glucose in the blood much higher than complex carbohydrates in a glucose tolerance test can.

79.  Sugar reduces learning capacity.

80.  Sugar can cause two blood proteins – albumin and lipoproteins – to function less effectively, which may reduce the body’s ability to handle fat and cholesterol.

81.  Sugar can contribute to Alzheimer’s disease.

82.  Sugar can cause platelet adhesiveness, which causes blood clots.

83.  Sugar can cause hormonal imbalance – some hormones become underactive and others become overactive.

84.  Sugar can lead to the formation of kidney stones.

85.  Sugar can cause free radicals and oxidative stress.

86.  Sugar can lead to biliary tract cancer.

87.  Sugar increases the risk of pregnant adolescents delivering a small-for-gestational-age (SGA) infant.

88.  Sugar can lead to a substantial decrease the in the length of pregnancy among adolescents.

89.  Sugar slows food’s travel time through the gastrointestinal tract.

90.  Sugar increases the concentration of bile acids in stool and bacterial enzymes in the colon, which can modify bile to produce cancer-causing compounds and colon cancer.

91.  Sugar increases estradiol (the most potent form of naturally occurring estrogen) in men.

92.  Sugar combines with and destroys phosphatase, a digestive enzyme, which makes digestion more difficult.

93.  Sugar can be a risk factor for gallbladder cancer.

94.  Sugar is an addictive substance.

95.  Sugar can be intoxicating, similar to alcohol.

96.  Sugar can aggravate premenstrual syndrome (PMS).

97.  Sugar can decrease emotional stability.

98.  Sugar promotes excessive food intake in obese people.

99.  Sugar can worsen the symptoms of children with attention deficit disorder

100. Sugar is addictive!

By Nancy Appleton PhD & G.N. Jacobs

Excerpted from Suicide by Sugar

100 Reasons Why Sugar is Ruining Your Health

A breakup letter

My dearest White Bread,

I think you know what I’m going to say. You HAVE to know that this has been coming for a long, long time.  It’s time for us to go our own ways. I need to quit you.

 

It’s not that I don’t love you, because I do. I know that I shouldn’t but I do. I love you simply as you are. I also love you toasted or french toasted or as a grilled cheese.  I’m the one clapping like a two year old every time you are brought to the table in a basket.  Even though it’s not politically correct anymore – most people have matured and now prefer your grainer sibling. Not me. Never me.  If I can’t have you – I don’t want any.

It’s not you, it’s me. I know many people who do just fine with you in their lives (just look at those French people and their fantastic baguettes)  I just can’t keep sneaking around like this anymore. I deserve better. You make me want you over and over and I can’t let it go. You make my gut feel bad and my blood sugars spike and then crash. You are damaged, fake and  HAVE NO VALUE and yet – I want you.

This relationship is not healthy for me – it’s toxic and I’m going to have to just break it off. You are making me sick. I don’t even know how you keep sneaking back into my life. I never buy you, I don’t choose you but whenever I see you (or smell you or squeeze you) I can’t help myself.

My friends never liked you, they can see through your sneaky outer crust and can tell that you are not a ‘health food’.

So, if you see me walking past you in the market – just look the other way. Pretend we’ve never met.  Don’t try to tempt me with the softness of your bread or the beautiful white center that toasts up to a delightful treat. If you think you can just ‘show up’ at my table and expect to be welcomed – you have another thing coming.

Good bye sliced goodness. We are over.

100 Reasons Why Sugar is Ruining Your Health

Mini Meals – on the go.

We had a wonderful class filled with good food and lots of laughs!  We used lots of local foods that were fresh and yummy. Enjoy!

Mini Meals for On the Go – Optimal Body Balance Cooking Class – Sheila Robertson

Evolution Tomato Salad – from the Food Revolution Cookbook

1 ½ pounds of ripe tomatoes

6 Tablespoons of EVOO

2 Tablespoons of red wine vinegar (or white balsamic)

Fresh Basil

Handful of black olives

15 oz can on cannellini beans

1 can of tuna

Salt and pepper to taste

(If you want to keep evolving this salad try adding red onion and feta cheese)

Evolution Cucumber Salad – from the Food Revolution Cookbook

2 Cucumbers

6 Tablespoons of EVOO

2 Tablespoons of Lemon juice

Fresh mint

1 Tablespoon of natural yogurt (non dairy options are available)

Handful of black olives

½ fresh red chile

Add in cooked shrimp or bagged salmon for your protein

Iced “Coffee”

Brew your favorite Techeeno

Add 1 scoop of Vanilla Protein powder

¼ cup of Milk of choice

Ice and then blend

Dilly Beans with Nitrate Free Salami and fruit

3 oz of cooked chicken, blanched green beans with mustard dip and a granny smith apple

 Sliced Egg Sandwich with herb mayonnaise

1 Tablespoon vegan mayonnaise

1 Tablespoon chopped parsley

1 teaspoon Dijon mustard

2 hardboiled eggs

1/c cup watercress

Season with salt and pepper

1 slice of pumpernickel bread

Mix the first 4 ingredients and make ½ a Sammie.

Add 1 cup of veggie crudités or 1 cup of veggie soup to round out the meal

Cherry Tomato and Feta Salad (whole living website)

Halve 3 ounces of cherry tomatoes and mix with 1 ounce crumbled low-fat feta cheese. Dress with 1 teaspoon balsamic vinegar and 1 teaspoon olive oil; season with salt and pepper to taste. Sprinkle with fresh oregano. Add 1 cup of melon on the side.

Ricotta, Herbs, and Cucumber(whole living website)

Stir 1 tablespoon chopped fresh basil, parsley, or dill into 1/4 cup low-fat ricotta cheese. Season with salt, pepper, and lemon juice. Spread on toast; top with cucumber. Add 1 cup of berries on the side.

The Perfect Hard-Boiled Egg

Cover eggs with cold water by 1 inch. Bring water to a boil. Keep covered and remove from heat. Let stand 13 minutes. Drain and run under cold water. (To spice it up, cut the egg in half and top with a dash of salt mixed with paprika; pepper and lemon zest; or chili flakes.)

Tropical Fruit Parfait

In a small jar, layer 1/2 cup fruit cut into 1/2-inch cubes (kiwis, mangos, and pineapples are nice) with 1/4 cup greek style yogurt (or goat yogurt or coconut yogurt). Top with 1 tablespoon toasted sliced almonds. Have with a side salad.

100 Reasons Why Sugar is Ruining Your Health

Party Starters…Great appetizers and ‘dish to pass’ recipes

 

Party Starters

Optimal Body Balance Cooking Class by Sheila ‘Party in an Apron’ Robertson

Caprese Stackers

Tomatoes – try the smaller ones so they are bite sized

Mozzarella cheese (we used buffalo cheese)

Fresh Basil

Make a dip of balsamic vinegar, EVOO and some fresh cracked pepper.  (We also added fresh oregano in the oil mix)

Layer the delicious items and hold together with a tooth pick. Put the dressing in the middle for dipping.

(We also used seasoned tofu in place of the cheese for non-dairy crew)

Antipasto Plate

Assemble hearts of palm, artichoke hearts, olives, roasted red peppers, nitrate free salami or prosciutto.

Feel free to add in tomatoes, mozzarella cheese, hummus and veggie ‘chips’ if you are not making the other recipes.

Endive with Olive Tapenade

Use whole endive leaves and layer ½ Tablespoon of olive tapenade. To make this a great mini meal add in some protein – try cold shrimp, chicken, tuna or even hard boiled egg

Easy, Spicy, Deviled Eggs

Cut the HB eggs in ½ lengthwise and pop out the yolk. Mash the yolk with Latinaise (from Ojai) and some chives.  Re-fill the egg whites with the mixture.

Crisp Green Beans in a Mustard Sauce

Blanch the green beans by dropping the cleaned beans in boiling water for approx. 1 minute. Remove from the heat, then chill the beans. Make the dipping sauce out of mustard, oil and white balsamic vinegar. Sprinkle the tops with a little sea salt.

Salmon Stuffed Tomatoes

Make little cups out of your tomatoes by scooping out the middle. Make the salmon mix by adding salmon, lemon, EVOO, sea salt, Italian seasonings and chives. Place this mix into the little cups

Chocolate and fruit

Mix together 1 whole bar of unsweetened baker’s chocolate with ½ cup grape seed oil and 1 cup of agave nectar. Heat through until smooth. Dip in your favorite fruits. Strawberries, Pineapple, banana all work great.

100 Reasons Why Sugar is Ruining Your Health

Healthy Grilling Cooking Class – Recipes

 

We had a smokin’ good time at the last cooking class!  Try them yourself. I LOVE fish tacos – I probably eat them everyweek.  I ALMOST can’t eat them when I go out because my recipes is SO good!  I am constantly switching it up adding or subtracting depending on what is available.  Let me know what you think!

Optimal Body Balance Cooking Class – Healthy Grilling

Fish ‘Tacos’

A white fish (tilapia, orange roughy, cod, etc.)

Napa Cabbage for the ‘taco’

Toppings for the taco

Fish:  Marinade in the juice from one lime and ½ a packet of Simply Organic fish taco seasoning mix.

Coat the fish with the breading of your choice (Almond flour, crushed rice crackers, etc) salt to taste and the

remaining ½ of the Simply Organic fish taco seasoning mix.

Grill on the direct heat of the grill or use aluminum foil ‘packs’. The fish is done when it ‘flakes’.

Clean the Napa Cabbage and keep the leaves whole – trimming off the thick white section – set aside to use as the ‘taco’

Toppings for the taco:

Lime, cilantro, re-fried beans, red onion – marinated in white balsamic vinegar or green onions and Ojai ‘Latinaise’.

Black and White Bean Salad

1 can of Black Beans

1 can of ‘white’ beans of choice

Tomatoes (and any available veggie)

Roasted Bell Peppers

Roasted Jalapenos

Roasted White Onion

Avocado

A sprinkle of turmeric

A sprinkle of cumin

Olives

Olive oil

White balsamic vinegar

Salt and Pepper to taste

Cilantro or Basil (or other herbs that you love)

Marinated Portobello Mushrooms

½ bottle of Italian Seasoning poured over sliced Portobello mushrooms

Or

Bragg’s Vinegar and Bragg’s amino acid (equal amounts) with a little sea salt

Grill over open flame. Serve as a ‘burger’ or add on top of a greens salad.

Guacamole Stuffed Cucumbers

Make little cups out of cucumbers

Add a dollop of prepared guacamole

Top with shredded Goat or Sheep’s cheese

Medjool Dates with Tahini and Pecans

Cut medjood dates in ½ and remove the pit

Fill the date with tahini and top with a nut (any kind will do)

I like to freeze mine in the summer to prevent the tahini from getting all over the place

Grilled Fruit

Pineapple

Plumbs

Nectarines

Make a sauce of agave nectar, sprinkle of nutmeg and cinnamon.

Cut the fruit into chunks and put on pre-soaked skewers

Coat with the sauce and grill until heated through.

Enjoy warm or cooled.

100 Reasons Why Sugar is Ruining Your Health

A ‘dude’ explains why salad is ‘man food’

I loved this article so much that I thought that I’d share it!

Editor’s note: John DeVore is a former editor at Maxim magazine and maxim.com and former host of “The DeVore and Diana Show” on Sirius XM radio. He currently offers man-centric perspectives as a columnist at Guyspeak.com and TheFrisky.com. He’s a lifelong food freak and yo-yo dieter and speaks fluent “dude.”

(CNN) — Real men eat salads. I know this because I am a dude. Right now, in my fridge, I have five bottles of hot sauce, a jar of Cheez Whiz and half a pack of hot dogs. But recently I went to lunch with a couple of buds, and I ordered a salad. I ordered it hard.

It was a basic frissée salad with bacon, shallots and a poached egg, tossed in a light vinaigrette. Frissée is a curly, toothsome leaf, bitter enough to balance bacon and egg but still possessed of a pleasant spring.

My friends laughed at me. They pointed. One ordered a burger, the other fried calamari. I was chastised for not eating “man food.”

For those of you who aren’t familiar with this gender normative term, “man food” is food that you’d imagine a lumberjack or a cowboy or a Viking would eat. Towers of butter-soaked pancakes. Pots of napalm-hot chili. Meat on a bone.

Thoroughly unsubtle, “man food” is rustic fare meant to satisfy a hearty appetite. Quantity is prized over quality. Calories are “fun points.” The more “fun points,” the tastier the belly filler.

But sometimes a dude needs a change. Specifically, a salad. A fresh, crisp, crunchy salad. Salads offer breathers between manly meals. Spinach, cucumber, tomato, red onions, mushrooms, chickpeas, oil and vinegar — that is my usual jam.

I don’t need any fancy, goopy dressings compromising my vegetables. (What does a ranch actually taste like, anyway?) Sometimes, I might throw some almonds or walnuts up in there. I’ve been known to be down with blueberries and mandarin oranges. I like bacon or grilled chicken on occasion. I am not a fan of unnecessary carbs like croutons. And then there are those moments I go crazy and get a frissée freakin’ salad.

I didn’t evolve without help. There was a time where, if I cut myself shaving, I’d bleed sausage gravy. My heart squeezed more than it pumped. And I also grew what I call “fat wings.”

Luckily, the woman I was dating at that time didn’t like any of those things. Being able to sit in a bathtub full of buffalo wings is every dude’s birthright, but I eventually learned that being attractive for your significant other is also pretty manly.

My girlfriend was a smart woman and didn’t bring up my devolving into a human biscuit. What she did was announce that we were going to save money so that Saturday nights, we could go to the local barbecue joint and destroy some cow with our faces.

Obviously, my first thought was, “Aww, she wants me to help her lose weight.” So I humored her. She came home from the supermarket with a stack of plastic disposable containers. In each, she put one potential salad ingredient. Not only the ones that would become my favorite but kidney beans, green peppers, corn and pepperoni slices.

She created a mini-salad bar in our fridge. It was easy, and I was told I could eat as much as I wanted. This became my lunch and occasional dinner.

You know what? We saved money. I lost weight. Gained energy. And my girlfriend and I, well, let’s just say we had the whoopee time.

I kept this up this salad-centric diet for months. My friends would come over to watch a fight or brawl on the PlayStation, and I’d meet them at the door with a salad in my hand.

The landlord would need my help with some drywall; I’d put my salad down.

At work, I’d articulate corporate strategy during lunch meetings spearing cucumbers in my lucky bowl of awesome salad. I made eating salad sexy. I made it macho, macho.

Is it rabbit food? Friend, if it’s rabbit food, then that rabbit is the size of a ferocious bear.

My friends poked fun at me as I munched on my fancy salad. It was tasty. I love how the warm yolk from the poached egg lightly coated the frissée, adding a dimension of hardiness to a dish with such leafy bounce. And the bacon chunks added just the right amount of fatty salt, more sturdy ballast. I wiped my mouth.

We were out celebrating one guy’s birthday. The other guy, an old friend from college, was “in-between gigs.” It had been another tough year. “Salad is not man food,” they mocked. Oh, but it is. I ordered a final round of beers. Then I picked up the check. -John Devore