Stop SUGAR Support Thread

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  • DivineMrsM
    DivineMrsM Member Posts: 9,620
    edited February 2012

    SAB, I use stevia in my coffee & on my cereal and like it, even better than sugar substitutes like Splenda.

  • LuvRVing
    LuvRVing Member Posts: 4,516
    edited February 2012

    The reality is that ALL CARBS convert to sugar once they get past your mouth.  So  whether it's fruit, whole grains, veggies or processed stuff like flour, sugar, etc., it all converts to sugar.  Some of these foods do so more quickly than others (the theory behind the glycemic index).  This is a lesson I learned a decade ago, when I was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes.

    There are lots of "theories" about whether or not "sugar" feeds cancer cells.  I think some people believe it's true because when we have those PET scans, the glucose attaches itself to the cancer cells and that's how they can see mets.  Other scientists theorize that it's too much circulating insulin that feeds cancer.  I think that the circulating insulin theory is the one that is associated with the metformin clinical trials.  Metformin's action is to reduce the amount of glucose released by the liver and to reduce insulin resistance to glucose at the cellular level.  When insulin resistance is reduced, your pancreas doesn't have to output as much insulin to take care of the glucose that your body produces from what you eat.  And your cells use (or take up) the glucose more efficiently, thus reducing the stress on your pancreas.  There are other ways to reduce circulating insulin, one of the best being exercise and maintaining a healthy weight. 

    In Type 2 diabetes, the more carbs you eat, the more insulin your pancreas has to produce.  Eventually, the beta cells in the pancreas can "wear out" and that's when a type 2 diabetic has to begin using insulin. 

    Regardless of whether you have breast cancer or any other health issue, maintaining a healthy weight with a healthy diet consisting of lots of fresh fruits and veggies, whole grains, lean proteins and healthy fats is a good thing along with daily exercise.  We've been told this for decades.  Whether or not this prevents BC is still subject to debate.  What is known is that being healthy and getting regular exercise,  in general, helps us to handle whatever comes our way in the form of health issues. 

  • Spinnerpom
    Spinnerpom Member Posts: 106
    edited February 2012

    Momine, I love sardines! They are one of the most nutritionally under-appreciated foods!  I get mine water-packed, just to save calories, and at something like 140 calories per tin with a whopping 19 grams of protein, a little good fat, and 20% of your day's requirement of calcium...and like $1 a can at Trader Joe's.  I love them with just a little lemon juice and pepper on them, served along-side some low fat cottage cheese.  I'm hungry now!

     And LuvRVing...Amen, girl! My sentiments exactly! 

  • Momine
    Momine Member Posts: 7,859
    edited February 2012

    Spinner, packed in water is even better obviously, just haven't seen them that way down here. Yep, it is low-cost, high-nutrition item. I add the onions for their anti-inflammatory and other benefits. I pretty much try to eat some form of onions and cabbage daily.

  • Kaara
    Kaara Member Posts: 3,647
    edited February 2012

    Since we've gone to our healthier diet, we've discovered sardines and use them on our salads at lunch for protein.  I like the ones in olive oil and lemon.  We also like the canned wild Alaskan sockeye salmon which we also put on our salads.

    This morning I'm having a smoothie made with romaine, spinach, red peppers, zuccini, apple, celery and strawberries.  Yummy.  Sometimes I'll add a scoop of protein powder. No added sugar.

  • Cherilynn64
    Cherilynn64 Member Posts: 342
    edited February 2012

    My diet lifelong has been crappy. My mom fixed TV dinners for dinner or we went to McDonalds. We had 2 liter cokes in the house and M and M bags at all times. Other than bananas, I never saw fruit until I went to a friend's house. So yeah all us kids have a mouth full of cavities. I'm actually underweight and I could eat all the pasta and carbs and sweets I want and never gain a pound. People said after 40 I would ....I'm 47 and still nothing. But.....if there's one thing getting this damned disease has done for me is a 180 on my food habits. So even if sugar has nothing to do with breast cancer, it was a good way (sadly though) to get me to eat much better than I ever have. And type 2 diabetes is rampant on both sides of my family (ironically cancer is non existant save for me, yaaayyy....not), so it for sure will help me to stave that off.

    I'm a pharmacist and read about the metformin clinical trials before I got diagnosed. The Mayo clinic here where I live is one of the places doing the trial, so I may look in to it. Very interesting study!

    Oh and for those interested, it's Extra not Dentyne that makes the sugar free gum that tastes like dessert. Saw mint chocolate chip at the store today. I don't even chew that much of it, as fruits really have helped me take off the huge sugar load I was used to (took my canister of white sugar today and tossed it in the garbage). But it's nice to have every so often. And I discovered maple sugar. Now that's pretty darn good and I only use a tiny amount on oatmeal and such. Boiled a little in hot water and made some maple syrup for whole grain waffles. Pretty tasty! But overall I'm amazed that once I stuck to saying no more white sugar, I've been ok.....and I think my taste buds are finally getting more sensitive. The green pomegranate hot tea I had finally didn't taste like plain hot water to me. Baby steps! 

  • Kaara
    Kaara Member Posts: 3,647
    edited February 2012

    I'm seeing a new MO in early March, and I hope she will support Metformin, because it looks like Tamox is not going to do it for me.  I have had such bad flu like symptoms after being on just a half dose for three weeks that I had to stop it.  I felt like I couldn't get out of bed.  Two days after stopping the aches have gone away and I'm less exhausted.

    In the meantime, I keep following the anti cancer diet and take my supplements, hoping for the best! 

  • Cherilynn64
    Cherilynn64 Member Posts: 342
    edited February 2012

    I am trying as much anti cancer diet as I can, taking better and more supplements, only buying organic, etc.....and I'm waiting to start tamoxifen. My receptors were both over 90%...but waiting on the Oncotype score yet to see about chemo then plug in all the numbers regarding that and tamoxifen. I know sooo many women have horrible problems on tamox, so I' hoping I'm not one of them. I also have 2 naturopathic oncologists in the area that I plan on consulting as well. Doesn't hurt to try everything and anything! Hopefully your new med onc in March will be a better help to you Kaara! Good luck! :-)

  • Cyborg
    Cyborg Member Posts: 848
    edited February 2012

    I have noticed a connection between joint pain increasing w my sugar intake.

  • Survivorwoman
    Survivorwoman Member Posts: 620
    edited February 2012

    Cyborg- you  are onto something . I don't eat sugar but on occasion I have a wheat bagel. After which I have joint pain. 

  • mumito
    mumito Member Posts: 4,562
    edited February 2012
    Ladies Just finished a 11 night cruise.I ate in the dinning room everynight and avoided deserts came back the same weight as when i left.Innocent
  • LuvRVing
    LuvRVing Member Posts: 4,516
    edited February 2012

    Mumayan - that requires a herculean effort!  Good for you!

  • Kaara
    Kaara Member Posts: 3,647
    edited February 2012

    mumayan:  Now that requires a lot of self discipline!  On our last cruise, I found that the buffet had the best salad fixings, and fresh veggies, so we ate there a lot.  We noticed that a lot of people were much more cautious about what they were eating.  Can't say that I didn't dig into a dessert a couple of times though:)

  • Cherilynn64
    Cherilynn64 Member Posts: 342
    edited March 2012

    Got my Oncotype back today - 11. NO CHEMO!!!! I start now on tamoxifen.

    So.....I'm going to keep up my good new healthy diet that I started back in Jan. Keeping the sugar out.....it's gonna be hard, but worth it if this does indeed help keep anymore cancer from ever coming back anywhere in me. Who knows, but it's worth a shot.....and I have to figure I'll be healthier overall. My hair stylist last Saturday at my appt remarked, "Just think of what a super woman you are going to be if your body has lasted 47 years on the absolute crap you fed it and you were never sick till this cancer....you're going to live to 120 and never have so much as a cold again in your life." LOL! I like her attitude. I was telling her about the Penguin cold cap and making plans for saving my hair in case I had to do chemo, so I filled her on on everything....including giving up my beloved lifelong Dr Pepper addiction. Even she knew I must be serious about being healthy if I gave THAT up. Laughing 

  • Kaara
    Kaara Member Posts: 3,647
    edited March 2012

    Cherilynn:  That is great news!  You are on the way to better health!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited March 2012

    Hello.  My name is Kate and I am a sugaraholic.

    Just found this thread and it's nice to know there's help out there!  Smile  Always been thin but since BC dx have packed on 20+ lbs and think it's all from sugar.  It feels like crack to me (or how I assume crack feels not having personal experience!).  (Honest!)  I've been known to hide candy bars in the house, hide ice cream bars beind the frozen peas and sneak into my son's bedroom and swipe his Halloween/Christmas stocking/Easter basket candy when he's not looking when the cravings get too bad.  (Usually the days when I'm all proud of myself because I exhibited great will power at the grocery store by not buying any of that stuff.)  Is there help for someone like me?   

  • JulieLynn
    JulieLynn Member Posts: 144
    edited March 2012

    Kate - I think we were separated at birth.  I was always thin (all thanks to my mother's genes, not because I was exercising every day)  and put on some weight after the passing of my dad 1-1/2 years ago and now with all the steroids the last three months, I've added another 15 on top of it....on top of the weight I gained back from what the AC caused me to lose.  UGH!!  I'm such a sugar junkie....and if it's chocolate, watch out!!   I'm trying to have more control but it really sucks.  I have a friend that keeps telling me that sugar causes cancer....NOT what I want to hear!!!!  Of course, today at the grocery store all the Easter candy was sitting there laughing at me.  Stupid Peeps. 

  • Lilah
    Lilah Member Posts: 4,898
    edited March 2012

    Hey Kate!  Is weight gain an SE of tamox (or arimidex or whatever)?  Which I assume you are on as an ER/PR positive survivor?

  • Kaara
    Kaara Member Posts: 3,647
    edited March 2012

    Most people lose weight on tamoxifen, so that probably is not the cause of weight gain.  Eating a lot of sugar will pack on the pounds.  Since we've given up sugar and starch in our diet, our weight has fallen off quickly and we're at or below our normal for height and weight.

    Having bc and being addicted to sugar is not a good thing.  Sugar doesn't cause cancer, but once cancer developes it gets its energy source from glucose which is what sugar converts to in your body, so the more you can eliminate sugar or anything that converts quickly to sugar, like simple carbs, the better chance you have to prevent recurrence.  If you stop it cold turkey...starches and sugars, you will have some difficulty for a couple of weeks, but then all your cravings will go away...ours did.  It's the best way to do it.  We're now happy with some fruit and nuts for dessert. 

  • hrf
    hrf Member Posts: 3,225
    edited March 2012

    Most of us put on weight with Arimidex.

  • Blessings2011
    Blessings2011 Member Posts: 4,276
    edited March 2012

    As some of you already know, I will be starting the Optifast Program at Kaiser on March 22nd.

    I was hoping to use that 16-week meal replacement phase as sort of my "food detox" since I am such a huge carboholic.

    But I started "training" for this program a few weeks ago - drinking my own protein shakes for breakfast and lunch, and having soup and salad for dinner. My only snacks have been either whole fruit or organic turkey jerky or low-fat string cheese or organic Greek yogurt (I found out I was very deficient in protein.) It has - however - been a challenge to drink that GALLON of water a day!

    Now, interestingly enough, I find that I have NO taste at all for all the foods in our pantry that I was planning to donate just to get it out of the house. Brownie mix, pumpkin bread mix, a gazillion different kinds of chips and crackers...just not interested! Can't remember the last time I had a piece of white bread!

    (Oh, wait, yes I can....a few days ago on vacation.....I had a club sandwich and ended up peeling all the bread off and eating just the contents of the sandwich. Duh.)

    So I'm thinking that this bodes pretty well for the "detox" part of the diet. And I have to remember, at the end of the road, there is not only a thinner, healthier body, but a brand-new scrip for Arimidex waiting for me. Sheesh! Hopefully I will have learned some important new lessons about the way I eat.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited March 2012

    Lilah- I'm not on Tamox but was on anti-depressants which I think contributed to the weight gain.  Throw in 5 surgeries, too much bed rest, depression, emotional eating, menopause, chronic pain from fibromyalgia, no job and a disabled DH (OMG, I'm a frickin' mess) the pounds have crept (leapt?) on over the past 2 years.  And sugar is my go to comfort blanket that's for sure.  

    Just wondering, does everyone recommend using artificial sweeteners or does that just prolong the sugar cravings?  

  • ReadingMama
    ReadingMama Member Posts: 573
    edited March 2012

    adding to favorites

  • Cherilynn64
    Cherilynn64 Member Posts: 342
    edited March 2012

    Kate,

     Hi fellow Phoenician! (I live in Fountain Hills).

     I'm a lifelon sugarholic junk food vegertarian. Thin my whole life - genetics. Now I'm proud to say EX junk foodie. I gave up al white sugar and white bread. It was TOUGH for a couple weeks. I eat sourdough bread as I cannot stomach the darker breads - the one I buy at Whole Foods has no sugar added so it's zero sugar content and it's unbleached flour (but not whole wheat which I know is better - but at least sourgough is better than plain white bread). Once I gave up my daily Dr Pepper and sugar addiction, after a couple weeks I started tasting things more. Now for me red grapes and clementine oranges are so sweet that they satisfy my former sugar craving.

    I would never recommend sugar subsitutes that are fake like splenda and equal and the like. I tried several forms of Stevia, BLECH! UGH! Couldn't stand them. So I looked more and found things like maple sugar/syrup, sucanant (dried beet sugar I think) can be subbed for real sugar and they aren't bad. I just had some flax outmeal which was bland, but I added some raisins and maple sugar and it was tasty. But mostly now I drink smoothies daily and the fruit really tastes sweet for me now. Never did before. Just remember things like equal and splenda are chemicals - and the sooner you can do organic foods and no fake stuff, the better. I do treat myself once a day to Ghiradhelli 72% dark chocolate. The serving size is 4 pieces but I find now I'm good after 1 piece, so I'm only having 1/4 the sugar that's listed on the package and that's hardly anything.

    I lived on donuts and cupcakes and oreos and m and m's my entire life till this year when I got diagnosed. I'm 47. If I can do it, YOU can do it :-)

    Cheri 

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited March 2012

    Julie- OMG- we are twins!  Thin all my life (no exercising, good genes), sugar junkie, chocoholic, Peeps curser- lol!

    Cheri- I would love to say I'm an ex food junkie!  You give me hope!  

    I found this on the Dr. Oz site.  (Sorry if this has been posted before.)  Has anyone tried the chromium picolinate to help with the sugar cravings?  Sheer willpower alone is not my strong suit.

    Dr Oz: Fat & Sugar Addiction

    Dr Oz asked Dr Jampolis what we need to do to get rid of a Fat & Sugar Addiction.  She said that you must detoxify your liver.  Your liver can get fat buildup in its cells, which makes it harder to metabolize carbs and fats and to get rid of toxins.  All of these can cause inflammation and Insulin Resistance, plus they can lead to liver damage.

    Dr Oz: 3 Step Sugar & Fat Addiction Program in 28 Days

    Here is the 3 Step Healthy Detox Program that Dr Oz spoke about with Dr Melina Jampolis:

    Dr Oz: Restore Liver with Antioxidants

    Dr Oz said that the first step is to restore your liver with antioxidants.  Replace all grains in your diet with Cruciferous Vegetables like cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower and radishes.  Dr Jampolis said that if you must have carbs, then you can include it in your breakfast because you burn off more in the morning than you do throughout the rest of the day.  Also, eat Allium Vegetables like onions and leeks which have bio-flavinoids and phyto-nutrients, which act like important vitamins and minerals in your body.

    Dr Oz: Chromium Picolinate for Sugar Withdrawal

    Dr Jampolis told Dr Oz that there are supplements she prescribes to help people with Fat & Sugar Withdrawal.  You can take 1000 mg of Chromium Picolinate every day to help ween yourself off of a Sugar Withdrawal, because Chromium Picolinate helps insulin to work better in your body.  You should stop taking Chromium Picolinate as soon as you are off of the Sugar Addiction, according to Dr Melina Jampolis.  You can also take a Vitamin B Complex to help you get over your cravings.  B Complex also boosts the Seratonin in your brain and helps with your mood.  Unlike, Chromium Picolinate, Dr Jampolis said that you can take a Vitamin B Complex every day (not just for a short period).

    Dr Oz: Red Meat in 4 to 1 Ratio

    Dr Jampolis said the final step is to cut sugar and fat, especially transfats, from your diet.  Eat red meat in a 4 to 1 ratio.  So, for every meal that has red meat, eat four meals that are not red meat (like chicken, tofu, or fish).  Also, eat 3 servings of fruit every day, especially deeply colored fruits, because these help to lower inflammation, reduce belly fat, and are packed with antioxidants. 

  • Kaara
    Kaara Member Posts: 3,647
    edited March 2012

    Kate33:  Good post...thanks!

  • Lilah
    Lilah Member Posts: 4,898
    edited March 2012

    Kate -- sugar substitutes (if you use them at all) should be used sparingly... mainly because they are chemicals and who knows what they do to our bodies.  I use them sparingly and they don't make me crave sugar.  I do find that it helps me a lot to keep track of what I eat by using a calorie counting app on my smart phone.  Somehow if you have to record it, you really do think about whether you really want it.  Everyone is different.  For me, its carbs that get me (bread, pasta, etc)... so if I count the carbs (sugar or not) and keep them to 100 carbs a day, I have good control.  For what it's worth, everything you eat turns to sugar (glucose/energy) in your body... but good carbs (high fiber, veggies) and protein (virtually carb free for the most part) tend to convert slower so are healthier for you.  Can you switch to apples when you are craving sugar?  (For example?)  I find an apple really does it for me (a good, fresh, crisp one).  A big glass of ice water also satisfies at times.  And if I am having a bad day I do indulge in sugar free popsicles... which help me (15 calories for one/sugar free).  You probably have to experiment to figure out what works for you. 

  • Jen42
    Jen42 Member Posts: 246
    edited March 2012

    I haven't been on here in awhile. Enjoying catching up on the posts. Makes me feel less alone in the struggle to give up sugar. I turned a corner about a month ago, got really determined to remove all crap from my diet. Gave up alcohol, sugar, gluten, and am in process of cutting way back on dairy (my primary doc tested my adrenals and they are low-normal and he was first person to say dairy taxes the adrenals). I am trying to avoid anything processed. Have discovered I love raw kale as a salad, with plain cooked chicken, garbanzo beans, and some olive oil/vinegar dressing. So I eat that for lunch almost every day. When I first tried to be serious about giving up sugar (after being diagnosed), I really struggled every day. Then got to point where during the work week I was very good, but blew it on weekends. Now I am a month into really "clean eating". It feels pretty good. It has improved my chronic insomnia, too -- quite an incentive to keep going on the straight and narrow !

  • Cherilynn64
    Cherilynn64 Member Posts: 342
    edited March 2012

    After a couple weeks off sugar, I was surprised how much fruit tasted sweet to me. Another interesting thing I found is that if I cut a lemon in half and squeeze that into a glass of cold water with ice, drinking that cuts my sugar craving. I have no idea why since it's not sweet (I add nothing to it, just water, ice, and lemon). I'm wondering if since I loved lemonade with sugar as a kid, maybe somehow my brain is tricked into thinking this is sweet? It's very strange - I have no desire for sweets when I drink this. 

  • Kaara
    Kaara Member Posts: 3,647
    edited March 2012

    Cherilynn:  We purchased a Brita water pitcher and cut up lemon in the filtered water.  We drink that all day, and maybe that is why we don't have sugar cravings so much anymore.  We are content to eat an orange or some dried fruit and nuts for dessert now.

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