Diet coke?

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Nancy2581
Nancy2581 Member Posts: 1,234

Ok I need to ask. Does anybody who drank diet coke before diagnosis still drink it after? I gave it up completely during treatment mostly because it tasted awful. Now though it tastes good again - yes, it's an addiction for me. I started off drinking only a couple a week and then one every other day and during the holidays um one a day. Bad!!! I have changed a lot of my eating habits for the better, but I just don't want to give this one up. I remember when I first met my oncologist I asked her if I had to give up diet coke. She laughed (but didn't say yes or no) and pulled out a diet coke from behind her computer lol.

Nancy

Comments

  • 123JustMe
    123JustMe Member Posts: 385
    edited April 2018
    Hi Nancy,
    I still drink Diet Coke too! I am drinking much more water than I ever did and changed my diet to mainly plant based.
  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited December 2015

    I gave up diet soda when I started going low-carb nearly three years ago. I find unsweetened iced tea or seltzer with a squeeze of lemon or lime (or unsweetened flavored seltzers like LaCroix or Calistoga) to be much more satisfying without getting that sugar-anticipating insulin hit and subsequent hypoglycemic crash. I’ve since backslid on my diet, but not when it comes to soda pop, diet or regular. Both taste unpleasantly sweet to me.

  • Opt4Life
    Opt4Life Member Posts: 191
    edited December 2015

    Its Diet Pepsi for me but I still drink about two a week as before. For what its worth, my oncologist told me she is pretty positive Diet Pepsi, nor my deodorant, or the extra cream in my coffee caused my cancer. Yep, I asked.. repeatedly. However, I do drink more water and eat less red meat and sugar since diagnosis.

  • ceanna
    ceanna Member Posts: 5,270
    edited December 2015

    I was a complete diet coke addict (40 oz. per day was not unusual) even through LX and radiation but gave it up 9 months ago when I started reading about the adverse effects of aspartame and artificial color and flavorings. I find I was more addicted to the carbonation than the caffeine, but didn't like the saltiness of seltzer water or tonic water. What satisfies my need for carbonation is plain sparkling water. The only ingredient is carbonated water--none of the artificial flavors, salt, or additives. Not always easy to find in the winter, but Aldi's had it this past summer, WalMart sometimes has it--like Voss sparkling water, and my current source is a Midwest grocery store chain called Meijer. Just look for one ingredient--carbonated water period. And make sure it's cold--warmer carbonated water leaves something to be desired!!

  • phrogger78
    phrogger78 Member Posts: 115
    edited December 2015

    I gave up diet coke almost 2 years ago and I did so because I figured that it would give me brain cancer or something else like that. Then as soon as I got my diagnosis, I figured I should just go back to drinking diet coke. There are so many horrible chemicals maybe it would just kill my tumor. Of course it is ridiculous and of course I did not go back to drinking diet coke, but man, I do want to at times. I miss it, it was really an addiction.

  • MargaretEleanor
    MargaretEleanor Member Posts: 42
    edited December 2015

    Hello, My name is MargaretEleanor, and I'm a diet soda (Coke and Dr. Pepper) addict and I admit it. I drink it daily, and more than one,every day. I've heard that confession is the first step to recovery

    I'm especially fond of fountain diet sodas. Yes, the ones at convenience stores (QT is where you'll find me) where you bring in your gently used great big cup and get your own refill (hmm, wonder if I've washed that cup lately) right along side of everybody else getting their own refill sodas in their rarely washed cups. Those soda fountains are the same germ farms, uh, I mean fountain drinks we're told to avoid during chemo. Next confession, I don't think I'm even going to try to quit any time soon

    When I was first diagnosed, I gave up diet sodas; cold turkey. But, when I was going through chemo, one of the nurses (not fond of her and a story for another day) infused the tasteless, odorless Herceptin before the putrid-smelling, gag-inducing Taxol. Ever since then, and we're talking five years and two months (but who's counting) since my last Taxol infusion, to me, water tastes like Taxol. After a day of not being able to drink water without throwing up, and being invited back to the infusion center for a big, fat, juicy bag of fluids, my oncologist told me I could drink whatever tasted good, the most important thing to him was that I stay well hydrated. I took my permission to drink diet soda, ran with it, didn't look back, and have never asked for permission again.

    I am very disciplined about eating, however. I eat mostly vegan, have lost over 100 pounds and exercise faithfully. I rarely drink, and have never smoked, despite being from the great bourbon and tobacco state of Kentucky. My research shows a much closer link between obesity and cancer, than diet soda and cancer.

    I don't recommend that you do as I do, but, if I run in to you at QT, your soda is on me!

  • Nancy2581
    Nancy2581 Member Posts: 1,234
    edited December 2015

    you guys are so funny. Thanks for sharing. I used to get diet coke as a fountain drink, but now only the bottled or canned are the ones I like. For awhile I would get iced tea unsweetened, but I sweetened it to my liking with no calorie sweetener. How is that different than diet coke. I will talk to my oncologist in January and ask her again. She really made me laugh when she pulled that diet coke from behind her computer. She said the oncology nurses drink it too so. . . Even before cancer I was really only drinking a can a day. I want to enjoy life and stupid diet coke makes me happy lol

  • Mamiya
    Mamiya Member Posts: 432
    edited December 2015

    the funny thing about this for me is that normally i am super sensitive to aspartame but with all the chemo poisoning it doesn't matter - so i can drink diet coke for the first time ever. so i have been. and i like it. :)


  • Nancy2581
    Nancy2581 Member Posts: 1,234
    edited December 2015

    that's funny notdoneyet. It's funny it tasted so icky to me when I was doing chemo, but then again so did everything else lol

  • farmerlucy
    farmerlucy Member Posts: 3,985
    edited December 2015
    Hey Nancy! I dropped DC after dx too. But wow there is just something about a crispy can of DC to get the morning started, (I'm bad I know). I don't really worry about it much. I drink too many. Oh well. I made it this far.



  • Sjacobs146
    Sjacobs146 Member Posts: 770
    edited December 2015

    I was a huge Diet Coke addict before BC too. I stopped during chemo because it tasted awful. I am trying to consume less chemicals and processed foods, so I gave up Diet Coke in favor of water. I do have it once in a while as a treat, but that's only once a month, if that.

  • mustlovepoodles
    mustlovepoodles Member Posts: 2,825
    edited December 2015

    Yep, Diet Coke over ice is one of the few things that actually tastes good to me after chemo. Well, that and ginger ale. I've always been an avid Diet Pepsi drinker, but for some reason it doesn't taste right to me now. Oh well. I don't sit around and worry about Diet Coke killing me. I'm 59. I'm pretty sure something else will kill me faster.

  • LisaAlissa
    LisaAlissa Member Posts: 1,092
    edited December 2015

    When I started seeing my MO, he told me that one of the drugs he was prescribing (now I can't remember which one) used the same receptor pathways as caffeine, so I needed to stop drinking coffee, coke, or using any products that included caffeine. So I didn't have a coke or diet coke for over 5 years. Now? I'm drinking diet coke again...

    LisaAlissa

  • Nancy2581
    Nancy2581 Member Posts: 1,234
    edited December 2015

    Lisa was it an AI or tamoxifen? Just curious - I know you can't remember, but since you were on it for 5 years you've got me curious.

  • LisaAlissa
    LisaAlissa Member Posts: 1,092
    edited December 2015

    Hi Nancy!

    Tamoxifen to begin with, then switched to Evista (tremendous SE problems with Tamixifen...). I don't remember inquiring about caffeine when I switched. Was out of the habit of drinking soda at that point.

    LisaAlissa



  • LM070917
    LM070917 Member Posts: 323
    edited December 2015

    I drank a Diet Coke a day prior to diagnosis, but since then I have stopped completely. The link between between aspartame and cancer in general is scary and it's not new research, it's been know about for over 20 years. It's manufactured processed rubbish, when you think about it. I was addicted to it, but once I realised how bad it is for you, not to mention all the bloating, I haven't looked back... And I have a flatter tummy hooray!

  • Anamia3-me
    Anamia3-me Member Posts: 22
    edited December 2015

    funny. A week before my usg that shows a BIRADS V i stoped drinking diet coke (i use to live on a 4 or 5 diet cokes from 600 ml daily) i stoped because a promise to the Lord ( im a catholic) because the diet coke it was the only thing i like more than anything. Mayor it was a signal yo better habits.

  • ChiSandy
    ChiSandy Member Posts: 12,133
    edited December 2015

    Actually, seltzer these days is just carbonated water, aka sparkling water--no chemicals or minerals other than what the water itself may have (which is why you might find Apollinaris, Perrier, Badoit or Pellegrino salty). In fact, "club soda" by definition has some sodium (maybe phosphate) in it. Back in the day when seltzer came in those heavy glass sealed syphon bottles (like in baggy-pants burlesque comedy skits), you could injure yourself on the bubbles and it did taste perceptibly salty. But I think the FDA now mandates that “seltzer" can contain only water and carbon dioxide. I got a Sodastream a few years ago and I make my own seltzer. I also like to squeeze in some lemon or lime.

  • coraleliz
    coraleliz Member Posts: 1,523
    edited December 2015

    I gave up diet soda almost 10 months ago. Prior to that, I was a closet drinker. I found myself hiding it from others. I had a seldom washed Big Gulp cup(like the one mentioned above) hiding in my car. My car went on autopilot to the nearby 7-11. I'd sip on the 44oz soda until I got to my destination. Then I placed it in a cooler I kept in my car. It awaited my return.

    One day a couple of months ago, I slipped up & got a diet coke or pepsi fountain drink. I can no longer drink the stuff. Does this mean I'm cured? Do I have to be 5years out? or maybe 10?

  • NatsFan
    NatsFan Member Posts: 3,745
    edited December 2015

    Diet Pepsi is my failing, but I think diet sodas are just one of many things that are bad for us. I don't have a perfect diet, but overall I try to reduce the things that are bad for me (diet soda, sugar, salt, alcohol, red meat, fatty foods, processed food) and increase the things that are good for me (30 minutes of exercise daily, fresh veggies, non-processed food) to try to get a better life balance. I have cut back on DP in the 8 years since my dx - I've gone from averaging couple of bottles a day to a few bottles a week. Yes, there are times of stress I might have a bottle every morning several days straight, but then there are those other times when I'll go a week or more without it.

    I think there's something to be said about missing the bubbles, as I've become a seltzer person as well.

  • Dogbiscuit
    Dogbiscuit Member Posts: 10
    edited January 2016

    My advice is to get off of all soda. Regular has high fructose corn syrup in it and diet has chemically derived sugar substitutes that have not been out long enough to undergo long term damage to the body. Plus, the substitutes are hundreds to sometimes thousands of a percent sweeter than actual sugar, which turns on cravings. If it is the bubbles you like, then go with the suggestion about seltzer water with some lemon, lime, orange, or pineapple added to it. Water is the best think to drink. Good luck!

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