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[-] VerilyFemme 14 points 1 day ago

Absolutely. My partner and I realized we were eating a lot of unhealthy food, so we started trying to cut down on sugar.

As it turns out, you can't really eat out anywhere if you're cutting sugar, so we started cooking at home.

Cut to about three weeks later, and I go to drink a HALF-SUGAR Gatorade. I could only get about two sips down before I had to throw it away. Way too sweet.

Then, I had to stop somewhere for lunch. Panda Express' chow mein and 2 entrees were ~1200 calories, and that really wasn't even filling.

Our bodies are really good at adapting to whatever diets we have to take on, and ultraprocessed food is great for survival due to its high caloric content for the cost. But we weren't meant to eat like this every day, and raising your kid to adapt to that instead of whole foods is child abuse.

[-] mateofeo85@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago

You also notice the high amount of sodium. At least I do when I eat healthy for a while and decide to eat fast food.

[-] VerilyFemme 5 points 1 day ago

What really shocked me was that it took a few days for my body to get used to eating healthily. I was mainly eating beans and cornbread, and it seemed to just not be able to easily digest it at first. I'd imagine that hyperprocessed stuff is crippling our body's ability to properly digest, because all the processing has been done already.

Of course, now I'm imagining kids that have eaten nothing but chicken nuggets since they could have solid food, and a lot of America's food addiction and dietary issues make so much sense.

[-] johnny_deadeyes@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 day ago

Our digestion of unprocessed foods improved with the addition of some fermented foods that maybe tuned up our gut biomes. Milk kefir in particular is a diverse probiotic and is easy to make yourself at room temperature on a kitchen counter.

[-] Valmond@lemmy.world 2 points 23 hours ago

Fun fact: if you eat lots of sugar the body starts to use only sugar as energy and "forgets" how to use fat. This means if you're on a sugar diet, you'll feel hunger all the time you do not eat sugar...

If you drop it, your body will slowly get back and burn fat when it needs energy (and the liver can make enough glucose for the brain to work so don't worry) resulting in way less obnoxious hunger and a lot of energy ready to go att all times.

Personally I'm almost never cold any more for example ๐Ÿ˜

[-] someguy3@lemmy.world 13 points 1 day ago

The free market will surely sort this out.

[-] Chivera@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago

The customer is always right

[-] johnny_deadeyes@slrpnk.net 7 points 1 day ago

Yeah. I was compelled to go cold-turkey off processed foods a couple decades ago for dire matters of health. I know it's not possible for everyone, but for me it was utterly necessary and vastly improved the quality of my life.

Everybody's now talking about satiety because it's the mechanism of these popular GLP-1 drugs. I've been trying to tell folks about it for 25 years. It was literally the key for me to losing ~120 lbs and keeping it off. I resolved diabetes, hypertension and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease -and vastly improved other issues that were making me miserable.

The bottom line was an awareness that what I eat now has a direct and powerful effect on how soon and how much I'll be compelled to eat later. I began to weight my choices towards the low-caloric density, the low glycemic and high-fiber. This of course also means mostly dumping processed foods.

I realize there is privilege in being able to do this and even devote the time to untangling health puzzles, I was fortunate to have the situation and support to do it.

I guess my point is that given resources it's at least possible to game your own satiety without being dependent on expensive drugs. No argument at all that the quality of what folks now regard as staple food is lousy and in fact calculated to cause overconsumption, illness.

[-] Atropos@lemmy.world 2 points 22 hours ago

What's your favorite snack now that you've refined your diet?

I have the honor of being the snack acquirer for my workplace break room, and do my best to supply mostly things like nuts and dried fruit, skipping things like chips and candy.

this post was submitted on 28 Jul 2025
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