by Suff » 21 Jan 2016, 17:33
I have one question, always, when someone looks at me, says "you're too fat you are going to get diabetes".
I ask them how it is possible to get a sugar processing intolerance when I put less sugar in my body (normally), than they do.
The response is always, always, the same. Apparently I have no clue how diabetes works or how the body deals with sugar as opposed to fats....
WM, you should see the look on the face of McD or Burger King when I'm starving but don't want the chips but I do want a long drink. I order a large (or super size), meal and Coke 0. Then when it comes I ask them to take the fries off it and do whatever they want with them.
Basically because it's cheaper to buy the meal with the fries than it is to buy the burger and the drink.
Occasionally I have some smartass who tells me that they can't take the fries back (with some stupid smirk), so I walk immediately to the bin and dump the fries in it, then look back at said smartass who is usually really annoyed about "food waste" then.
This, of course, is when my willpower is working. Sadly it doesn't always so I very much avoid burger places then.
It has annoyed me for more than a decade that people think they can fill themselves up with all kinds of sugar all day long and because they are not getting fat (not eating a lot other than the sugar) and not eating fat, even worse idiocy, that they won't get diabetes....
I see that the attitudes are changing but, as you say WM, there needs to be a fundamental rethink as to how we are going to remove all this sugar from the diet of the next generation.
If you haven't seen it, I recommend anyone who is unsure of the real impact of sugar on our system to watch the excellent documentary SuperSizeMe. It still rants on about fat all the time, but, as it goes on, it becomes very apparent that sugar is both damaging to the liver and highly addictive. The doctor who glibly thought that his blood work would show some elevated fat and not much else on the diet was, quite literally, shocked by the impact of sugar on the system. In fact, half way though, he suggested that the attempt to eat McDonalds only for a month should be stopped as it could actually be harmful to the long term health.
The very worst two messages which were not really pushed enough, were this.
1. The guy wound up with a serious addiction problem which took him the better part of a year to kick
2. The body adjusted and the worst of the symptoms became much lower grade. So the shock was over. But the long term impact was massive and it was simply swept under the carpet.
Ho Hum. It's big business and it's going to take a LOT of pushing to even start to move attitudes. Just look at smoking and people have known that there is a 1 in 5 chance of getting cancer and dying if you do....
There are 10 types of people in the world:
Those who understand Binary and those who do not.