Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1247: The Dangers of Eating Too Much Sugar
Episode Date: March 12, 2020In this episode, Sal, Adam & Justin discuss the potential negative impacts of consuming too much sugar. The demonization of sugar. (5:00) The addictive properties of sugar and the physiological effec...ts on your body. (7:39) How we evolved to crave it. (12:19) Things that studies have shown that high sugar diets contribute to. (14:48) #1 - Weight Gain. (16:15) #2 - Risk for heart disease. (21:26) Expressing empathy for former clients and themselves. (24:00) #3 - Acne. (30:34) #4 - Effect on the microbiome and autoimmune diseases. (31:40) #5 - Type 2 diabetes. (35:07) Consumer alert! Nutrient splitting on labels is a real issue. (38:00) #6 - Cancer and it’s link to high consumption of sugar. (40:03) #7 - Can accelerate skin and cellular aging. (42:36) #8 – Energy swings and mood. (45:10) How to eat sugar properly. (49:52) Related Links/Products Mentioned March Promotion: MAPS Powerlift ½ off! **Code “POWER50” at checkout** Visit Four Sigmatic for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Code “mindpump” at checkout** Sugar and the Brain | Neurobiology Fructose may affect hunger cues Added Sugar Intake and Cardiovascular Diseases Mortality Among US Adults Acne: prevalence and relationship with dietary habits in Eskisehir, Turkey. Sugar and Type 2 diabetes Understanding the Warburg Effect: The Metabolic Requirements of Cell Proliferation High serum glucose levels are associated with a higher perceived age The Relationship between Sugar and Behavior in Children The Link Between Sugar And Depression: What You Should Know Mind Pump Free Resources
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
In this episode of Mind Pump, we talk all about sugar.
Oh yeah, that component in food that makes it taste really good and sweet, so sweet.
It's been demonized in some circles.
Some people say it's not a problem at all
so long as your calories are low.
It's been blamed for rises and heart disease and cancer.
We tend to think sugar probably best if you generally
avoid it.
So we talk about all of the stuff that sugar can do
to your body and our experiences with sugar and our clients.
We talk about, it's addictive properties. That's right. Sugar does have some addictive properties and we worked a lot of people who seem to have issues with sugar addiction.
We talk about how it can cause weight gain. It's a potential to increase risks for heart disease,
cancer, acne, type two diabetes,
might actually speed up the aging process.
Energy swings, it can make people's energy go up and down.
We also talk about how to eat it properly,
like how to have a good relationship around a sugar,
so we know you're going to enjoy this episode.
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Today I was scrolling through social media and I've seen a few of these posts on squatting
and scrolling Instagram and yeah that's the move. That's an I'm on the toilet. Yeah.
And that's hovering in. I see people, and this is starting to happen again,
it comes in waves in the fitness space,
but where people, you have people who really demonize
certain things in food, and then you have the other side
which like all of it's okay, it's all good,
never is no good or bad or whatever.
Anyway, there was a post on sugar
talking about how it's not addictive. Sugar's
not addictive. I've never seen anybody sell their body for sex for sugar or whatever, comparing
it to drugs. I kind of understand the message, but also it's a little bit of an annoying
message.
I hate this message. Just because I think that when you think of the majority of people that are trying to
our audience, right?
Like when we, when I think about the people that I'm making posts for or that are listening
to the show or following me on social media and this includes pretty much any other fitness
professional I would think, if you really understand your audience and you understand the people
that you're trying to help, then you do know that a majority of people struggle
with weight loss.
And you have an even crazier bias
because they're following you looking to you
for fitness advice and information.
And to come out and say things like that is stupid.
It's stupid, it's ignorant,
and it's a terrible message to send to people.
Now I understand that there are people that came out and said things like, sugars as
addictive as cocaine. And so, you know, there's obviously the science nerds want to retaliate
and defend it from a physiological standpoint that, well, no, when we look at it scientifically, it's
not as dependent as you can become as on cocaine.
But the reality of it is, you know, if you walked around snorting lines of cocaine in front
of people at restaurants, people would fucking look at you like you're a weirdo, and it's
not as accepted as sugar as, whereas if you're eating an ice cream cone or pounding
a bag of candy next to somebody at the movie theater, it's completely socially accepted.
Sure.
And you also have to, because people try to compare it, you know, when they come up with
the, because where it comes from is these studies on brain images where they show that
sugar lights up parts of the brain
in very similar or the same ways that cocaine will.
So then these articles come out saying sugar
is as addictive as cocaine or as a drug
based off of these brain images.
And then of course people get pissed off and say again,
I don't know anybody that's Robin Banks
to try and get sugar this now.
Okay, first off, you don't have to. Well, that's a big one. Now I'm not saying anybody that's, you know, Robin Banks to try and get sugar this now. Okay. Yeah. First off, you don't have to.
Well, that's a big one.
Yeah.
Now, I'm not saying it would happen, but let's also, let's be fair here.
Nobody's selling their bodies for sugar because part of the reason is because you don't have
to.
Right.
Uh, cocaine is not everywhere in super cheap and produced all over the place.
Oh, what do you think would have sugar is?
What do you think would happen if the government came out
and said right now that sugar is a scheduled one drug?
You don't think there would be people doing crazy
to get on with it.
You don't have a huge black mark of 100%.
Yeah, you would start to see some pretty crazy stuff
for sugar.
Now, physiologically speaking, is sugar addictive?
Well, okay, this is gonna be my experience working
with lots of clients.
When you are in a high sugar diet and you go drastic in the other direction when you eliminate sugar,
they do suffer from withdrawal.
They the way that they taste food
changes things taste really bland. Part of that a big part of that psychological withdrawal.
But I do think there are some physical withdrawals,
not nearly as strong as physical withdrawals from most drugs,
but they're there nonetheless.
And I'll also say this,
people who overeat and over-consume sugar,
many of them see what's happening to their bodies.
Okay, many of them know that their health is bad,
have been told by their doctors, or see that the scale has moved up quite a bit. I mean, before you become 80 pounds
overweight at one point, it was 20 and 30 pounds overweight. You don't usually out of the
blue get a heart attack and die. Typically, there's lots of stuff that happens leading up
to that. And yet, people continue down that path, which is kind of a characteristic
of what happens when people are addicted to drugs, dude.
Yeah, and it's just funny to me,
because why do people get addicted to drugs
in the first place?
It's an escape.
It's coping mechanism.
It's a thing that they're doing to break away
from the day-to-day pain that they're experiencing
psychologically because of whatever trauma
or whatever, they're going through
in their specific life.
And to think that people don't use sugar
in the same exact way is idiotic in my opinion.
Like it's very visible to see that people,
you know, act in accordance against their own health interests
because it makes them feel good momentarily.
Right. And not just some feel good momentarily. Right.
And not just some people, most people.
Right.
Very good point.
When I evaluate someone's nutrition, so the very first thing we do is, you know, I tell
clients, be yourself, track your food, I eat whatever you normally eat, don't try and
be good for me.
I want to look at it and then we'll assess it and we'll make changes.
The number one thing that I have to address right away is the overconsumption of sugar.
It's just, it's in so many foods, so many people eat in excess and don't even realize that
they do.
So the problem that I have, and it really annoys me when fitness professionals put out messages
like that. It reminds me of what it would be like if somebody was standing up in an AA
meeting, drinking a beer and trying to convince everybody at the AA meeting that, look, you
can be like me and fit and still have a beer every once in a while and not become an alcoholic.
It's a fucking horrible message when you know who you're communicating to. Does
that mean that the people in this room don't have, I bought a bag of gummy bears in the airport
on the way over to flying over to Ohio. So it's not like I don't have sugar too. But you also
don't see me as a fitness professional post that and share with C.I.2 each sugar too. It's, yeah,
I do, okay?
But I'm also not going to promote that message
because then I give all these clients
that are already struggling with that,
a free pass to do that.
And they're just not in the same place as you or I.
And so that's the irresponsibility of trainers
that put out messages like this.
It's one of my biggest pet peeves in our space.
Sure, and let's boil it all down to this.
If we were to examine all of the things
that cause sickness, illness,
and even if you break it down further,
cancer, heart disease, diabetes, dementia,
all of the health problems
that are really plaguing modern societies,
if you get all the stuff and boil it all down, the number one culprit,
the number one culprit is food, too much of it or the wrong kind of it or both.
It's food. Are people aware of this? They are. A lot of people are.
They know what's going on. They see what's happening. I could walk up to the
average person on the street and ask them, does America have a problem
with eating too much, or does America have an obesity problem?
Are we having chronic health problems
due to overconsumption of food?
Most average people would say, yeah,
and yet we continue along that path,
that shows me that there are some addictive properties
to food and more specifically to certain things
in food and sugar being one of them.
Well, we've already made the case that, you know, they've done studies on this on groups
that eat processed foods versus groups that eat whole foods.
What are one of the main ingredients that in processed foods that make it hyper-palatable?
Sugar.
Sugar.
Yeah, sugar is one of the main components.
Good luck.
Finding 100 grams of sugar in nature in whole foods.
Tell me, I'll wait.
Yeah, it's actually sugar is quite rare in nature.
If we didn't have agriculture, okay,
where we're actually planting freeze and plants ourselves
and structuring it, if you're just in nature,
and we haven't discovered modern agriculture,
sugar would be extremely rare.
You know how you would find it?
You'd find the occasional fruit, or berry,
which by the way, fruits,
fruits today don't look like they used to.
Okay, we've-
We have a lot of selective farming.
We have modified,
if you look at what bananas used to look like,
they were full of seeds,
fibrous, very little sugary flesh,
same thing with apples, same thing with lots with most fruits,
right?
And it was a rare.
If you're walking, you see a tree with a few of them.
Oh my God, there was an exciting event.
Or honey and honey came with a lot of pain.
It was guarded by lots of bees.
It's just not that common.
I mean sugar cane where we get sugar from.
You know how hard it is to get the sugar out of sugar cane?
You never seen a panda bear?
You never seen a panda bear.
If I had a sugar cane in my hand, I'd have to chew on that thing
for weeks to get a couple teaspoons of sugar out of it.
It's full and full of fiber.
And so, why is this important?
Well, our bodies evolved for the most part in this kind of an environment where now, let's
look at the other stuff that was salt.
Salt was a little bit difficult to come by as well, but you'd find it in rocks and especially
if you live near the sea.
Fat is fat, super hard to come by as well, but you'd find it in rocks, and especially if you live near the sea. Fat is fat, super hard to come by.
Not really, every animal that you killed
had lots of fat and lots of protein.
Sugar was very, very difficult to come by.
Now today, it's not, like you said, Adam,
almost every processed food has added sugar.
There's a reason why we crave it.
It's an easy energy source.
It probably came along with certain nutrients
that we needed as well.
So again, if you're in nature and you see the random fruit and you eat it, now you're
getting some vitamin C along with it.
So we evolved to have these really strong mechanisms to crave it because it was nature, excuse
me, because it was, it wasn't very plentiful.
So we would seek it out.
Now you combine that with modern life and you have a bit of a problem. Now there are lots of studies that have been done
on sugar and now here's a deal with studies. Okay, context makes a big difference
So most of these studies that we're going to talk about are in the context of a high calorie diet
Right, and this is the case that some of the fitness professionals will make that it's just it's a lesser evil when you
Are in a calorie and I and I think this is very clear.
Yeah, if everybody in America was in a caloric deficit,
then we'd be less worried about things like sugar.
Show me a high calorie, excuse me,
a high sugar lower calorie, adequate protein and fat diet.
Yeah, it doesn't examine.
And you're getting all the nutrients required.
It's okay, a high sugar diet, it's almost always a high calorie diet.
Yeah.
Almost always, unless you're sick.
It's easy to do.
It's very, very easy.
So, okay, but I do want to be clear again, most of these studies are done in the context
of a high calorie diet.
Some of these studies compared high sugar, high calorie diet to low sugar, high calorie
diet, just to see the difference.
And of course, nutritional studies are notoriously difficult
because they tend to be observational,
they tend to be based off of surveys.
So you have to look at a lot of them,
and then you have to look at populations of people
to kind of pull out the truth.
And consistently what we start to see across the board
is that a high sugar diet probably
not good for you.
So I think we should go down kind of a list of things that studies have shown that high
sugar diets kind of contribute to.
Number one, they cause weight gain.
Now of course, you need to eat more calories than you're burning in order to gain body fat.
But again, I'm gonna go back to what I said before,
eating a lot of sugar typically results in eating a lot of calories.
In fact, I learned this when I was younger.
You know, when I was younger, trying to put on muscle
and I didn't really understand nutrition super well.
All I understood at this point was,
gotta eat more, gotta eat more calories.
It was, I thought I had discovered a hack.
How can I get more calories?
I'm eating so much food and I'm not gaining any weight.
I would seek out sugary foods,
because I knew that, like after I ate a big meal,
for example, and I felt full and stuffed,
I'm like, I gotta eat more, I'm not gaining any weight.
I knew I could reach for the high sugary dish
of whatever ice cream dessert.
You always got to do for dessert, right?
Yes, because it made me want to,
it made me want to eat more.
And studies show this, studies show that sugar
has a positive effect on hunger.
In other words, it increases hunger for most people.
And again, think of yourself when you're eating
a big family dinner, even if your stuffed,
sweet dessert typically gets the appetite
to be stimulated.
It's just funny that that gets refuted,
that it could promote cravings.
Like if you ask anybody if sugar, after you eat sugar,
if it actually promotes the desire to then keep eating, even if it's something small,
you just have, I know personally,
like so many clients that I've trained,
I mean, this has been a problem.
It's something that just introduces the idea
that at this time frame,
like I eat something sugary,
and now at all of a sudden sparks this desire for more.
Well, here's an easy test for all the fitness people
that are listening right now that already measure
away track food and love doing all that.
Put this to the test.
Measure out oatmeal and berries and equal amount of calories.
Eat that for breakfast one morning.
Then the next morning, get up and have eggs and bacon
with the same calorie. Sure.
And then tell me how you feel two hours later from both those meals.
Right.
It's a really simple test to see what happens.
And although we could make the case that the oatmeal and berries may be more valuable
to you or it from a size of portions, you could eat more of it in relation to the bacon
and whole eggs.
But watch what happens over the next two hours.
And this was something that I remember happening to me
as I was trying to cut for a show.
Like one of the best things I ever did was switch over
to a high fat breakfast instead of having,
because that was like a staple for me
from like most of my fitness career was oatmeal.
oatmeal berries in a way protein scoop was like my breakfast forever. And I'd be starving two hours later. Now for somebody who
was trying to bulk and build, I use that as a strategy. Like this was a great way for me to promote
wanting to eat again less than two hours later where I put another meal down. But for the majority
of people, most people are trying to lean out or lose body fat. It's not an ideal breakfast.
For those reasons, because it does, it promotes hunger.
It makes me want to eat again two hours later.
Now here's something else.
I think this may be one of the biggest nails in the coffin for sugar.
That's that if you are going to drink a drink that contains calories for the most parts of high sugar
drink, there's very few drinks out there that are a high protein or high fat drink that
people tend to over consume.
You know what I'm saying?
That would be hard.
Maybe I'm milkshake, you know, but that's also sugar too.
Yeah, but a high sugary drink, first off studies show they don't curb any appetite.
So you could drink, you could drink 250 calories of sugar.
Absolutely.
Appetite has not been curbed.
Now, if you drink a 250 calorie drink that's full of fat or protein,
you start to notice some appetite curbing.
But not with sugary drinks, and I would say that's probably
the biggest problem, is our consumption of sugary beverages,
sodas and juices.
Again, the vast majority of highary beverages, sodas and juices.
Again, the vast majority of high calorie drinks
that are out there.
Too quick, too easy.
Our sugar, right.
Here's the other thing,
high fructose consumption has even been shown
to cause, potentially cause leptin resistance.
Now leptin is an important,
hormone in the body that tells the body,
hey, we need to stop eating.
Well, you start to become resistant to leptin.
You start to get this hunger signal, that's a little bit haywire.
And now your signals don't match what your body actually needs or wants.
And so you just start eating a lot more.
A high sugar diet.
A high sugar high calorie diet has also been shown to cause more visceral body fat
than other types of higher calorie diets.
Visceral body fat is that body fat
that's around your organs.
It's the bad inflammatory type.
And sugar, a couple studies suggest
that sugar can contribute to more visceral body fat
than other types of components in your food.
How about heart disease?
Studies are pretty clear on this.
There was one study, they took 30,000 people,
and they found that those who consumed 17 to 21%
of their calories from added sugar
had a 38% greater risk of heart disease,
which is a huge, huge jump.
Yeah, it's insane.
And, you know, again, back to the sugar we drink, a 16-ounce can of sodas, 52 grams of sugar.
Adam, how many grams of sugar would you want your clients to eat typically when you'd
work with them?
That's about it.
You're looking at it like, especially coming from some of that.
It all depends on if we're having, if it's coming from fruit, right?
So I always allow a little bit more leeway for somebody who is consuming it in fruit.
So I'm gonna look at that.
Like, are we getting it outside of fruit?
Or are you getting it with that?
And that's just purely because of the fiber intake
that you're gonna get from that.
It's not that that cancels it out.
It just has more health benefits
than just pure sugar from like a beverage drink.
But yeah, I want them under 70 grams a day.
And if you're getting 50 of it from a single
drink, it doesn't give you room to have any healthy fruits for the day.
Berries are also way more satiating than fiber. You got to eat them. You're not just drinking
them. Juice would be closer to like a sugary soda in terms of its effect on the body and appetite
and all that stuff. Now does American Heart Association have they because they obviously kind of change their stance about cholesterol, you know, being like the major source for heart disease. Now have they
swayed it a little bit more and looked into sugar? No, while sugar, they still consider it to be
something that you want to generally avoid. You know, it's kind of across the board, even low fat proponents,
vegans who typically have lower protein
and fat in their diets, they all typically,
there's only one diet I've ever heard of
that's a high sugar diet and that's the fruititarian diet.
You guys ever know that?
Oh yeah, yeah.
Which is terrible, like what a terrible idea.
It's obviously not super popular
because I think the people who tried it have had
me to go from that to breath a Terry and then it's death.
And then they're tired.
Who's the guy that was famous for that? Look terrible. Then he just died recently.
Oh, there was a guy.
Oh, the guy that got. Yeah, there was a guy that did that. You guys know Steve Jobs tried
that for a second, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. He tried that for a quick second.
Right before he died, right? I don't know if it was right before. Yeah. I don't know.
But it might have been right before he got his pain-created cancer.
Well, I know right now you're going through
all the things in listing off, like, the science to support it.
And I think that's important.
So people don't think we're just pulling things out of our ass.
But, you know, personally, for me,
this really doesn't come down to,
I don't need to see the studies.
I don't need to, I've trained enough clients to see this in real life, to see the
struggle that people have.
And I have a lot of empathy because I come from this.
I was raised in a house that, you know, we had, you know, capped in crunch and fruity
pebbles and things like that for breakfast every single morning.
And if it wasn't that, did you see that cinnamon toast crunch now has true?
Cinnamon toast.
Wow.
No, I did it.
My mind was blown.
I'm sorry.
I'm totally derailing.
So, or I had donuts, or I had a stack of pancakes buried in syrup.
Like that was, I mean, I ate that every day of my life for probably 20 years of my life.
And then when I got an adulthood and had to fit in for myself, it was like agal waffles
in syrup or cereal for breakfast.
And because I was a skinny kid who couldn't put body fat or muscle on, I thought nothing
of it.
You know, I'm not fat.
Why can't I have donuts?
And that's how I feel the messaging
when fitness professionals present that,
it's like, I'm lean.
Look, I can be fit, I eat sugar, I do these things.
And the reality is that when you're 20 years old,
like I was when I thought the same way too.
I thought I was invincible to these things.
And now I look back at almost 40 years old
and a completely different job
where I'm sitting a port mostly throughout the day,
which I would think that I probably relate more
to my clients now than what I did 20 years ago.
20 years ago, I was a kid who was not only training clients eight to 10 hours
a day.
I was wakeboarding, snowboarding, playing basketball.
I mean, my activity level, I was moving on a low day, 15,000 steps of walking and then
in addition to that exercise.
Like, the amount of calories that my body was burning,
yeah, I could get away with four or five donuts a day,
I could get away with a bag of candy
or Ben and Jerry's ice cream every single night.
And so then, you know, I justified that.
And what was really bad about that messaging is,
you tell that to a client, which most trainers know
that your average client is not 20 years old.
Your average client is not 20 years old. Your average
client is probably 35 to 55 middle age need to lose weight, have sedentary lifestyles, and
then you're promoting a message like that. It's a terrible message to send to them because
they're already looking for justification on that why they should be able to do those
things. And part of that wanting that justification
is because they still struggle with addiction.
And just because on a physiological level
and with the studies and with the science shows
of what cocaine does inside of your body
and what sugar does your body,
does it mean that somebody mentally
in behavioral speaking cannot be as addictive
or more addicted to something?
It's at look, at the end of the day,
it's all boils down to the individual
because for some individuals, sugar is far more addictive
than cocaine.
Look, I've had clients who've done both, cocaine and sugar.
I've done both.
And they had no problem stopping the cocaine.
I've got no problem not doing cocaine.
It's not a problem for me.
It really isn't.
Right, right.
It's not like you needed it before breakfast.
Not having sugar though is still a problem for me at 38 years old.
It's something that I have to consistently think about
and I've got a rain in.
And when I allow it in and I justify,
hey, I'm a fit trainer, I can go have a three scoop
waffle cone ice cream or I can go have a bag of candy.
What I always notice is the next day I want more.
Isn't that crazy?
It's way crazy.
Yeah, that's crazy.
And then all of a sudden fruit starts tasting less good and I start craving more and more
of those, and I'm very aware.
So I know as a trainer that my clients are not that in tune with their body.
Most clients are not so aware that as soon as they eat something, they notice if their autoimmune issues flare up,
they notice if they have poor sleep
or lower energy levels or an inflamed gut from it.
They don't notice those things.
That's why they hire people like us
to help them make those connections.
So they realize that.
So when I think about my own addiction struggles with sugar
and I'm unbelievably aware of it and still
struggle with it.
It would be naive of me to think that the majority and the average consumer or listener
doesn't battle with this all the time and may not even realize that they're battling with
this all the time.
Right.
And one thing I want to comment on, you said how you were a skinny kid and so you thought
it wasn't a problem.
Now, physical displays of poor health, like obesity,
they can be relatively accurate at determining
whether or not someone's health is,
especially when obesity starts to get really out of hand,
predicting somebody's health.
But here's the thing, a sizable percentage of people
who die from heart disease and cancer were never overweight.
Okay, so keep that in mind.
It's not just because you're not overweight does not mean that you're,
you can be doing damage to your body.
Again, a sizable percentage.
I forgot what the exact number was, but it's, I mean, I know it's millions of people
who don't have these signs of being
overweight.
To my head.
Part of why I think I'm so fired up about this conversation right now is obviously that
we've seen recent post relating to this.
And this is also a very, very personal besides what it is to me.
It's also my sister was hospitalized because she was hyperglycemic because she lived off a
fucking candy and cereal for 20 years of her life.
And she was rushed to the ER and she's sitting in the hospital today still right now and
she's still battling things that the doctors can't figure out what the fuck is wrong with
her.
Now I can't pinpoint that exactly to sugar.
I can't prove any doctors that they can't prove it's not either, but I can tell you
that we both were raised on the same
Diet and ate that way all the way through our young years and into adulthood and she has all kinds of health issues and autoimmune issues
Just like I do and the only culprit that I could think of is the way we were eating as kids and then ate as adults
So and the human body just did not evolve and neither one of us were fat. Yeah, yeah neither one of us were fat
No, you're both you're both naturally skinny. Yes
Yeah, and and weird stuff happened look there's there's studies that showed that sugar is linked to acne
Now I know some people like that's not true. No, there's studies
I found one that showed that you know they took 2,300 teens and those that consumed added sugar had a 30% greater
risk of developing acne.
Now as a trainer, when I would have clients reduce heavily processed food consumption or
even when I just have them reduce added sugar consumption because sometimes, now my ultimate
goal as a trainer was to get clients to reduce
their heavily processed food consumption. That was always the number one. But sometimes
that was a bit difficult. I had to break it down into smaller pieces. So then I would
tell my client, okay, we're not going to try to reduce heavily processed foods. Let's
just try to reduce sugar. Now, I knew naturally that would help quite a bit, but there's foods
you could buy that are heavily processed that are low in sugar also, not as much, but they're still there. And inevitably,
I would start to see, they would notice themselves some weird things happening. Aside from weight loss,
one of the ones, the common ones was their skin would clear up. The skin is a wonderful window
into the inside of your body and you start to see it start to clear up. Now with a functional
medicine doctor kind of traced that back to an autoimmune issue like more so,
like with the microbiome, like with they look into that
in terms of like how the consumption of foods like sugar
would affect and respond accordingly after that.
Not sure, but I do know that consuming lots of sugar
does feed bacteria that causes things like due to decay.
So this is why sugar causes.
Yeah, we know that is a fact.
Yeah, we know that.
We know that so.
Why wouldn't it feed bad bacteria in your gut also?
It'll feed all bacteria.
Right.
All bacteria that consume.
So if you have it, if you have, so to Justin's point, if you have, and this is, I
notice this myself, right?
So my ex-prite, my sister has endometriosis.
That's what she battles with, that's her autoimmune
disease and it sucks because we don't have a lot of stuff around to help her with that. And then I
have psoriasis, also something that we don't have a lot to really help. We have more information
probably, and it's something that is less detrimental, I think, than what my poor sister has. But it's very
clear when I have, you know,
it sit down and I have something like, in fact, the gummy bears I mentioned that I bought on the plane.
I didn't finish them.
One, right away, I felt something in my gut.
I'm like, you know what?
Yeah, I wanted to keep shoving them in my mouth because they taste good going down,
but I was like, yeah, I'll pay for it later on.
Within two hours, almost always, of me having something enjoying some ice cream or doing those things, and this is'll pay for it later on. Within two hours, almost always of me having something
enjoying some ice cream or doing those things,
and this is what keeps me today from it.
So it's almost like the, you know,
the autoimmune has now become a blessing in disguise.
I try and look at it like that, even though I fucking hated,
but it'll flare up my psoriasis.
I mean, within two hours, I'll be itching at it right away.
Oh, interesting.
Yeah, like clockwork.
So 100%, I know it has to be going in there and feeding that bacteria and making it worse
and upsetting my gut, which then expresses itself through my skin.
And the first sign of it for me is just the irritation of it.
It makes me want to itch it.
And then the next day, it'll be scapular and stuff.
And that's just how my body expresses it.
When it comes to autoimmune, it could be so many different ways that it shows up in so
many forms.
Well, actually, if you look up autoimmune diseases and sugar, you do find casual links to increased
symptoms, to more symptoms, to having worse issues with most autoimmune issues.
If you go and work with doctors
or you work with functional medicine doctors
and you have certain autoimmune issues,
I don't think a single one will recommend a high sugar diet.
Almost all of them will tell you
to reduce your sugar consumption.
And you're saying functional,
the problem is a lot of regular doctors don't tell you shit.
Well, that's why I brought up functional
because they're not even gonna do that kind of.
No, I was going to dermatologist for years.
We never touched diets.
And the vitamin D advice that Sal,
you gave me years ago,
one of the best things that ever happened to my psoriasis
and cutting back on my sugar is the second best thing
that's ever happening.
When we went on the ketogenic diet, my psoriasis was some of the best it had ever been. So
that's the things that sucks is that we have doctors out there that are always looking on ways to try and address
what's happening but not addressing the root cause that caused it. And so you, unless you're seeing a
functional medicine doctor, a lot of them are going to point you in that direction.
No, no.
Type 2 diabetes, which is an obvious one.
That's an obvious one that sugar definitely.
Now, to be clear,
any high calorie diet for too long
can definitely increase risk of type 2 diabetes,
regardless of what that diet is.
That being said, when all factors are controlled,
sugar on its own is more strongly connected
to type two diabetes.
And it's more closely connected to
what they sometimes call type three diabetes,
which is Alzheimer's or impairments of the brain.
In fact, when you take, this is a widely documented,
you take someone with Alzheimer's in dementia
and you put them on a low sugar diet or you take it a step further and you put them on a very low carbohydrate
diet, a more ketogenic diet, their cognition improves.
They actually show lower symptoms of their Alzheimer's or dementia.
Again, I think all the things we're pointing, pointing out to the fact that we just didn't evolve
with all this sugar, and there was a policy,
not that long ago.
One thing you'll notice about, if you look at the back
of your food labels, your high sugar foods,
obviously, typically the sugar comes in the form
of high fructose corn syrup.
So soda doesn't say sugar, it says high fructose corn syrup. So soda doesn't say sugar.
It says high fructose corn syrup.
If you buy bread that's got added sugar.
High fructose corn syrup.
You can't sugar alcohols.
Candy, high fructose corn syrup.
You want to ask yourself,
why are we using this form of sugar
over other forms of sugar?
We subsidize it.
It comes from corn.
Corn is a subsidized crop, meaning tax payer dollars goize it. It comes from corn. Corn is a subsidized crop, meaning taxpayer dollars go to it.
To bring the price down, making it extremely cheap.
A long time ago, the US government considered corn to be a staple crop and thought it would
be a phenomenal idea to keep the price low by having everybody pay taxes towards it.
Weird rationale, right?
Bad math, but whatever. let's keep it down,
let's prop this crop up,
and our sugar stopped coming from sugar cane,
and actually decimated the sugar cane market,
which Hawaii lost that market quite a bit,
because we started to use high fructose corn syrup
because corn became so cheap.
So sugar in general, and before that,
we were actually propping up sugar also.
So sugar is cheap and plentiful and very easy way
to make something more palatable,
which is one of the main reasons why you see it exploding.
Just dust it on everything.
It's in everything.
It's just an easy way to make something
taste a little bit better.
Salt will do that a little bit as well,
but sugar really is one of the key.
It's a massive industry that we also have to understand
that when you see studies that try and counter
like counter the message of sugars like cocaine,
who do you think it's coming from?
Like, if you, sugar is making so much money
in the world that nobody wants,
no companies or brands want to see that go away.
In fact, you're starting to see this too.
I don't know, I don't think we've ever discussed this on the show
that I think the consumer should be aware
of what's called nutrient splitting on labels.
And sugar can come in so many different forms.
I mean, you'll see corn syrup, fruit toast,
you'll see regular sugar, you'll see cane sugar,
dextrose, you'll see like, there's...
You've evaporated cane juice.
Yes, right. And so they do, they do, and if you ever wonder why you see this on a label,
this is a total manipulation to, to fool the consumer into thinking that there's not
that much added sugar into this.
So, in a crystal.
They, they, they, nutrients split it all so then they can put something else in front
of the label because the way a label is designed is it's, it's put in the ingredients.
It's put in the order of what is the most in that food
that you're or that drink that you're drinking.
So let's say they wanna add 30 grams of sugar,
what they could do is put evaporated cane juice,
molasses, and then sugar, and so in that order.
So you think, oh, sugar's a third ingredient,
when in fact it's been...
Well, not only that, but then they could put something else,
like real fruit, which let's say is real fruit
is actually, let's that, but then they could put something else like real fruit, which let's say is real fruit is actually
let's say 12 grams and then they so they can put it first real fruit and then the three afterwards are three types of sugars that add up to less than 12 grams
So there's where they could put the real fruit. So when you read the label you're like, oh look sugars the fifth ingredient
They bring the grand total down exactly. Wow. So that's how that's called nutrient splitting and they do this on ingredients labels as a strategy because the average consumer is now savvy that oh I shouldn't
just never aware they're just looking right for the sugar grams. Right. And so you know be aware
when you're looking at an ingredient label when you look at all the different types of sugars you
know there can be eight ten fifteen different forms different forms, and they can put all those different forms in a product
and they only have to, they're measuring them individually
so they can put them deeper into the label.
So it looks like there's not as much sugar,
but if you were really to combine them all,
the weight of it would probably make it
the number one thing.
Wow, so that's crazy.
It's extremely complicated.
Well, odds are against us.
Well, one of the climbing reasons why more and more people in modern countries die is
cancer.
Cancer now, one out of every three people will die of cancer.
So it's now, it's climbing, and it's actually one of the higher ones.
Part of the reason is we're all living longer, so the longer you live, higher chances of
getting cancer.
The other reasons are quite aren't so clear,
but we do know there's a very, very clear connection
between obesity and cancer, and then diet and lifestyle
and cancer.
In fact, some scientists would say that about 72
or more percent of all cancers can be prevented
through lifestyle and good diet and from not being obese.
But that all being said, sugar on its own be prevented through lifestyle and good diet and from not being obese.
But that all being said, sugar on its own has also been connected to many, many forms of
cancer.
In fact, when you're getting an image to see if you have cancer, do you know what they
inject you with?
Sugar.
Oh, really?
Yeah, they want it lights up because cancer cells are hungry cells.
They burn lots of energy.
Is that really what they do?
I did not know that.
And they're very, very hungry, right?
They burn up lots of energy,
but they're also incapable most cancer cells,
or some that can actually do this,
but the vast majority of them can't use ketones for energy.
So they'll either use amino acids,
or they'll use sugar or glucose.
Wow, that's interesting. So if you go in to go get tested for something like that, I think
they also tell you to be fasted for 12 or 24 hours before. So that's why they're trying
to get you into ketosis. And then they throw sugar in you to see it get sucked up real
quick when the cancer is. It lights up. Oh wow. I did not know that's how that makes sense
though now. Yep, yep. So I think it's called the Warburg effect. If I'm not know that's how that makes sense though now. Yep, yep. So, I think it's called the Warburg Effect.
If I'm not mistaken, maybe Doug can correct me.
But this is the phenomena that they discover
with cancer cells where if you deplete them of sugar
that oftentimes they'll shrink and sometimes they'll die.
So in the context of a high calorie,
high inflammatory diet, poor health,
high sugar in all of that makes it far worse
because now you're you're you're like giving high high octane fuel to cancer cells. So it has been connected
again to many forms of cancer. It is complex. So just seeing a high sugar diet, you know might not
you know increase your risk of cancer necessarily,
but when you combine it with other factors, studies show that it's probably going to cause some problems.
Here's one a lot of people that didn't know.
It can accelerate skin aging.
So there's something called, let's see, AGE is the acronym.
I can't remember what it stands for.
I'm trying to look it up right now.
AGE stands for Advanced Glication and Products.
Okay, so these are compounds, I'm looking it up right now.
Our compounds form by reactions between sugar
and protein in the body,
and they're suspected to play a key role in skin aging.
I believe it or not.
So consuming a diet high in refined carbs and sugar
leads to more of these things,
which can cause your skin to age faster.
So they've done studies where they've compared
women who consume lots of refined carbohydrates
and sugars to women who consume a high protein
lower carbohydrate diet,
and they find that there's a more of a wrinkle to parents in the women who consume more sugar.
Now, I like to bring that one up
because we're also aesthetically focused,
so sometimes I'm talking to a 30-year-old
and the cancer and heart disease stuff,
and like, yeah, whatever, makes you give you more wrinkles.
Wait a minute.
I look good now, though.
Yeah, let me pay attention to that one.
It could also may increase cellular aging.
So this is something that's being debated right now
in scientific circles, but they've done studies to show,
so you know what telomeres are?
Okay, so telomeres are protective caps
on the end of your chromosomes.
And as you age, they get shorter and shorter.
And so scientists can,
you know, they can relatively accurately predict someone's age by looking at the length of a telomere,
but you can make them age slower by having a better lifestyle.
So they can see that, oh, this person's 30, but their telomere show that they're like 20 in their lifestyles.
Healthy, they're very healthy, they exercise, they get good sleep.
I thought those were the cartoons with the little antennae on top of the marshmallow.
They're purple, little cartoons with the antennas, that on top of the marsh like little, their purple little cartoons with the antennas.
That's what I thought about a while.
Teletubbies?
Oh, that's what it is.
Teletubbies, that's what it is.
No, no, no.
You tell by your Teletubbies, no, you are.
I know that people listening were thinking
the same thing as I was.
No, so they showed, there was a study that looked at,
over 5,000 people, and it showed that regularly
the drinking sugar, sweetened beverages was associated with shorter
telomere length and premature cellular aging.
Another study showed that each daily 20 ounce serving of sugar, sweetened soda, equated
to 4.6 additional years of aging, independent of other variables.
This is just based on the telomeres.
So speeds up the aging process in the body.
Of course, we know about energy swings.
How do you guys feel when you eat a lot of sugar?
Is there something that distinct that happens with me?
Spike, then a major crash.
Every time.
It's very distinct with me.
If I eat, it's like an hour dump for me.
Totally.
I'll feel okay, and then I'll wanna fall asleep.
And that has to do with the you know the blood sugar up and down
If you ever buy away if you're a parent you know exactly what I'm talking about you ever watch your kid eat a lot of sugar
Yeah, I haven't eaten a stack of pancakes with a ton of syrup and then you know like they'll play outside then all since like
Isn't that funny that we as parents that
No parent will contest this right no parent will ever, I let my kid have a big ol' piece
of cake or I gave him an ice cream.
There was no change in the bedroom.
There was no change in the bedroom.
No parent will say that.
They're an angel.
And yet we have that in front of us, but then we just ignore it
in ourselves because we're older than our adults.
We try and rationalize it later with other studies
and other things out there that'll help to promote
the fact that I still wanna donate.
And the reality of it is the reason why I think we see
that in children and it's so clear
and nobody debates it is because a couple reasons one,
they're so young so they're probably nowhere near
as adaptative as we are.
And then they're a tenth of the size of us as adults.
And so when we give them one cookie or-
Yeah, like a cookie that an adult would eat.
Right, you know what I'm saying?
Think about that for a second.
If they're less than a quarter of your size,
most of your kids are even less than that, right?
They're a tenth of your size.
That's like you having 10X that and tell me you wouldn't feel a difference.
Go have it.
So go have a gallon of ice cream and tell me how you feel afterwards.
Yeah.
And the other part of it is kids just display their emotions very outwardly,
whereas if you're an adult and you
start to feel kind of cranky, you might not let people know, but little kids let you know. And that's
what I noticed with my kids. They eat a big sugar email. After about an hour or two hours later,
they're just irritable. You know what I mean? They're just kind of a pain in the ass and I know it's
like they're tired, Yeah, blood sugar crashed
They're not feeling good. This is especially when they were really really little I say hate it. We go to parties and
You know, of course people would feed them all kinds of you know
candy and sugar and cake and
You know cupcakes and whatever and then it came time to go and then you go and then you know you in the car They'd fall asleep and you'd wake them up and they'd be pissed off and it's like, oh what a nightmare
Yeah, every single time Justin's also been somebody who's shared and Justin
You're not the only parent that has shared this with me where you know first kid comes along and they're really strict about diet
They they I'm not gonna let my kid have sugar. I make everything second kid comes around
The little loser a little looser whatever and then
Five eight ten years later,
they can see a distinct difference
in their behaviors with their food.
And Justin's confirmed this both with Ethan and Everett
before that this happened to you.
And you're probably the fifth parent
that I've personally talked to that's friends of mine
that did something very similar.
And they all are in a grience that there's a different
difference in their eating behaviors.
And they both attribute
or they all attribute it to the way they were as parents
with the way they fed their kids.
Well, if you look at mood disorders,
like ADHD, if you look at depression
and other forms of disorder's anxiety,
you'll find studies that have links between diet in other forms of disorders anxiety,
you'll find studies that have links between diet and those things, and typically a high sugar diet
causes those things to be worse.
You see more symptoms in them.
There was one study I read a long time ago
on children with ADD where they eliminated sugar
out of their diet, and they saw pronounced positive effect
in the children's behaviors because of the diet.
Their ADD symptoms were way better.
Well, I don't know.
Depression is another one.
I don't know about you guys,
but it's always been one of the easiest ways
for me to right away start helping clients.
That's why it's one of the first go-to places
that I adjust.
Right away, I normally just tell them
to be tighter on their sugar
and then tell them to get that all from fruit.
I'm saying, okay, here's a deal.
I don't want you eating any other sugars outside of fruit.
So if you have a craving suite, have some grapes
or have some berry, ideally berries, things like that,
and just that alone already starts to change.
And adding nutrient-rich, fibrous type whole foods helps to slowly adjust
and change the palate.
So then they start craving more nutrient dense foods.
I mean, that's something that,
like if I'm eating a high percentage of sugar,
like how many nutrients am I really adding
into my diet?
A lot of times, like that's something you gotta consider.
Well, sugar carbs in general,
but sugars are not essential macronutrients
and they typically are empty.
Empty.
It's just calories.
You don't need them.
Now here's the thing,
I don't wanna demonize sugar
and make it this evil scary thing.
Here's how I treat sugar.
I treat sugar like a beer.
I sometimes I'll drink a beer,
but I know I'm not gonna feel super great.
I'm just aware. I'm just aware of it. Like, I'll enjoy it. I'm having fun, but I'm aware
that this isn't really good for me and I'm probably not gonna feel.
It's a treat. Nearly as sharp later on. Same thing is true for sugar. I'll have it here
and there depending on the context. If I'm at a birthday party and it's important that
I enjoy a slice of pie or cake,
then I'll do it if it's a holiday,
if somebody made something special.
Other than that, I generally avoid it
and I feel better as a result
and that's how I've also coach clients.
Of course, you don't wanna demonize things
because it can cause a bit of a,
you can get what's, you know, like a backlash
or you can get, it can actually be the opposite
where if you scare someone so much, then they do the restrict binge type of thing. what's like a backlash or you can get, it can actually be the opposite where
if you scare someone so much,
then they do the restrict binge type of thing.
I think it's really just about awareness.
We're not, yeah, I don't look at it as demonizing,
I look at it as not advocating for sugar
to be a part of my everyday meal.
Yes, that's silly.
That's why I like the beer,
the beer and AA analogy so much,
because I agree with you.
It's like alcohol to me. It's not like something I'm demonizing. We all like the beer, the beer and AA analogy so much because I agree with you. It's like alcohol to me.
It's not like something I, I'm demonizing.
We all drink a beer.
We all have alcohol occasionally, but are very aware it's not serving our body and very
aware of like it creeping up and becoming a habit or a behavior.
If my once in a while beer turned into a beer every single day and then turned into two
beers every day, then three, but I have a fucking problem.
And I would look at consuming sugar the same way, not demonizing, not saying you shouldn't
or can't have it and avoid it at a birthday party.
No, enjoy those things, but also be aware if it's something that you find yourself gravitating
towards every single day and multiple times a day, you have a problem.
And there's a powerful pool there.
Well, it can take people by surprise.
There is because, because unlike alcohol and cocaine
and these things that have been demonized for long
and we know drugs are bad.
And there's barriers to get those things.
Right, those things, like people don't look at,
if somebody was, like I said,
they think about the movie theater.
When you're in the movie theater,
like everybody has got a bag of candy.
Oh my gosh. And we're all stuffing our faces and it's socially accepted. It's not a big
deal. I mean, if you saw everybody doing that with cocaine, it would be fucking weird,
right? So that's where you've got to be careful with it is that it's something that is so
socially accepted, that it's very easy to justify it and keep doing it. And that's why
when you're, when you're a fitness professional
and you're sharing your posts that have
all these treats and foods, it's just a poor message
for the general population.
Since a majority of my career has been spent
trying to help my clients find ways
to eliminate the amount of sugar
and replace it with more nutrient dense foods, I think it's just a bad thing to be promoting. Just because somebody else has come out
and been more of an alarmist about it, you have professionals that want to try and counter that,
but who are you really helping by doing that? Are you really helping the people that are,
the people you're really speaking to and you think you're helping, don't need your help.
Yeah. They already have,
they're already counting their macros.
You've got the discipline, all the things in place,
they're fine.
Yeah, they're already competitors or macro counters
and weighing their food and it's figured out all that stuff out
and you're telling them,
hey, it's okay to have the occasional ice cream cone
or candy bar and they're not a big deal.
But the rest of the people that are trying to piece this all
together and figure out what's going on, you know, saying that you just justify their bad behaviors
that they already have. Yeah, and it's not helping anyone. And you know, I'll say this,
reducing sugar in your diet is a very easy way to make a large positive impact on nutrition,
because what it tends to do is it tends to reduce
your heavily processed food consumption.
So that tends to automatically happen
when you're counting sugar.
As a result of those, you also tend to eat less calories.
Now, I'm not saying there is more work that needs to be done.
All I'm saying is is if you want something simple
that tends to have large effects,
like one single step that has large effects,
really reducing your sugar intake,
it can help.
It's one of the more successful,
simple steps you can take.
And with that, go to minepumpfree.com
and download our guides.
They're all totally free.
You can also find the three of us on Instagram.
You can find Justin at Mind Pump Justin. You can find me at Mind Pump Sal and Adam at Mind Pump Adam.
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