For God’s sake people, it’s a BANANA.
I was in a lift. It was lunch time. I was holding a banana. I was thinking about other things.
A woman got in. I didn’t know her, she didn’t know me. She looked at my snack.
“Oh,” she said longingly. “I WISH I could eat a banana.”
I was confused. “They sell them at the cafe next door,” I told her. “They’re a dollar.”
“Oh no,” she said, her face contorting with something like disgust. “Sooooo much sugar in a banana.”
I looked down at the fruit in my hand. Its bend seemed a little more pronounced now, like it was hanging its little yellow head in shame. I stepped out of the lift at my floor. I gave my banana to a colleague. It was, quite literally, forbidden fruit.
Yes, in case you haven’t noticed, sugar is out of fashion.
I buy my vitamin-averse child a fresh juice and I get a warning about the impending ‘sugar rush’. I take my kids to the pool and five mothers are reading I Quit Sugar. I ask my friend, “How are you?” and she says, “I’m on the 8WP.” And if my peers aren’t doing it, they want to. They’re pondering a life without chocolate. Or wine. Or, you know, tinned tomatoes.
Read more: Thinking about detoxing? Read this first.
It’s not new. Back in 1972 a book by John Yudkin called Pure, White And Deadly warned of the dangers of sugar vs fat. But in Australia, the anti-sugar movement really kicked into gear a few years ago, when the savvy Sarah Wilson published I Quit Sugar, sold a gajillion-million copies and built an empire.
Top Comments
The problem with saying 'just eat in moderation' is most people don't know what that means. There's no limit to eating in moderation. People prefer to have specific guidelines of what they can and can't eat when dieting so they can tell whether they're making progress or not. It's much easier to say "Don't eat chocolate anymore" than "Eat chocolate in moderation" (what does that even mean?). When you can measure the results and see the direct correlation between cutting out a food group, people respond more to that.
Telling people to eat in moderation is easy. But will they really do it unless you give them specific guidelines? Probably not.
People want rules and laws, not just guidelines. They want someone else to think for them, because for many people, using the brain is hard work.
I have completed two rounds of the IQS program and love it. I don't think it's a secret that the western world is in the middle of an obesity and Diabetes Type 2 epidemic. The IQS really just focuses on a very simple principal, what Sarah Wilson calls JERF - Just Eat Real Food. And yes, real food does contain sugar in its natural form, which also mekes the food nutrient rich and fibre dense. I was a sugar addict, it affected my moods and my energy levels and breaking that addiction was liberating for me, but i think 50% of the benefits of the program are associated with the JERF, rather than specifically the lack of fructose.
There was a comment below about Rice Malt Syrup. Yes it has a high GI, but the glycaemic index itself has limitations. It was developed as an aid for people with Diabetes. Diabetics can only consume small amounts of glucose. So definitely a diabetic should stay away from Rice Malt Syrup. However RMS has zero fructose which means there is no hit on the liver when it is consumed. If you look up the I Quit Sugar website there is information about this and links to peer reviewed research. And my last comment on RMS is that although i have completed 2 rounds of the IQS program, i have only consumed less than one quarter of a jar of Rice Malt Syrup since July. That's hardly an excessive amount of glucose. Sarah Wilson advocates a very sparing use of Rice Malt Syrup or Stevia. One could hardly compare that to consuming a litre of Coke a day which is considered normal in our society.