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 SWEET LOVE

 

Many scientists believe our love of sugar  

may actually be an addiction. When  

we eat or drink sugary foods, the sugar  

enters our blood and affects the parts of  

our brain that make us feel good. Then the  

good feeling goes away, leaving us wanting  

more. All tasty foods do this, but sugar has a  

particularly strong effect. In this way, it is in fact  

an addictive drug, one that doctors recommend 

we all cut down on. 

“It seems like every time I study an illness and trace a  

path to the first cause, I find my way back to sugar,” says  

scientist Richard Johnson. One-third of adults worldwide have  

high blood pressure,1 

 and up to 347 million have diabetes.2 

 Why? “Sugar,  

we believe, is one of the culprits, if not the major culprit,” says Johnson. 

Our bodies are designed to survive on very little sugar. Early humans often had  

very little food, so our bodies learned to be very efficient in storing sugar as  

fat. In this way, we had energy stored for when there was no food. But today,  

most people have more than enough. So the very thing that once saved us  

may now be killing us. 

So what is the solution? It’s obvious that we need to eat less sugar. The  

trouble is, in today’s world, it’s extremely difficult to avoid. From breakfast  

cereals to after-dinner desserts, our foods are increasingly filled with it. Some  

manufacturers even use sugar to replace taste in foods that are advertised as  

low in fat. So while the foods appear to be healthier, large amounts of sugar  

are often added. 

But some people are fighting back against sugar and trying to create a  

healthier environment. Many schools are replacing sugary desserts with  

healthier options, like fruit. Other schools are trying to encourage exercise  

by building facilities like walking tracks so students and others in the  

community can exercise. The battle has not yet been lost.

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