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    physical cravingssugar and alcohol

    Okay all, thanks for all of the continued posts...they are great. I've been busy with my research, schoolwork, etc, but neglecting my exercise because my back is out and I'm going to find a decent chiropractor and try the acupuncture route as well.

    So, I had to share this approved excerpt from www.self-renewal.com...still working on the perfect personal detox and healing modality for myself...so..

    Two Causes
    Medical research shows two major causes of physical addiction. (1) Your cells adapt to alcohol; and (2) your body has a problem with alcohol metabolism.

    Adaptation in the cells. To your cells, alcohol becomes a way of life. Your blood bathes every cell in alcohol on a fairly regular schedule. Your cells adjust. They grow to expect these doses on time.

    Your cells learn to cope with alcohol by defending themselves against alcohol?s toxic effects. Cell walls harden to retain stability and reduce toxic damage. But as your cells get tough against alcohol, gradually more and more can be consumed. Your tolerance increases.

    In the long run, however, cell walls break down. At this point, your cells lose their ability not only to keep toxins out but to retain the essential nutrients you get from food. Many of them stop functioning altogether, or start functioning abnormally. That?s when your organs (heart, brain, liver, kidneys, etc.), which are nothing more than whole systems of cells, begin to fail.

    Your cells show signs of physical addiction another way. They crave alcohol as a food. Alcohol converts almost instantly to glucose in the blood. Known as blood-sugar, the body uses this as food for all the cells. When you drink alcohol, like eating a candy bar or drinking a soda, the cells get a quick burst of energy. This energy, as you may know, is measured in ?calories.?

    Alcoholic beverages pack a lot of calories. Five to ten drinks provide the same amount of calories as a well-balanced meal. But the meal, of course, would have provided essential vitamins, minerals, proteins (amino acids), fats, fiber, and the complex carbohydrates?all of which the body needs to stay healthy. Unfortunately, the simple carbohydrates of alcohol satisfy the hunger too well. And, when you drink a lot, you usually don?t feel like eating a meal, balanced or not.

    Your cells adapt another way. They grow to crave alcohol for the sedation. Alcohol sedates all of your cells. Also, secondary compounds called isoquinolines form in the brain where they cause heroin-like sedation of the brain and nervous system. That?s why, among all the cells, nerve cells react most violently whenever alcohol is taken away. You?ll see anything from shaking hands and nervous irritability, to convulsive seizures.

    Problem with alcohol metabolism. Physical addiction, the body?s normal reaction to too much alcohol too often, doesn?t affect everyone the same way. A select group of people who have a problem metabolizing alcohol are especially susceptible.

    Alcohol metabolism is normally a simple chemical process. Basically the liver attempts to detoxify the body of alcohol by breaking toxic alcohol into acetaldehyde (another toxic chemical), and then reducing acetaldehyde to acetate or acetic acid which quickly convert to glucose in the blood. In ?alcoholic? drinkers the liver functions poorly during this second step. It converts acetaldehyde to acetate at about half the speed of a ?normal? drinker?s liver.

    This malfunction causes two main problems. First of all, acetaldehyde builds in the blood. As a powerful toxin, acetaldehyde adds to the toxic damage alcohol causes the cells, which start to fight as much to protect themselves from acetaldehyde as from alcohol.

    Secondly, acetaldehyde interacts with brain enzymes, creating isoquinolines, those opiate-like chemicals that tranquilize the brain and nervous system. This chemical byproduct doubles or even triples the sedative effect of the alcohol. What?s more, this added sedative in the brain dramatically increases the addictive power of alcohol. Because of it, withdrawal becomes more extreme. You go all the way from euphoric sedation while drinking, to a high-pitched buzzing anxiety when you withdraw. How do you get rid of the anxiety? Alcohol. Or other sedative drugs.

    So the metabolic problem causes greater agitation in your cells, as they?re forced to fight another toxin. But it causes greater sedation as well. That?s why, when you get the alcohol ?really working,? you?re raring to go yet calm and cool. How can you beat this high?

    And all this because of a glitch in metabolism. Clearly this glitch is the main reason for your physical addiction. About 10% of all drinkers have this problem. They are the ones who become ?alcoholic.?

    So why do some livers develop this metabolic problem, while others do not? Why do some livers set the stage for alcoholism by processing alcohol at a slower rate? There are at least five ways the metabolic problem can begin:

    Genetic inheritance.

    Fetal alcohol addiction.

    Sugar addiction.

    Overeating.

    Prolonged excessive drinking.


    Let?s look at each of these in turn.

    Genetic inheritance. The ?alcoholic metabolism? can be inherited. If your mother or father or any of your four grandparents had a problem with alcohol, you stand a better than average chance of having a problem with it.

    What?s the average chance? In America, about 10% of all drinkers become alcoholic drinkers. If you have a history of alcoholism in your family, and if you become a drinker, your chances of becoming an alcoholic drinker are anywhere from 2 to 5 times greater than average. Instead of a 10% chance, you have a 20%-50% chance of becoming an alcoholic.

    The chance increases because you inherit certain elements of your biochemistry through your genes. Your ability to metabolize alcohol is more likely to be weak, if it was weak in one or more of your parents or grandparents. One other point: You may also inherit a weak sugar metabolism, and this can lead to a problem with alcohol metabolism once you start drinking.

    So your genetic history plays an important role in the development of alcoholism. If alcoholism runs in your family and if you start drinking, there is a greater than average risk that you will become an alcoholic.

    However, you can?t say whether you will be alcoholic for sure, based on genetic factors. Even with a strong genetic history of alcoholism, you still have a 50%-80% chance of not being affected. Obviously, other factors are involved.

    Fetal alcohol addiction. A baby can be born with a full-blown alcohol addiction. At birth, the child?s liver can have a problem with alcohol metabolism, and he or she can have built up a tolerance to alcohol, exhibit a withdrawal syndrome, and show all the physiological traits that accompany alcoholism.

    This can happen to any baby whose mother drank heavily during pregnancy. Why? Because alcohol goes from the mother?s blood directly into the fetus: It crosses the placenta. What?s worse, if the mother has the ?alcoholic metabolism,? toxic acetaldehyde that builds in her blood also crosses the placenta.

    In fact, if the mother drinks too heavily during pregnancy, the baby can suffer fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). Symptoms include unusual deformities in skull and facial features, mental retardation, severe problems with digestion and metabolism, nervous disorders, malnutrition and many other extremely serious disorders.

    But if you were born with even a mild addiction to alcohol and begin drinking later in life, alcohol is much more likely to cause you problems. Why? You can reactivate the alcoholic metabolism that developed when you were in the womb.

    Advice to pregnant mothers? Don?t drink. Current medical advice says don?t drink at all during pregnancy. Some studies show that even small amounts of alcohol may compromise fetal health. Also if you are breast feeding, don?t drink, because alcohol passes directly into mother?s breast milk.

    Sugar addiction. The body metabolizes alcohol and sugar in nearly the same manner. That?s why a serious sugar addiction early in life can become the perfect set-up for an alcohol addiction later on.

    Over-consumption of sweets and other foods high in sugar often leads to hypoglycemia (low blood sugar). Like alcoholism, hypoglycemia is a metabolic problem. And, like alcoholism, it cause a vicious cycle of addiction.

    What?s the relationship between hypoglycemia and alcoholism? Studies show 95%-100% of all alcoholic drinkers suffer from hypoglycemia.

    Here?s what happens: When we ingest sugary foods or alcohol, our blood-sugar (glucose) shoots up like a rocket. Blood-sugar, you may remember, is a form of food for the cells. It?s how the cells get energy. In a strong and healthy body, this energy remains fairly constant. Our cells burn blood-sugar at a fairly even rate, keeping our energy level stable.

    We even have built-in controls to ensure this. For instance, when blood sugar rises too quickly, the body undergoes a stress reaction. This immediately signals the pancreas to produce insulin, a hormone which reduces blood-sugar. Usually the body produces insulin in just the right amounts, lowering blood-sugar to normal levels without much trouble.

    After years of excesses and abuse however, this sugar control system starts to break down. Then, the pancreas begins to make mistakes. It begins overreacting. Whenever sugar or alcohol is ingested, it produces too much insulin.

    Too much insulin sends the blood-sugar level crashing below normal. This abrupt decline results in the body suddenly feels drained, fatigued, depressed after the initial high. Your energy level goes way down. You may have a headache, feel tense and anxious, or experience fuzzy thinking. These are withdrawal symptoms; they appear anywhere from one to four hours after the initial high. How do you get rid of the symptoms in a hurry? More sweets...or alcohol...or both.

    A hypoglycemic metabolism drives both the sugar and the alcohol addictions. Alcohol relieves you of hypoglycemic symptoms more effectively than sugar. But, as you?d expect, it causes these symptoms to grow more and more severe with each withdrawal.

    In fact, alcohol does everything on a slightly grander scale than sugar. It calms you more than sugar because it has a more powerful sedative effect. Yet alcohol also has more toxic side effects than sugar, so the long-range damage to your cells is greater.

    Many teenagers trade their sugar addiction for a more mature addiction: alcohol. The trade-up often happens in adults as well. It?s an easy change because the alcohol addiction fits so neatly into the same biochemical routine as the sugar addiction.

    Of course not all sugar addicts become alcoholic drinkers. But alcohol works wonders for some of them. They instantly prefer it to sweets. For them, alcohol takes the nervous edge off their lives so much more completely. But again, whenever they stop drinking for even a day or two, they keep going for something sweet?often every other hour or so.

    When you quit drinking for good, your hypoglycemia can drive you crazy with cravings. Sweets and high-sugar foods will satisfy the cravings temporarily, but not with the supreme calm produced by alcohol. And if you keep eating sweets or drinking sweet drinks to satisfy the cravings, your metabolism will remain about the same. That means you?ll continue to crave alcohol to calm you down.

    But if you break your sugar addiction at the same time you quit drinking, you will not crave alcohol. It?s actually easier to quit alcohol and sugar together, than it is to quit alcohol alone. You?ll learn how to do this later in this book.

    Overeating. Here?s another way you can cause metabolic problems that will set the stage for alcoholism. Overeating, like overdrinking, is a problem of excessive appetite. Many alcoholic drinkers had problems with overeating when they were young, before they started to drink. For some, the habit of overeating disappears when their drinking habit begins. Others alternate habits: They overeat, then they over-drink, then they overeat, etc. Still others do both concurrently.

    Interestingly enough, Overeaters Anonymous uses the same 12-step program as AA. However, not enough research has been done to clarify the relationship between these two addictions. More evidence is needed. For now, though, here?s an analysis which suggests a biochemical link.

    Overeating is a problem of excess, as is alcoholism. Overeating forces the metabolism to work overtime and is especially hard on the liver. The liver has two main functions: to help gain valuable nutrients from normal digestion, and to rid the body of toxins. When you eat too much, the liver is forced to work overtime on normal digestion and, as a result, excess toxins accumulate in the blood. The same happens when the liver must process too much alcohol.

    Today?s food, laced with chemical additives, causes another problem for the overeater. It increases the toxic overload on the liver and can make it even harder for liver to function properly.

    In many ways alcohol brings welcome relief to overeaters. It offers instant calories without the burden of all that digestion. If you drink before you eat, it depresses the appetite and you eat less. If you eat too much and drink afterward, you speed digestion.

    Overeating teaches the metabolism how to deal with excess. Overdrinking fits the same biochemical scenario, but it?s easier in a way. Why? Alcohol is light; food is heavy. To the overeater, alcohol provides relief while still satisfying the need for excess.

    That?s why, when you quit drinking, you may naturally begin overeating in order to satisfy your body?s expectation for excess. So when you quit, you can do yourself a big favor by learning not to overeat. This in turn will help you to reduce your cravings for alcohol. Later in the book, you?ll learn how to stop overeating.

    Prolonged excessive drinking. Here?s one other way normal alcohol metabolism can break down and the alcoholic metabolism begin.

    Some habitual drinkers drink a lot without showing serious signs of addiction. But after many years of abuse the internal organs can wear out, especially the pancreas and liver. When the liver loses its ability to metabolize alcohol efficiently, tolerance can increase, and other problems of alcoholism, like excessive cellular damage and withdrawal syndrome, can appear.

    This follows the same principle as adult-onset diabetes. Metabolism functions well for a very long time, only to break down after too many years of stress.

    Even ?social drinkers? and ?borderline alcoholics? who average anywhere from two to six drinks per day. All of a sudden things change. They start drinking more and more as addiction sets in.

    Prolonged drinking of any amount can trigger hypoglycemia and consequently alcoholism. First, the pancreas breaks down, starting the sugar addiction. Then the liver breaks down, starting the alcohol addiction.

    As obvious as this sounds, it doesn?t happen very often?at least according to research. Most research suggests alcoholic drinkers begin their drinking careers with the metabolic problem already established. Tolerance builds from the very first. Hypoglycemic withdrawal symptoms become slowly exaggerated into more severe alcoholic withdrawal symptoms, along with a greater and greater compulsion to drink.

    What Can You Do about the Physical Addiction?
    Once started, the physical addiction gets worse and worse. In order to change it, you need to change your metabolism. Here?s a quick review:

    The ?alcoholic metabolism? drives the physical addiction. This glitch in metabolism boosts the sedative effects of alcohol to your cells. It keeps the body bristling with high doses of sugar to counteract the gloomy side of hypoglycemia. And it creates excess toxins in the body that demand a little extra effort in your own struggle for survival.

    Meanwhile, your mind keeps finding all kinds of uses for alcohol. It interprets the way you feel, moment to moment, and knows exactly why you ?need another drink.? But the mind can?t always be trusted. Your body can be near death with alcoholic damage and your mind can want another drink.

    But you can change. When you quit drinking and change to a healthy diet, your cells begin to heal and your metabolism begins to revitalize itself. This is the key. After awhile, you begin to feel rejuvenated, strong, and healthy.

    Top

    A Disease Controlled by Diet
    Is alcoholism a disease? There?s much confusion.

    Pull up a barstool beside any alcoholic drinker and ask whether he thinks he has a disease. He will tell you no, even though he may be quick to admit he?s ?an alcoholic.? But ask any recovering alcoholic in A.A. He?ll tell you he has a disease and he?ll tell you he has this disease whether or not he?s drinking.

    Each of them is partly right. Alcoholic drinking starts a disease process. This process progresses when you?re drinking. It stops when you stop drinking. And when you stop drinking, you can heal much of the damage from the disease if you change your diet.

    Alcoholism fits the definition of disease. Like other diseases, alcoholism impairs your health by damaging your cells. Like other diseases, it interrupts your body?s vital functions, causing specific symptoms. And like other diseases such as cancer, if it?s allowed to continue long enough, it?ll kill you.

    But as a disease, it has an ironic twist. The agent causing the disease acts like a medicine that cures the symptoms. Alcoholic drinkers actually feel healthier when they?re drinking. Pain and sickness seem to disappear. Unfortunately, the sense of health is artificial. When you drink, you relieve yourself of the symptoms only. Meanwhile, inside your body, a disease process rages.

    Drinking wears out your body and actually speeds up the aging process. Your cells live their lives in the fast lane of high blood-sugar and toxic invaders, grabbing a few thrills, but choking on the poisons. You get physically sick more often. Or you feel some slight sickness which lingers and is hard to pinpoint.

    When cells don?t get sufficient nutrients, or if the cells are harmed too often by toxins in the blood, they stop performing important functions. After awhile, whole groups of cells begin giving out, and organs begin to fail. Especially susceptible are the brain, heart, liver, pancreas, intestines, kidneys, and stomach.

    Metabolism Revisited
    The disease itself depends on a problem in metabolism. The problem seems innocent enough. Your liver is simply slow on one step of normal alcohol metabolism: the breakdown of acetaldehyde.

    The build-up of acetaldehyde also boosts the brain?s production of isoquinoline, a strong sedative similar to morphine or heroin that calms us deeply and kills pain. This added sedative effect greatly increases alcohol?s addictive power. It drives us to drink. Thus the damage continues, the disease progresses, and the metabolic problem gets worse.

    Metabolism and Diet
    Metabolism is intimately connected to diet. Your body metabolizes food for one main purpose: to get vital nutrients to all the cells. To serve this purpose, your body can metabolize many different foods and can learn how to gain nutrients from almost any kind of food you give it. Metabolism also helps to rid the body of any unwanted toxins.

    Yet your personal metabolism works differently from anyone else?s. Studies show that each individual has a unique biochemical make-up and that individuals differ greatly from one another in the way they metabolize various kinds of food. To give you an idea how much possible variation there is, researchers have currently identified over 3,000 metabolic substances (called ?metabolites?), and over 1,100 enzymes. Each individual has her own unique proportions of all 4,100 of these biochemicals.

    Also, the mixture of biochemicals varies for each kind of food you ingest. For instance, the biochemicals your body produces to metabolize carrots differ somewhat from those it uses for potatoes. Furthermore, your body?s biochemicals vary from day to day, and vary depending on what you last ate and even how long ago you ate it.

    One more thing: Your body uses quite different biochemicals to metabolize the different classes of foods?meats, grains, vegetables, beans, fruits, etc. As you might have guessed, you need a whole different biochemical preparedness to handle alcohol, sweets, drugs, chemical additives, and toxins. In fact, too many excesses from this group can cause your metabolism to break down, and begin to make mistakes. For instance, too much sugar too often can cause hypoglycemia. The pancreas begins overreacting (producing too much insulin) when each new burst of sugar hits the bloodstream.

    But your body adjusts to whatever diet you give it. The most frequent foods in your diet come to be expected. Biochemical pathways get established the more they are used. Thus, if your body doesn?t get an expected food, you actually begin to crave it.

    Your body becomes addicted to the foods you give it the most. Your metabolism so completely adjusts to your regular diet that any change from this diet becomes increasingly difficult. Ask anyone who has attempted a major shift in diet. For instance, if you eat meat regularly, your metabolism will take a long time to adjust to a vegetarian diet. Although the same nutrients are available, your body doesn?t have the biochemical preparedness. The ability is there. Your body can metabolize vegetarian meals. But to gain the same efficiency with a new diet can take from one to seven years.

    The important thing to remember is this: Metabolism depends on diet. You can change your metabolism if you change your diet. It will take a long time to change your metabolism significantly, but you can feel incredible improvements after just a few months. You?ll discover the kind of changes you need to make in the chapter on diet.

    Top

    The Alcoholic Diet
    Almost all alcoholic drinkers suffer from malnutrition. Given the amount of alcohol in their diets alone, they don?t stand a chance of gaining proper nourishment. Why? Alcohol robs the body of vital nutrients.

    This happens in two ways:

    The alcoholic diet leaves little room for nutrient-rich foods. Alcohol is a food itself?with calories but no nutrients. When too many of your diet?s calories come from alcohol, you don?t have much appetite left for other foods.

    When you burn calories, your cells require nutrients and burning the ?empty calories? of alcohol forces your cells to use reserve nutrients they have stored?especially the B-vitamins and vitamin C. By drinking heavily on just one occasion, you can completely deplete these reserves.

    Alcoholic malnutrition kills slowly. Cells weaken from starvation and become disease-prone. Your behavior can even become bizarre, your thinking impaired. After awhile, one of your organs will give out. If it?s a vital organ, chances are you?ll die.

    But if you change your diet, the disease process will stop. The latest research links diet to all major diseases (heart disease, cancer, stroke) and most minor diseases you can think of. But how does diet cause such a long-range debilitating disease as alcoholism? At the root of the dietary problem lies addiction. The alcoholic diet is unbalanced because of various food addictions. The alcohol itself is a dual addiction: a food addiction and a drug addiction.

    Food addiction, like drug addiction, depends on a biochemical craving. Your body?s biochemistry becomes so dependent on a particular food that it grows to expect that food. As with drugs, some foods are more addicting than others. Also, when you stop consuming an addictive food, you experience withdrawal symptoms. These symptoms can be mild, such as headaches, muscle aches, back aches, cramps, diarrhea, constipation, confusion, irregular pulse rate, anxiety, nausea; or more acute, such as dizziness, extreme emotional upset (tears, anger, depression), paranoia, minor convulsions (shakes and tremors), and wild fluctuations in blood pressure.

    Nutritionists classify sugar and alcohol as foods because they have calories. This is the only reason for the classification. But as ?foods,? they are seriously lacking, for neither sugar nor alcohol has any nutrients to help with their digestion. For practical purposes, sugar and alcohol are the same food. One beer has about the same instant caloric value as ten teaspoons of white sugar.

    Among ?foods,? alcoholic beverages and sugar foods are probably the most addicting you can find. But the additional drug effects of alcohol make it more addicting than sugar. So when you quit drinking, you must withdraw from both addictions: the food (or sugar) addiction of alcohol and the drug addiction of alcohol.

    You can withdraw from the drug effects in a short time. Depending on the amount of alcohol you drink, severe withdrawal symptoms will last for one to three weeks, and minor symptoms will continue for a few months.

    You will begin your withdrawal from the sugar addiction if, when you stop drinking, you stop eating sugar-foods as well. In this case, cravings for both sweets and alcohol will diminish after a few weeks, and disappear after six months to a year. If you stop drinking, yet continue to eat sugar foods, your hypoglycemia will drive you crazy with regular cravings for alcohol and sweets.

    The Cure
    Yes, there is a cure for alcoholism.

    Your basic goal: to change your metabolism for greater health. That means you need to eliminate alcohol and other addictive foods from your diet, and change some other parts of your diet as well.

    Then wait.

    Why wait? Because once the healing process begins, it takes time to recover. Your body needs time to repair the damage. But the best news is that you begin healing right away. In fact, the healthier your new lifestyle, the faster you will heal. You can heal most of your damaged cells, at least to some degree, because you have your body?s replacement policy going for you.

    Your body creates new cells every minute to the tune of about three to four hundred million per day! These new cells replace old and dying cells. When you stop drinking, the new cells your body creates will not be ?alcoholic? cells. They will never have tasted alcohol. These new cells will be healthy, if you continue to follow a healthy diet.

    Scientists say that every seven years the body replaces every cell (except nerve cells) at least once. That means the body renews itself and becomes a completely new conglomeration of cells. A new you.

    This new you begins every day. Now.

    #2
    physical cravingssugar and alcohol

    so what should I be eating...in a nutshell I mean. I notice I am craving chocolate and sweets which I never eat and coffee. What would be a good substitute I drink herbal tea.

    Comment


      #3
      physical cravingssugar and alcohol

      physical cravingssugar and alcohol

      Dear CV,

      WOW! Thanks so much for the research. Excellent with it's full coverage on why and how!

      It explains a lot of what I found out as kid when I was told at 18 that I had hypoglycemia. At the critical four hours into the test my blood sugar was at 24, an almost unheard of low. I was laying on the couch in the lab, sweating, shaking, pale as a ghost and try not to throw up. While I understand the chemical part of this and have had a hugh protein, avoided many carbs and no sugar since then. . I drink Diet Cokes with my rum . . (tee hee!) It is totally great to have it printed and in my face again why the cravings have been tough. As a latent participant in alcohol, I can totally understand that I am messing with my pancreas again. . . Big Tiime!

      Thanks so very much for the info!
      Hugs,
      Mary

      Comment


        #4
        physical cravingssugar and alcohol

        Okay, you really need a mild, sugar free low-glycemic diet at first...and I understand because I struggle to stay on it myself. You might want to look at another 100 mg copper supplement for the chocolate cravings and 200 mcg chromium picolinate for the sugar/blood sugar effects. It has a stabilizing effect on how your insulin and glucose processes. I know there are some of these in the allone so you don't want to go overboard..

        As for diet...I hope this helps. I can ezmail you specifics if you want more detail.

        You will want to stick with the protein, preferably fish, chicken, turkey more than beef unless you get hormone free beef...and yes, I love my prime rib and an excellent filet...darn Ruth's Chris with her butter!:lol

        The really good glycemics that will help you will be 1 cup of slow cooking or irish cut oatmeal with some stevia (possibly honey as your body absorbs it more slowly) and cinnamon (cinnamon helps stabilize blood sugar naturally). Brown rice, sweet potato...buckwheat pancakes will also help with the sugar cravings.

        An excellent omelette with "some cheese" but add some veggies and protein will go a long way...

        There are so many things we can eat, but, if you're like me, I just sometimes want to nuke it...when I do that, I try to hit a decent lean cuisine which doesn't use preservatives.

        Comment


          #5
          physical cravingssugar and alcohol

          CV;

          Thanks for the information!

          I have a close friend who recently found out that her hubby of 10 yrs is a closet drinker. He never drinks at home and he never goes out with friends that know him and my friend. I mentioned some of the information that you posted and she was very interested in what I told her. She asked me if you are a doctor or counselor that could get some spedific information for her hubby.


          Hugs!
          :h Brandy

          Comment


            #6
            physical cravingssugar and alcohol

            Hi Brandy, if you ezmail me, I can get more specific details for you and your friend if they need it. Every treatment needs specialization...because we are all special...:h

            Comment


              #7
              physical cravingssugar and alcohol

              This addresses so many unanswered questions I had, like: Can you turn yourself into an alcoholic? What's the link btw alcohol & sugar? And a whole lot more. Plus, I'm so pleased to find out that we regenerate cells so quickly after quitting! I was thinking they were lost forever. And I love the mention of a cure. When was the last time we heard that word connected to alcoholic issues? Here's to healing! Thanks Cynthia

              Deirdre

              Comment


                #8
                physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                CV;

                I sent you an ezmail, I hope you got it...

                Brandy

                Comment


                  #9
                  physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                  RE: physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                  WOW! Thanks so much, CV! GREAT info!

                  Looking back I definitely fit into the sugar addict teen turned to alcohol.

                  So do you think we need to be AF for the "recovery" process to kick in or can we just substantially cut down and still see benefits?

                  Comment


                    #10
                    physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                    Re: RE: physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                    Hi Brandy, I didn't get an EZmail, you can resend.

                    Needchange, you'll definitely find your initial recovery period much easier if you go af/sugar free/carb free for 2 to 3 weeks and stick to a low glycemic diet with high protein, eating every 2 to 3 hours. You may want to divide your supps evenly and space them out every two to three hours also, to keep a steady supply of nutrients and support going.

                    I know how hard this is, especially the first 3 days, because I go into crazy carb/sugar cravings when I first cut out alcohol for any reason, dieting, AF, whatever. When I was drinking, I didn't crave sugar or carbs...so, that proved it for me...:b

                    Comment


                      #11
                      physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                      Re: RE: physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                      Great article! Thanks CV! I'm also one of the teen sugar junkies, turned Alkie...: ...I can remember from waaayyyy back. Having that feeling of just about climbing the walls if I didn't get my candy bar in the afternoon! Almost like needing a drink, for an serious drinker... (except, I'm remembering this from when I was 6 or 7 yrs old!)8o

                      Comment


                        #12
                        physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                        RE: physical cravings/ sugar and alcohol

                        Ahhhh...never made the connection between my teen sugar cravings with my now alcohol cravings! Now that I think about it....Moonpies! That delightful glob of marshmellow, smushed between two graham crackers, and dipped in chocolate....YUM....I feel another addiction coming back!

                        CV- was afraid that's what you'd say. AF, huh? Not quite sure I can do it. Just such a big part of my social life (yeah...and beyond )

                        I just feel life would be anxiety ridden and boring w/o drinking. Any advive?

                        Maybe I should get on the abs thread and see how "they" are doing it and coping. Sometimes I feel as though it's easier for others.

                        I've avoided even clicking on that thread because I don't want abs, just maintain. However, clearly I have a serious problem............................

                        Comment


                          #13
                          physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                          Re: RE: physical cravings/ sugar and alcohol

                          Yeah, I am afraid of going abs, but mods is getting hard (though my hubby likes me drinking)........I see me escalating slowly but surely (maybe that is AA talking to me!?).....I had about 10 yesterday..........stared out great, but ended up drinking way too much. Trying to go AF today, we'll se how that goes?!:

                          My hubby is already talking about going out to a lake and "having a beer"........know what that means! I may just have 1 or 2...........that is my goal anyway, right!?

                          Anyway, Cynthia, I am going to milk you for all the info you can give me........will ezbox you soon..............thanks for all you have helpes me w/ so far :h :P :happy

                          Mary Anne

                          Comment


                            #14
                            physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                            Re: RE: physical cravings/ sugar and alcohol

                            Living, you can do it...just try a little at a time if you can't go cold turkey. I really do know that it's tough! But, if you can cut down to two drinks a day, change your sugar to stevia and stay away from starchy carbs like potatoes and white bread/flour products...you'll have a much easier time of it within a few days.

                            Meanwhile, some supplements that help with the sugar cravings are the l-glutamine and chrominum picolinate. For the very hypersensitive, there is vanadyl, which really helps the syndrome x and borderline pre-diabetic blood issues.

                            Try following this diet for a bit and see if it helps...

                            Foods that are allowed:

                            Vegetables: asparagus, broccoli, cauliflower, eggplant, parsley, squash, avocado, brussel sprouts, celery, green pepper, peas, tomatoes, green beans, yellow beans, cabbage corn, okra, potatoes, beets, carrots, cucumber, onion, radishes, greens: beet, collard, kale, lettuce, mustard, spinach & turnip

                            Meats: beef, duck, eggs, quail, chicken, fish, oyster, rabbit, clam, tuna, turkey, crab, shrimp, goose, pheasant, lobster, cornish hen, lamb, pork, veal. Try to make sure they are without hormones if possible.

                            Dairy: milk, butter, cream, plain yogurt; cheeses must be well heated and eaten hot (i.e. lasagne)

                            Beverages: milk, water, herb teas, tomato juice, decaf coffee, V8, diet pop with no fruit juice or caffeine

                            Nuts, seeds, oils: almonds, pecans, walnuts, butter, brazil nuts, pumpkin seeds, oils (almond, avocado, corn, linseed, olive, sesame, safflower, sunflower, canola, soy), cashews, sesame seeds., filberts, sunflower seeds.

                            Whole grains; must be eaten hot: brown rice, barley, buckwheat, wheat, rye, oats, millet

                            Misc: NutriSweet*, Equal*, NutriSweet Jello, rice cakes, sesame rice crackers, triscuits, Shredded Wheat, raw unpasteurized apple cider vinegar (available at health food stores), Stevia **

                            Forbidden Foods

                            Anything sweet (sugar, honey, molasses, maple syrup, corn syrup, dextrose, sorbitol, Splenda), alcoholic beverages, buttermilk, cheeses, coffee & tea, cold cereal (read label), cottage cheese, crackers, dried & candied fruits, flour enriched with vitamins from yeast, fruit & fruit juices (except lemon or lime juice; only 1 gm per tablespoon), leftovers, malt products, mushrooms, packaged & processed foods, peanuts, pistachios, pretzels, processed & smoked meats, sorbitol, sprouts, sweet potatoes & yams, vinegar-containing foods (catsup, mustard, mayonnaise, salad dressings, pickles), vitamins/minerals from yeast source (read label), yeast, yeast breads & pastries :h

                            Comment


                              #15
                              physical cravingssugar and alcohol

                              Many thanks for this info. I have now gone two weeks AF and was very disappointed to note how unwell I felt overall. From day one of abstinence I had a faint muzzy headache throughout the day, and what I can only describe as sluggishness generally. I started the supps and wondered if it was these being introduced into my system but remembered that this had started from the beginning of abstaining. Also, I have had lots of little irritations, ie mouth ulcers, itchy scalp, odd little pains in my joints. So, is this all the toxins coming out or what?

                              In the past, wine as always increased my appetite, presuming that this was OK as wine is noted for being a 'digestivo' anyway. However, I have been buying AF wine which oddly makes me feel very full when consumed with food. Also, AF beer does it too. Rather like water will.

                              I decided to stop drinking because it worried me how much wine/booze one could take without any obvious signs that I was getting tiddled. However, I was always asleep by the time the television went on. I put this down to being 58 and working full time.

                              My next step will be to do the GI diet. Although I am not fat, it would be nice to get rid of the midriff bulge. I've got dogs so I've always walked at least an hour a day before work. The joys of living and working in the same town I guess.

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