Every night after my kids went to bed, I used to go to the kitchen in search of anything sweet. A piece of cake, a cookie, ice cream. And I wouldn’t just take a small piece or scoop, I would really fill myself and ignore those sugar headaches. Part of it was my mentality of making sugar such a big deal, but the other part was it was a habit. Once I let go of thinking sugar was this forbidden treasure that we were going to run out of soon, I noticed that my mind was almost on auto pilot to go get something sweet once the kids were down. I had become Pavlov’s Dog, conditioning myself that once my kids were asleep it was time to go to sugar town. Break this cycle. It’s ok to tell yourself, “I’m ok tonight, I’ll just have tome tea, or if I’m hungry I’ll have a slice of toast.” Break the action and let yourself know that you’ll have sweets, or soda, or fast food, or chips or yada yada yada, soon. There is no shortage. Like your laundry. You’ll get to it eventually. If you’re hungry, eat real food.
Another thing that I noticed was that I would stuff my face when I was around sugar. I wouldn’t just have a cupcake, I’d have 3. I wouldn’t just have a swiss miss roll, I’d have 2. I used to fear cooking with sugar. It became this creature of cancer. And while this has some truth to it, I was making matters worse. I have a very thin and intuitive sister in law who is Chinese. She often adds a few teaspoons of sugar to dishes when she uses soy sauce with out worrying too much about it. Again, she has balance. Little doses here or there aren’t a big deal, so let’s relax and enjoy our nutritious food and continue to ask ourselves, what does my body need more of today?
Our society loves to have treats at social situations. That’s part of the party! What I do now, instead of either stuffing my face, or keeping far away, I look at what looks the best to me and I savor the crap out of it. I eat a modest amount for my body, and I fill my heart with gratitude for such a delicious morsel, and then I’m done. I’m not always perfect at this, but I try to not let sweets have such a grip on my life and mind.
Moral of the story, focus more about what you put into you body, instead of worrying about what you are trying to keep from it. Redirect your thoughts to what your body needs.