Sugar/Re: ratfactor sdf (zaibatsu), 04/30/2019 ------------------------------------------------------------ User ratfactor over at SDF recently wrote about sugar addiction[1]. I'm using the word addiction in all seriousness and in the full sense of the word; if you don't know anything about food addictions, then read up on them, it's a real problem. ratfactor, I have the same problem(s) with sugar, perhaps to a similar degree. My cyclical downhill slide looks a little like this: 1. Recover from last cycle of hitting the bottom, get back to a somewhat reasonable state of health, and forget how bad things felt at the bottom. 2. Start to justify small treats here and there: Just a little won't hurt; Normal people do it all the time; There's nothing wrong with enjoying life; etc. 3. Begin using the sugar as a reward and/or consoluation. For me this starts at the grocery store. I don't particularly enjoy shopping, but I do most of the shopping for my family. The drug dealers conveniently place the drugs right at the checkout line, so I'll grab a candy bar as a reward for putting up with the stress of a crowded store (or whatever stress or excuse my addict brain invents.) 4. The next step for me is looking for excuses to go shopping so I can buy something with sugar in it. I'll find my brain asking "what do we need at the store?" for no reason other than to get close to the drugs. This is when my conscious brain realizes that I'm on the downhill slide, but that's not generally enough to stop me. 5. I'll eventually hit "bottom" and I'll manage to stop myself before I end up in the hospital. Based on ratfactor's post, I think they will understand that the above is not a joke, it's the reality of addictive substances, even ones as simple and common and legal as sugar. "Bottom" for me presently looks like this: - Migraine headaches - Slight weight gain - Mood swings & mild depression - Excessive napping, especially after eating My biggest problem is that I don't gain weight easily, so people around me generally view me as healthy, even when I'm not. In my culture, which focuses entirely too much on appearance, most people would consider this a blessing, but it's just another risk factor. All told, none of this is truly horrible, nor entirely comparable to "bottom" for hard drugs or alcohol. Even so, it's a bottom that can degrade quality of life very quickly, and can lead to an early death. Ratfactor seemed to have some solutions. I don't really have any for now, aside from remaining aware. I saw a billboard in Phoenix once, with a frustrated woman next to an ashtray and a phone. The text on the billboard was a note from her future cigarette-free self to her present self, and it read "Dear Self: Never quit quitting." For this and other addictions, that billboard has been a sort of beacon for me, as silly as that might sound. I figure, if I never give up trying to overcome my problems, then I've already won. [1] gopher://sdf.org:70/0/users/ratfactor/phlog/2019-04-29-sugar