Anyone else still eating sugar? Anyone? How about gluten?
All around me, vast chunks of people are giving up vast chunks of food. Sugar. Gluten. Dairy. Meat. Carbs. Lactose. Caffeine. Anything processed. Anything not organic. Some are swearing off a single thing – sugar is a fashionable item to delete in 2012 – while others are ditching several at once.
Much of this purging is typical January/February stuff. With Australia Day behind us, the music is off, the lights are on and we’re all suddenly blinking and cursing months of gluttonous debauchery (also know as “summer”). It’s wheatgrass shots from tomorrow, for sure.
You don’t need me to remind you this binge-purge approach is flawed and ultimately doomed. Which is why you’re not going on a diet, right? You’re simply giving up alcohol, sugar and gluten – once you establish exactly what gluten is and share this information with me. Is it wheat? I think it’s wheat. I know that most fun foods contain gluten- like cake and pasta – although I can already hear my inbox pinging as helpful people rush to tell me about all the delicious gluten-free pasta and sugar-free cake that’s available. Better still, I could make it myself! With amarynth flour! It’s easy!
Upside: it’s great that people are taking an interest in their diets in a perceived attempt to be healthier. Downside: it’s bloody boring when they bang on about it.
Notice how giving up a food group seems to make people evangelical? They proselytise like they’re born-again because they REALLY need you to understand IN DETAIL why they’re not eating gluten or sugar or dairy and tell you IN MORE DETAIL how fantastic they feel.
Several mates have gone down this path and frankly, it’s starting to grate a wee bit because they want to talk about what they’re not eating ALL THE TIME.
So what of cutting out food groups? Nutritionist Joanna McMillan insists this approach drives her crazy. “Much of it is based on small picture science or no science at all. It doesn’t look at food as a whole but picks on individual nutrients. Fruit is not the same as having lollies – yes they both contain sugar but sugar is not inherently bad – in fruit where it is bound up in cell walls with fibre and nutrients is very different to refined sugar made into a lolly. Some people cannot tolerate gluten yet suddenly everyone thinks gluten is bad. The truth is it is modern refined foods that are causing most of our health problems. Not the individual components of food. We’re missing the point.”
Then there’s the pseudo status that seems to be involved with not eating certain things. Talking to one girlfriend about this trend, she joked: “I am a bit embarrassed to say I eat anything. Makes me sound like a bogan.”
As another friend puts it: “Holier-than-thou food attitudes make me feel like I’m a horrible person for choosing peanut M&Ms rather than soy and linseed yumballs or whatever I ‘should’ be eating at 3pm. I would love to be someone who can give up sugar and gluten and all that, but a) I’m far from perfect, b) I don’t have time and c) I really love the new Dessert Factory chain that’s popped up near my house.”
One 22 year old I know reminded me that most people have more pressing food issues. “I don’t know anyone giving up dairy or sugar – I guess because many of my friends are more concerned about being able to afford food in general” she deadpanned. “Either that or we’re still too busy binge-drinking to care too much about what else we put into our system.”
On a related note, what’s with all the food intolerances?
An upcoming research report from Monash University reveals only 14 percent of people on gluten-free diets were advised by a doctor or tested for coeliac disease. Almost half just did it because they “felt” they were gluten-intolerant.
Not to make light of the kids – and adults – who do have serious food allergies. Life threatening ones. But as most waiters will attest, when someone claims to be ‘allergic’ to coriander, it often just means they don’t like it. Which must peeve the truly allergic (and their parents) something fierce because it leads to an air of cynicism around food allergies.
In our house, my six year old daughter is thrilled to have discovered that – just like her father – drinking cow’s milk makes her dizzy. She has wanted a food allergy for years so this is a source of much pride, something she waves in the face of her younger brother as evidence of her superiority. He is suitably impressed and keeps asking me what he’s allergic to, ever hopeful.
It never used to be like this. Nobody had an intolerance when I was a kid, let alone wanted one. And who’d heard of gluten? Apart from the occasional vegetarian, everyone ate and drank everything, mostly in moderation.
Now when friends come over for afternoon tea I get tense offering them a cup of tea. Between the lactose-intolerants, the sugar-frees, caffeine-frees, those not drinking soy products, those who only do organic, it’s become an impossibly complex operation that requires a powerpoint presentation and 18 different individual types of tea and milk. Cake anyone?
Do you eat anything? Everything? Are there people in your orbit who are giving things up? Do they bang on about it?








Comments
729 Comments so far
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I’m in the process of giving up sugar. I’m doing it gradually though so I don’t surprise my body. Right now, I’m using a natural sugar alternative (Natvia) that tastes and feels like real sugar. A healthy and natural choice that will do good for our bodies.
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Mia – I agree that fad eating has reached ridiculous proportions and ridicule them all you like. But don’t throw genuine sufferers into that mix. Instead, do some research and raise the debate on why are so many being diagnosed now? What is the real cause of genuine life threatening allergies. I won’t talk about my own issues I’m just going to talk about my 4 grandchildren & the multiple food allergies & intolerances (yes different entirely) they suffer. Asthma for 3, Coeliacs (confirmed) for 2, fructose, sucrose, soy, dairy, olive oil, rice, potato, peanut…I could go on but I’ll stop there. The degree varies – some anaphylactic, some a rash and sore tummy. Why? No, it isn’t because mum didn’t eat certain foods while pregnant (talk about ignorance) nor is it that the food was introduced at the wrong time, etc etc. The real culprit here is our food. When we were growing up..yes there were less allergies (known & identified anyway – perhaps they were just permanently frail and poorly – we certainly had them!). What is the reason there were less – our food. Most people don’t think we have GM food..but oh yes we do. Check out the modified crops – http://www.foodstandards.gov.au/consumerinformation/gmfoods/gmcurrentapplication1030.cfm. The basic essential grains we use are not what they were. Everything today is for the $$$ – not our health. GM makes them pesticide & herbicide resistant, high in things our diet needs but usually low in this food – lysine or oleic acid etc. We live breathe and eat pollutants that will cause who knows what for future generations and our food only looks like the original. Mia – contribute to the debate by raising these issues and mock the food companies etc who still only focus on the $$.
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Leonie, I never did throw genuine sufferers into the mix. The whole point I was making is that genuine sufferers suffer more when others fake or exagerate food allergies.
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I suffer from a very rare allergy and find it very difficult to eat out due to most places and people not taking it seriously. Just because I’m highly allergic to pepper it doesn’t mean I don’t like it. In fact I tend not to eat out anywhere because of lack of understanding. The sad truth is my throat swells if I come in contact with it. I also have a food intolerance. No I’m not allergic to dairy but it does cause me a lot of pain if I eat it. I have a very limited diet and I do not feel “special”. I hate my pepper allergy and dairy intolerance. I would give anything to be able to go out and order anything off a menu without worrying what the consequences are going to be.
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Pure ignorance!
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I understand your article is directed towards those that have jumped the latest dietary/wellness bandwagon but the flippancy of the the article continues to propagate misunderstanding about allergies.
As a breast-feeding mum of an allergy baby I have numerous dietary restrictions. Currently I am excluding dairy, egg, soya and seafood. When I eat these food, the proteins end up in my breast milk and she gets a reaction which includes ‘proctocolitis’. This means she develops an inflamed, bleeding bowel and screams for many hours. You seem to only have respect for ‘life-threatening’ allergies but my daughters reactions are serious.
Food allergies and intolerance are increasing and have a significant burden to our communities now. Some studies have shown that grocery shopping takes 39% longer and cost 11% more.
I no longer eat at cafes or restaurants when I am out of the house. I can no longer stand the dubious stares or reactions from accidental exposures in restaurants. We only visit a very small group of understanding friends & family and mostly I bring my own food. No airline can cater for my dietary restrictions. This meant during the long-haul flight to move back to Australia I struggled to eat enough as a breast feeding mum.
I wish I didn’t have these restrictions. In many ways I am sacrificing my own health for my daughter – I’ve lost 20kg so far, & may need to stop breast feeding due to weight loss. I am likely to have impacted on my fertility & health for future pregnancies. But my aim to provide breast milk for 12 months. I try hard to minimise the impact on those around me by bringing my own food.
Personally I find the social isolation as a first time mum, the constant level of vigilance, and the time & logistics devoted to meal preparation to be the most significant burden to me & our family.
For further information on food allergies please read…
http://www.allergy.org.au/patients/food-allergy/food-allergy
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I have to agree here. The flippancy is the problem with the article Mia. I have a grandson who is 3 and 1/2 and he is strongly food allergic. His diet is really specific and anything outside that brings on massive reactions that are sometimes life threatening. If you could write some more and acknowledge that you may have inadvertently belittled those who have a real food allergy problem. It’s so important as those who have it sometimes tread a tightrope in restaurants, if they can even go there.
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I find this article extremely ignorant. Food allergies are awful bloody things and if you don’t have one then you should thank your lucky stars and be grateful. I have celiac desiese and it is difficult. I often get judgemental looks from waitresses when I order food which can be frustrating but generally I don’t care… as I would rather be judged and get what I want then get “glutened” and have to deal with the horrific side effects for weeks afterwards.
People in general are VERY uneducated when it comes to food allergies and intolerance’s and I don’t think you are really in a position to write about it until you have fully done your research. I don’t know anyone who pretends to have a food allergy, as all you get for it is judged and complications. It is not something desirable. Modern diseases are very closely linked to the diet which is excess sugar a lot of the time, and auto-immune diseases are extremely common these days which are closely related to food allergies. Anyone who takes the time to respect their body and health and cuts out refined sugars or whatever it is they think they will benefit without, deserves respect.
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I was medically diagnosed with lactose intolerence after consuming milk and having blood tests every half an hour. My sister, with the same symptoms, decided not to both having this test – considering we are identical twins it’s a pretty safe bet that she that has it. I cut out dairy completely and then every time I had even the slightest bit of diary I had a reaction far more severe then in the past. With lactose intolerence completely cutting out diary can make you hyper sensitive to it – for some people it might be necessary to cut it out completely, but that’s really up to the person to decide. My sister continued to eat cheese (less lactose than milk) and occasionally chocolate (who would want to cut that out?).
After recently being diagnosed with coeliac disease (about 8 months ago) I started to reintroduce dairy in the hopes that I would begin to tolerate it. As previous comments have said, the damage gluten causes to the small intenstines in people with coeliac disease can lead to lactose intolerence. As the body starts to repair itself through a gluten free diet the lactose intolerence can improve.
I still consider myself to be lacotse intolerent and I still get sick when I eat it (although it improved for a while, unfortunately it didn’t last); however I also now eat some diary. My sister continued to eat cheese and yogurt, despite being lactose intolerent, due to the lower lactose content.
I understand that allergies are completely different to intolerences or even to coeliac disease, and I totally get why people can be so mad at the fad diets. The anger at people with undiagnosed intolerences is a bit harder for me to grasp because I know people who haven’t bothered to sit in doctors surgery for 3 hours having blood taken. If you’re constantly getting sick every time you drink milk, there is a pretty good chance you’re lactose intolerent and there isn’t anything you’re doctor can do for that other than tell where to buy some lacteeze tablets.
Perhaps they should have gone to the doctor in case something else is wrong (i.e. coeliac disease), however they shouldn’t have to explain their dietry needs or have a doctors certificate so that they can order a lactose free, gluten free, diary free meal. What we eat is nobodies business but our own.
If you’re so angry at people for going on a diet or telling you that caggage makes them bloat then perhaps it’s more important for you to look at why it’s making you so angry, instead of spewing hatred everytime you hear the phrase ‘gluten – free’. If your kid has a life threatening allergy, I get why you’re angry. It’s must be so awful and hard and scary. People with intolerences must seem like they’re making an mountain out of a molehill. But for the parent of a kid with an intolerence, that might be their mountain.
But for those who eat normally, why are you so angry about this?
I know why I’m angry about this article, because I feel like I’m being judged for being on a ‘special’ diet, because I have felt like I need to justify my dietry needs as legitimate to people before who have opinions like that in the article, and because I feel that people need to trust what their bodies are telling them and have the right to eat whatever they want.
But are people genuinely angry because they don’t have enough varieties of milk or milk substitutes in the house for visitors??? Or do they feel intimidated when other people make efforts to improve their health (whether misguided or not)? Why do people feel they have any right to pass such judgement over other peoples lives or what they eat?
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I completely agree with this.
Although I have not yet been tested (however, am going to the dr next week since my bf keeps begging me to) I am positive i am intolerant to wheat.
Not just gluten, but wheat.
Suprise, after cutting it out of my diet, my symptoms clear up. Re-introduce it and they flare up again. I don’t really feel I need a DR to jab me and waste my time to tell me something I’ve already worked out myself.
I am going to get the proper diagnosis though because maybe (although not holding my breath) it’ll point out exactly what the problem is, hopefully it can be fixed and I can go back to eating delicious, easy foods like toasty cheese sandwiches and garlic bread.
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I have Coeliac Disease and just decided to laugh when I read this article – because Mia is right… when people come over to your house are you seriously meant to have five different kinds of milk in the fridge, be stocked up with 50 different flours or have everything organic or whatever it is… I mean I get it we need to be aware of intollernances, illness, allergies and be able to cater for those who can’t eat certain foods – but think about it as far as food has gone it’s gotten to the point of it being ridiculous…
Dear Mia – Gluten is the protein found in Wheat – most processed foods that have wheat in them have Gluten
Glucose syrup and dextrose come from wheat but do not contain gluten as they are so processed all the gluten has been “cleaned” out of these ingredients…
I think that we all need to relax and laugh at this a bit more – after all we are Australian!
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I have to admit that I am normally a fan of your articles Mia, but this one hits a particularly sore note with me. I find it extremely ignorant. I am coeliac.
I found out I was coeliac 6 years ago after enduring 2 years of extreme illness including severe issues with kidney functioning for which I was hospitalised twice and had every test under the sun only to find out that the only thing that appeared to be medically wrong with me is that I was somehow extremely deficient in every vitamin imaginable. I went to 9 doctors before one of them tested me for coeliac disease after having the intelligence to ask about my diet, where I discovered that what most people think is a healthy diet (wheat bix for breakfast, salad sandwich for lunch and either pasta or meat and vegies for dinner) is a deathly diet for me. I literally thought I had AIDS…I was getting thinner and thinner, sicker and sicker, had an Ethiopian belly and had to resign from my job due to my “mysterious” illness. I was diagnosed with “chronic fatigue syndrome” due to the extreme lethargy and cognitive interference that ingesting gluten causes to those with coeliac disease. It is difficult for doctors to medically diagnose coeliac disease, particularly because when someone is this ill most doctors assume it is something more severe than simply a test for coeliac disease, so they test you for everything and eliminate other diseases before testing for coeliac disease.
The vitamin deficiency caused from coeliac disease causes a host of problems for the sufferer including organ failure, primarily kidney and liver failure. My Aunt was in a similar situation being put on dialysis before she was eventually diagnosed coeliac.
If people recognise that eating food items containing gluten is what is causing their issues and don’t want to have to go through the lengthy and uncomfortable procedures including blood tests, genetic tests, elimination and reintroduction diets followed by endoscopy (also rather expensive), then it is their bodies and they should do as they feel…without judgement.
About a year ago after telling a waitress I was coeliac and asking if anything on the menu was gluten free, specifically stating I can’t have ANY gluten, I was questioned by this waitress, who claimed to be a “2nd year med student” as to “how intolerant” I was of gluten. I would think most med students would be taught that coeliacs cannot have ANY gluten. It may not kill us instantly, but just like a diabetic eating a little extra sugar per day, a little gluten per day will eventually see us back in hospital fighting for our lives.
Fad diets that exclude gluten for weight loss infuriate me because it trivialises people who have REAL conditions, but if someone says they can’t eat something, trust that they know their body a damn sight better than you do.
Additionally, most coeliacs are lactose intolerant also because the villi that are destroyed during the autoimmune response to gluten ingestion contain lactase enzyme that digest lactose. They may sometimes still eat lactose containing foods…because it won’t kill them, it will give them a sore bloated tummy and make them fart a lot (not pleasant for anyone really is it?) but unlike eating gluten, that will be over in an hour or so and not see them dead.
I recently had to take a week off work because a place where I get gluten free sandwiches from gave me a sandwich contaminated with other bread crumbs. I know within an hour of eating if something contains gluten, the cognitive effects are akin to taking a sedative overdose. Concentration and attention span is about 5 seconds in length and somnolence is overwhelming. 4 hours later I get to spend the next 3 days on the toilet pretty much non-stop with crippling stomach pains that labor could not even compare to and at least 5-7 days of being physically incapable of moving out of bed.
People really should do a little more research before they judge others eating habits. Focus on your own food and articles like this ARE the reason why people who can’t eat certain foods have to defend themselves at dinner and explain in detail why they can’t eat something…to educate the ignorant.
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My 4 year old is severely anaphylactic to dairy, egg, wheat and nuts (all medically diagnosed and under a medical team at local childrens hosp).
Nothing makes me go GRRRRR more than a parent who tells me their child is “intolerant: or “insensitive” to wheat or milk (which they then admit is NOT medically diagnosed but the feel this must be the case as their child gets “slightly mucousy” after having the product).
To say this to a parent who has a child with a life threatening allergy to these basic food products so that eating out is a nightmare and EVERYTHING has to be made from scratch smacks of insensitivity and ignorance.
Walk in my shoes and then we’ll see if you like your child having an “intolerance”.
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Hi Fedup Parent…see my post above. Gluten can kill people! It may not be anaphylaxis but people don’t criticise diabetics for not eating sugar do they?
People really need to start educating themselves before judging others.
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Tanya-I know gluten can kill people. My mum has coeliac and I have intolerance (medically diagnosed by an immunologist) to fructose so let’s say my comment is pretty educated.
If you read my comment properly I was referring to parents / people who say their child is intolerant to a food product and when you unpack it you find the child is no such thing that the parent is just saying it.
if you don’t want your child to eat a food product that’s cool and it’s totally your business just please don’t use a medical label to describe a food preference/ choice.
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Hi Tanya, Sorry to jump on your post but as a diabetic (and coeliac – lucky me) can I just say that sometimes having sugar will actually save a diabetic’s life and the myth that diabetes is all about cutting out sugar is a very dangerous fallacy!
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I see where you are going with this…but you make it sound like I’m ignorant to give up a certain food unless I’m deathly allergic to it? I have recently gone to lactose-free milk because normal milk made my stomach queasy…I wouldn’t say I’m lactose-intolerant or allergic, just that I don’t like how it makes my body feel. Same goes with gluten, I eat it but I avoid it if I can because it does give me a bloated feeling, but I don’t cut it out of my diet, maybe when I get sick of that feeling I will. I agree there are people who make a ‘fad’ out of what they eat or don’t eat, but I reckon the majority don’t.
There are also those who take a political stance in what they eat. There are foods I don’t eat because I don’t agree with the harvesting practices. For example I don’t eat most fish because I don’t agree with deep sea trawling and by-catch practices, the fish I DO eat: their commercial harvesting practices have been independently reviewed and found to be reasonably sustainable (in my own country at least). I also only eat free range eggs and try for foods that have been harvested in a way I find satisfactory. I could not live with myself by buying these types because I’d be perpetuating/encouraging this treatment with my money, it has nothing to do with any ‘fad’ but my own beliefs as a biologist. It’s important to understand where your food comes from and how it is harvested, not only to shallowly agree that anything with ‘organic’ or ‘sustainably managed’ on the packet is true.
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Chelsey, it might be an idea to ask your dr to do a blood test for coeliac disease just in case. Coeliac disease damages the villi in the small intestine which can cause lactose intolerance, along with malabsorbtion. If you’re experiencing symptoms relating to both diary and gluten it’s worth checking out as most people with coeliac disease don’t know that they have it and it can cause lifelong problems.
Also, great comment
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As a chef, if a customer tells me they are intolerant or allergic to something, or that they just don’t eat something, I will do everything in my power to ensure that there is not a trace of that item in their food. It is not my place to judge what other people eat, or if they actually are intolerant to something.
It is no ones place to judge what another person puts into their body, unless you are a trained dietitian. For many people who are not celiac, removing gluten from their diet is a good way to improve their health. And if it makes them feel better, how is that a bad thing?
In regards to lactose intolerence, adult humans are not genetically predisposed to consuming cows milk; humans are only meant to drink milk until they are weaned, so even if you are not diagnosed with lactose intolerence most people find it beneficial to remove dairy from their diet. Your predisposition to lactose intolerence depends very much on your ancestory.
Most products containing sugar use refined sugar. There is NOTHING good about refined sugar. As with most things, you do need a certain amount of sugar in your diet, but the process of refining sugar is damaging. It is understandable for people to cut sugar out of their diet. It is possible to get all of the sugar you need in your diet from natural foods. It is a lot better to use sugars that are less refined, such as treacle or golden syrup.
The process of refining food removes nutrients from the product. Raw foods contain vitamins and the co-enzymes needed by your body to use those vitamins. Processed foods do not.
Also, some organic food is actually better for you. With some products it doesn’t make a difference nutritionally, but overall the lack of chemicals can’t be a bad thing.
Intolerences are not a way people make themselves feel special.
In regards to the increase in allergies there is possibly a very simple answer. It is now a lot easier to properly diagnose an allergy or intolerence. Also allergies and intolerences can also be caused by over-exposure to a product. Drinking two or three litres of milk a day can lead to lactose intolerence, and working with shellfish for an extended period of time can lead to a shellfish allergy.
Don’t judge what other people eat; it is not your place.
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So even though eating wheat makes me bloating and not able to go to the toilet for days, I should eat it because you think I’m a wanker?
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As far as what’s with the increase in celiac? A lot of it has to do with actually having diagnostic tests for it now, as well as recognizing more of the symptoms and realizing that it’s a life-long condition. An accurate blood test for celiac was only developed about 10 years ago, which makes it much easier to identify now than it used to be, for one thing.
I’m also bit tired of hearing “But I never knew anyone when I was a kid who had X.” Believe it or not, but people WERE diagnosed with celiac disease when you were a kid (and even before). But back then, only small children who met the ‘failure to thrive’ criteria (i.e. severe lack of growth) qualified. They were called ‘banana babies’, because they were put on a diet of mostly bananas. It was thought at the time that these kids would grow out of their celiac disease, so they were eventually transitioned to regular food as they grew up. Probably by the time they were at school, they were eating normally. It was also thought that adults couldn’t develop celiac. Now they know that’s not the case.
Additionally, for adults that DO have celiac, it’s not something that kills you quickly. Instead, it leads to things like cancer and further autoimmune diseases. My aunt got very ill from celiac when she was in her 40s before she was diagnosed. If she had actually died from it, they probably would have said it was a perforated bowel and never noticed the celiac that caused it at all. Same thing for lots of intestinal, stomach and bowel cancers. People actually died from these things, but in many cases, celiac was the underlying cause.
Anyway – just thought you might be interested in a bit of the history behind it. It isn’t a new thing or a modern disease. It’s just more well-known and better diagnosed these days.
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I find it interesting that a lot of people with coeliac disease, food allergies or intolerences say they worry that they will be seen as following a fad or trend if they have to check ingredients when eating out or talk about it to friends. I can understand this a bit as I have coeliac disease and lactose intolerence – but I also find it ridiculous. The thing is, I know a number of people with coeliac diesease and a number of people with intolerences – but I don’t know anyone who pretends to have an intolerence because they think it’s cool or because it’s the latest trend. I know people who have gone on diets which involved cutting out certain foods to lose weight, but these were people who genuinely needed to lose weight. Considering the health risks associated with obesity, I think that cutting out refined sugar (as in any chocolate bars, cake etc) can be seen as a genuine dietry need.
The majority of people saying that they have an intolerence probably do have an intolerence. I’m sure there are people who say they have an intolerence when they don’t, but personally I’m fine with this – it’s their choice to eat or not eat whatever they want. It’s their body. Besides, there will be a better variety of gluten free foods available!
What really bothers me is people getting annoyed about fads and trends, not the fads and trends themselves. Or the fact that people may not take my condition seriously because of discussions like this. Mia, I’m guessing that you’ve had someone talk down to you because you ask to check the ingredients of the soy milk they’re going to use in your coffee (some soy milk contains barley, which also contains gluten. Gluten is not wheat, it’s a protein found in some grains including wheat). It’s pretty upsetting, especially when you’ve only been eating gluten free for a few months and are still working out what your diagnosis means. I don’t feel that I should have to explain my medical history to a waiter every time I eat out just so they don’t assume I’m being picky. I don’t blame people on fad diets for this – they’re not the ones who don’t take my request seriously and therefore put my health at risk.
I talk to my friends about what I eat because I need some support around my diagnosis and I post every amazing looking gluten free thing I eat on facebook because I’m excited to find that the food I can eat is edible and I’m excited that I am looking after my health properly – possibly for the first time in my life. I don’t think my close friends get annoyed (in fact they have been amazing and suppprtive) about that or think that’s preaching or boasting, so it’s such a shame that you think so poorly of it when your friends do the same. Our health is the most important thing. We should be able to talk about it openly, without being looked down on.
I didn’t know what coeliac disease was until I found out I had it. People suffer for years with this and the symptoms vary so much and make it hard to diagnose. I never even considered that my diet could have anthing to do with my symptoms, they were so random. Most people with coeliac disease have no idea that they have it. I would hate for people to dismiss their symptoms just because they assume gluten free diets are fads.
For me personally, this article was really upsetting, especially since no effort was made to actually research the topic. It’s this sort of attitude that has made my diagnosis more difficult. Even if I didn’t have coeliac disease, if I told a waiter that I didn’t eat gluten I would expect them to respect that and tell me if they could cater for that. It’s my body, it’s my choice what I put into it and it’s my choice how I look after it.
I didn’t expect going gluten free would be difficult (after all, all you have to do is cut out some food) but it affects your lifestyle a lot. I went through Europe with a bag full of gluten free snacks, because I wasn’t sure what I could eat. Consider that next time your friends talk about their dietry needs. All you’re being asked to do is listen and be supportive, at least you’re not carrying around 2kg of snacks in your suitcase, being told off by a barrista, going to a function or event where you are the only one can’t eat anything, having to give up tim tams and beer, getting sick because a cafe doesn’t really get the whole cross-contamination thing…. Is getting bored by a conversation really that bad?
Also, when I was 6 I would have been excited to find out I had an intolerence too. It would have made me feel special. It’s a kid thing, not a sign of the times.
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I have a fructose intolerance. It was medically diagnosed if it makes you feel that it is more real, but while the test involves measuring how much fructose by products you breath out, you could do a similar test for yourself to see if you feel bad after having products high in fructose.
I prefer not to discuss my symptoms with people while we are eating. This is when the subject of my inconvenient (far more to me than them!) dietary choices usually comes up, so maybe this makes it appear that it wasn’t much of a problem. But without going into the not so pretty details, as well as having a lot of gut pains after meals, I woke up every night feeling nauseous. That gets old pretty quickly, but I didn’t think there was much I could do about it, until a doctor suggested the FODMAPS diet, which basically involves no wheat, onions, low sugar and fruit. So often gluten free food is a good shorthand for food that I can eat.
It has made an amazing difference, and yes, I still sometimes eat things with fructose in them, because a small amount is not so bad or because I don’t want to be a hassle or yes, if something looks very tasty. But the end result is that, unless it was a very small amount, I pay for it later.
Basically, I love food with wheat, onions, fruit and sugar, and hate making a fuss about it, but I also enjoy not feeling like I have constant food poisoning.
I’m sorry if you feel that people who choose not to eat wheat are a problem in your life, but apparently while they owe you some detailed explanation of their dietary choices so you can judge if it is legitimate or not, if they do try to explain then they are banging on about it.
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Mia is a writer with a gift for wit. Her columns are deliberately tongue in cheek. Who would read them if they were holier than thou and used each week to sprout a new community service announcement?! If I can have a laugh while reading this, despite the fact that I am a diagnosed Coeliac and can never tolerate even the smallest amount of gluten, then we all can. Agreed! Fad followers make things harder in many ways for true allergy sufferers…but true allergy sufferers learn very quickly how to manage their own diets and don’t need to bore everyone else with the details. They know what to avoid and do so quietly as not to cause a fuss. Mia’s columns should come with a disclaimer: Not intended for the self righteous!
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Like!
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Great post. The medicalisation of pickiness drives me crazy. I have a diagnosed lactose intolerance (diagnosed with a hydrogen breath test when I was a child), as do three of my immediate family members. I’m more and more reluctant to disclose this lest people think I’m just following some sort of fad.
On the up side, however, I no longer have to haunt specialised health food stores for milk substitutes — I can get everything I need right at Woolies or Coles!
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Hi Mia, thanks for your article, I thought it represented a lot of current opinions. I’m a 3rd year medical student and also have a BSc in Immunology. I used to roll my eyes at the ‘gluten free girls’ that used to come into the cafe I worked at…..until last year I got so sick I ended up in hospital for a week (admitted under the gastrointestinal ward) and have had to follow a stupid gluten free diet myself. I can 100% guarantee you that I know exactly when I accidentally eat gluten and I would do anything to have gluten again. I have done lots of research into gluten intolerances and the science behind it and still have no answer to why gluten makes me feel so rotten or exactly what it does to my body and why. Maybe one day I’ll get the chance to do some research into the topic and get back to you!
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I notice that this fad of self diagnosis tends to be a chick thing. I eat anything and everything, and thank the maker I’m not allergic to any of it.
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A good article that gives some scientific validity to the argument and mentions Mia.. so kudos for generating the debate
http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/diet-and-fitness/myth-and-fact-in-the-gluten-debate-20120228-1u0mr.html
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I own a cafe and the “I have a modern condition” people drive me nuts! Especially when, for example, she’s (and it’s always a she) lactose intolerant and we open the soy milk but then find she’s enjoying the scones with lashings of cream. I suggested to a friend that opening a cafe which just catered to allergies and intolerances could be a winner but she pointed out that no one would feel “special” so no one would come! Could be a point there…
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Lynne, I have a milk protein intolerance, which thankfully is much better than it used to be. This means I can enjoy some, but not too much, milk. It would make perfect sense to me to avoid a big cup of milky drink and enjoy some cream on a score.
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Oh and I don’t feel special spending 3 days in hospital in agonizing pain, then relying on muscle relaxants to stop my stomach and intestines from cramping. Thankfully that hasn’t happened in long time, but please me more understanding to your customers, they will thank you for it.
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Hi Mia,
This is the last article I choose to read which is written by you. It’s a shame your writing hasn’t improved past the odd 21st speech or email to the girls.
People choosing to eat healthy food for whatever reason should be commended as they are helping make a positive change to society. This includes positive outcomes in their own life and for others including benefits to the environment and the next generation.
It’s a shame that you find these choices boring or unfashionable, or that a minor slip or reversion to old habits is a source of amusement and cries of hypochrisy.
Perhaps it would be wiser for you to stick to fashion advice of a textural nature, since you are bored with choices that your acquaintences make.
I’d much rather sit next to someone at a dinner party who can explain to me the benefits, recipes and sourcing of whole foods that taste good than someone who is obsessed with to-the-moment trivia.
That’s just me.
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Ariadne – did you actually read the article?? Because you missed the point entirely. The point being that cutting out entire food groups is NOT healthy.
Of course making healthier food choices is good, but the point was quite clearly made here that just because a certain ingredient is sometimes bad for some people, it isn’t always bad for every person. Fruit has sugar in it but it also has fibre and vitamins. Wholegrain bread has gluten in it but it also has lots of fibre. Milk has lactose in it, but it also has protein, calcium, vitamin b12, and all sorts of things the body needs.
I’d much rather sit next to someone at the dinner table who isn’t obnoxious, scathing and actually missing the point entirely.
That’s just me.
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If a food group is harmful to your health, surely cutting it out *would* be healthy? Grains, sugar, legumes and unnatural oils are irritating and damaging to the health of all humans – in some more than others. The other nutrients they contain can’t be properly used by the body due to the antinutrients they contain and the inflammatory response they cause. Although I fully recognise that having to hear all about it ad nauseum would also be quite irritating… Maybe people get over zealous about what they’re not eating because conventional wisdom about healthy eating is way off the mark and they’re trying to get the message out there.
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Way to go, Caitlin.
There are many healthy and informed vegetarians who as you have said “have cut out an entire food group”.
And I’m not sure that you got the point of the article, either.
Fortunately we won’t be invited to the same dinner party.
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i like this piece so much better than sarah wilson’s pseudoscience ‘gluten is poison’ response. and i’m medically diagnosed coeliac – intestinal biopsy. i probably hate the fad intolerance trend more than most simply because it delegitimises what is a real issue for me and makes people more dismissive of us real sufferers. you sometimes venture a little close to that here, mia, but i’m sure i can put that down to employing a bit of hyperbole. but yes, people who just decide after reading one article about some celebrity or other on a new diet deciding ‘oh, sometimes i feel a bit too full after i eat, so i must also be lactose/gluten/garlic/fairy floss intolerant’ pisses me off no end.
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Great article Mia!
I truly believe that the increase in food allergies amongst children these days is the fact that we are not exposing them to all these foods – particularly while we are pregnant. We are not giving the growing feotus the opportunity to build up its immune system.
My mother’s generation rarely heard of any of these allergies, and even when I was at school in the 80s and 90s I only knew of 1 girl who had an allergy – in the entire school!! It was a big deal back then!
Now that I’m pregnant I’m trying to eat standard off the shelf bread, full cream milk and other dairy products, peanuts, sesame seeds etc etc etc … all in an attempt to try to prevent my baby from having any allergies or being anaphylactic.
Having said all that though, food isn’t as fresh or as ‘clean’ as it used to be and I’m sure that is having an effect on why we have so many food-allergy related issues at the moment.
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Good luck with that ideology Sof!! Funny everyone has an opinion about allergies but unless you’re an immunologist, you really have no idea! Interesting hypothesis that not exposing one’s growing feotus to allergenic food causes allergy, which is not actually that original and nor is evidenced. I ate peanuts whilst pregnant with the first three of my children and the third has a severe peanut allergy (anaphylaxis). Naturally I didn’t eat nuts with my fourth pregnancy but I do know I ate a lot of yoghurt (two somedays) and low and behold my fourth child has severe allergies. He is (anaphylactic) to dairy, eggs, chicken, sesame and nuts including peanuts. So I’ve lived your theory and it doesn’t work. Immunologists have been studying allergy for decades (and yes, our forty something specialist has a peanut allergy) and they still can’t find the answers, thus the true answer is never going to be as simplistic as yours. Oh and for the record the hygiene theory where we’re not exposed to enough germs in early childhood because of our over sanitised environment is ironically incongruent with your idea that our food isn’t clean enough!! I do hope for your child’s sake that he/she doesn’t get allergies but one thing I know is it won’t be because of what you do or do not eat!
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Sorry Sof, as already pointed out, you are wrong on that one. Having a random stuff-in-everything diet to ‘cure’ a future child’s food intolerances is not only misguided, but it sounds ridiculous as science.
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Everyone is obsessed with food; eating it, controlling it, micro- managing it, watching TV programs about it. What does this say about us as a society? Has food become a substitute for cigarettes? Freud would have a field day !
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I am a 22 year old girl who has Candida (essentially a fungal overgrowth starting in the stomach). How do I know this? I first had the same issue when I was 9 years old and it was officially diagnosed. I had horrendous symptoms that lasted for over 6 months. In order to alleviate this, I was required to completely cut out yeast, dairy and sugar from my diet for a number of months. I was then able to reintroduce all of the foods that produced the fungus in the first place when the Candida was completely gone from my system.
I am a food-a-holic. I’ve always been somebody that loves food, the act of eating and takes great pleasure in cooking and eating a delicious meal. So to find the same old symptoms coming back at 21 years of age was a huge blow for me. After ignoring them for a number of months and just “putting up with them”, after trying conventional creams and antibiotics, after my symptoms causing issues in other areas of my life, I decided that enough was enough. I knew then that I needed to change my diet dramatically in order for me to feel any better.
The funny thing is, most of the foods that I’m choosing to give up have never agreed with me and have caused bloating, cramping and chronic diarrhoea. It just goes to show that before suffering from any bad Candida symptoms, my body ceased to agree with the things I was putting into my body that caused the overgrowth.
By making the decision to cut out things like yeast, dairy and sugar (and in the initial few months fruit, some vegetables, nuts etc) I feel incredibly empowered. Why? I’m taking my health in my own hands. I’ve researched alternatives to the things that I love so I know I won’t feel like I’m missing out on life. I know that inevitably I will feel better, look better and not have any of the pesky symptoms I’ve been suffering with for a long while. Granted – if I have a small bit of something I love occasionally AFTER the infection has cleared, it won’t kill me like somebody who has severe allergies, but I firmly believe that we are what we eat. If there are things that don’t make us feel our best, and create other internal challenges, why eat them just because they taste good?
I am not the kind of person who would ever put up their hand for an intolerance. But I am the kind of person who wants to feel the best I possibly can. AND, if that involves the removal of some things from my diet, so be it.
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Read this instead – http://www.thewellnesswarrior.com.au/2011/11/when-did-feeding-ourselves-become-so-complicated/
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Thanks for the link to this article, Christina.
Hard to understand why it was pulled from this site? The author indicates it’s because they don’t agree with her views on certain health issues. I haven’t looked further but just read that one article. Perfectly harmless IMO. It is clear, concise and advocates eating real food. Real food! How outrageous!
In fact I think it is a message that SHOULD be imparted on MM. The cupcake, chocolate and wine propagation would do well to be countered with some basic health messages.
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We all need to talk about food and its effects on our bodies especially to our children…rather than putting people down for trying to do better & be healthier, lets encourage them & support them and allow them to feel good about themselves for trying to enjoy a healthier life style. Food can be an unpopular & sensitive topic, with obesity, food allergies & intolerances becoming more and more common I think it’s a topic that needs more discussion not less!
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Nothing to do with this article, although I do agree with you it fine if you want to give up every food known to man but your diet is your business!
I just wanted to say I am currently a communications student and your writing is my inspiration for everything I do! You write in a way that makes people stop and read. You are just so readable and really are a breath of fresh air.
So Thank-You.
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You’re right, such a trend!!
I am gluten intolerant and amine intolerant, and yep – I got tested. It SUCKED going through colonoscopies/blood tests, + 3 months of an elimination diet with double blind placebo tests, eating nothing but slightly fried beans with rice and boiled brussel sprouts (not a hint of pepper allowed, or tea, coffee – anything tasty!!). It was worth it for me, because I discovered what had been making me feel so crap.
Funnily enough though, I try NOT to say too much about it!! I’m vegetarian too, and well, as a reader below put it – I’m bloody boring to go out for dinner with!! I wish I wasn’t gluten free, it’s almost embarrassing having to check what ingredients are in things when we go out – simply because, as a slim vegetarian, I’m sure people assume I’m just super fussy/trend follower!! Gah!!!!
I’m really not sure why intolerances are on the rise, perhaps we are just being diagnosed more, but I’m not sure… Anyway, no more discussing this boring topic!!
(oh and, I still cheat when it comes to Twix bars and Tim Tams too, I must admit. The hives/days of upset stomach still seem worth it as twisted as that sounds!)
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Mia,
What a fantastic article!
I find it hard to understand how people are taking offense to such light-hearted, and humorous topic. Judgement aside, I totally agree with you. I live with a girl who doesn’t eat chocolate… but eats ‘Twix’. “Isn’t that chocolate?” You may ask, as I first did. Apparently, it’s an exception.
I have another friend who chooses not to eat gluten, as apparently it ‘clogged her up’. She’s not intolerant, or allergic, she just decides not to eat it. Last year I travelled Italy with her. Italy. Italy for a gluten freer must have been the most boring experience one could ever undertake. Imagine turning down a pizza for yet another risotto, or even a salad. YUCK! Needless to say, in the month we spent there, the gluten freer lost weight while I, the gluttonous gluten gained 4 delicious kgs. But I must admit, it was worth ever bit of it!
I have tried one of those, let’s not eat sugar for a week diets. Before I read this article, I was actually at Uni pondering the issue. Just as I made my decision to enjoy a sugar free week, I was handed a Cornetto. It wasn’t before I got right down to the bottom of the cone that I realised.
As much as I would like to be able to not eat sugar, I just don’t have the willpower. And I think I’d be rather tart without it!
: )
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Hi Harriet,
Thanks for sharing your experience with sugar.
Science has shown that sugar is indeed addictive. I think the best way to cut out sugar is to find someone who has already completed the journey to give you some moral support. Otherwise, it can be hard if you keep accepting Cornettos.
Best regards,
Nick
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I’m a little confused as to why lactose intolerance is mentioned. Are people really cutting out dairy when they *aren’t* intolerant? For what reason? I so so so wish I could have the occasional scoop of ice cream without major digestive upsets. Lately I’ve been taking pills of Lactase enzymes just so I can enjoy a night out at a restaurant with my husband and NOT have to ask for the massive ingredient list. Most people don’t realize that lactose isn’t just found in dairy products anymore. Companies have added it to hard candies, granola bars, etc. It’s exhausting for me to (1) either be obnoxious about ingredients or (2) suffer the dreaded bubble guts. I’m amazed anyone would say they are intolerant if they are, in fact, not. Makes those of us who actually are, have to deal with the third degree from waitresses who don’t believe us! Not cool, guys.
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Hi Amanda,
Some people react to casein (a protein found in milk), so they are not necessarily cutting out diary because of lactose.
http://www.webmd.com/allergies/casein-allergy-overview
Some doctors recommend that children with recurrent ear infections cut out diary for a month or so, to see if their condition improves.
Best Regards,
Nick
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Hi Nick
I am an incomplete coeliac and was diagnosed last August.Auto-immune disease run in my family so I was not surprised.(I am 34 by the way).I just wanted to thank you very much for all the comments and info you have supplied in this discussion.I eat a plant based diet now and some nuts/seeds but do not consume any grains as they make me feel as bad as when I was eating gluten.I think that the readers that have been negative about some of your comments are really uninformed and a bit in denial as well.I do not though bring up my diet unless I absolutely have to because of the negative comments people can make.
Just wondering if you read Mark Sissons The Daily Apple blog and follow any of the blogs about Leptin Reset Diets?I am doing(most of the time!)the Leptin Reset diet with great results.
Take care and keep getting the word out there!
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Hello there,
You’re welcome.
I am sorry to hear about your diagnosis, though it’s wonderful news that you have started a new life focussed on maintaining your health. Yes, I have heard of Mark Sisson’s blog, though to be honest I don’t ‘follow’ his blog. I am wary of people who sell one-size-fits-all dietary supplements. I am a great believer in personalised health care. I haven’t been following any “leptin reset” blogs either. I believe that if you keep all fructose consumption to an absolute minimal, your leptin function should improve.
Best regards,
Nick
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Hi Nick
Thanks for your reply.
Totally agree with you on reducing fruit consumption.If I eat any during the day(and usually not is the norm)I will keep it to 1 serving of a low sugar fruit i.e.pear,berries etc…There is some benefits in fruit for sure but society has accepted the idea that massive amounts of fruit consumption is fine .There is really not enough focus on veges but I think that that is due to the fact that vegetables aren’t sweet enough for so many peoples tastebuds these days.
Take care
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the thing that cracks me up?
People that eat organic food and diet coke. Or with a cigarette.
What a joke. The more affluent we become as a society, the harder we try to create problems that don’t exist and to make ourselves interesting….
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“Organic” food. Heh. That always makes me smile, it does.
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+1…….
… although one might make the argument that diet coke is pretty close
Yes food not derived from organic matter sounds pretty unpleasant
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Salt is an inorganic food, kind of.
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how so?!
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I like the taste of organic food, particularly veggies. The on use of chemicals is a bonus.
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I hate to be vulgar, but the amount of butt-hurt people below who didn’t understand the point of the article is impressive.
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Loved the article Mia…I’m starting to think that some people make believe themselves into having a food intolerance. I have gone out to dinner with a friend who is a gluten free vegan…It’s so NOT fun…our choice of food is so limited.
I guess I could probably cut out sugar from my diet and because of my Italian heritage and metabolism, if I look at a piece of bread I’ll probably gain weight but I believe that these people lead a very limiting existence, particularly somewhere like Melbourne where we have amazing cafes and restaurants in abundance.
As a teacher, I can certainly vouch for the highly allergic children and know of schools which ban peanuts as a general rule. I have noticed a greater intolerance though for certain food groups and wonder where this originated from.
Also, Mia, thanks for writing another article not just about being a parent or child raising…
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I have a confession to make. I. Eat. Everything.
So do my teenage boys. And so do many of their teenage friends.
I know lots of younger kids now have allergies and I appreciate that mostly there is nothing to be done but avoid the culprit, but there is evidence that if kids are not exposed to the main causes of allergens when they are babies their bodies do not learn to tolerate them and later in life they may become allergic to those causes. Of course this is not always the case but it is a factor. Some allergies are genetic. My maternal and child health nurse was forever saying: introduce eggs now, give them a little peanut butter, sandwiches, etc. I’m sure this was part of the avoid allergy development process, and as I say none of mine have allergies, but of course others do.
I am lucky that none of my kids have allergies, and nor did I know anyone with allergies when I was growing up. Don’t know why it is so prevalent now and it is something you have to think of when you have other kids/teenagers over these days.
ah well. such is life.
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Kate, no one knows yet why the allergies are happening but they’re very real. I ate peanut butter, eggs and dairy in pregnancy and breastfeeding and my daughter is anaphylactic to all of those things. Her allergies showed up in the form of eczema at around 3 months as she was getting the allergins through my breastmilk. All the books and advice at the time (less than 2 years ago), said exclusively breastfeed for 6 months, so I did for 5.5 months. What more could I have done? I couldn’t and cant introduce those foods as she will end up in hospital (as she did just a week ago after accidently drinking cow’s milk instead of soy milk).
I know your comment is meant with the best intentions, but it is so much more complicated than introducing foods early. Your kids dont have allergies because there probably isnt a predisposition to them in your genetic history.
Lucky you!! I hate them with a passion and would give my right arm for them to just go away.
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My daughter too was allergic to many things before even tasting her first ‘organic’ solids. It amazes me that breastfeeding babies can show their allergies that early. I fed her till she was 14months. So far my other children are ok. Having one anaphylactic child is enough!
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Kate you are lucky, when my daughter was almost 1 egg cross contamination (she didnt even eat it) caused a 25 min mercy dash to the hospital while she lay limp, pale & non-responsive in my arms. That was the beginning of our need to educate ourselves about food allergy. Before that night I was not aware of or looking for food problems, I knew nothing. I now know that what we experienced that night was the beginning of an anaphylactic reaction with pale & floppy typical symptoms in an infant experiencing anaphylaxis. I would never encourage anyone to feed the known allergens to a child, it can be fatal for some.
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I’ve made some pretty radical dietary changes in the last 9 months triggered by weight gain/an autoimmune disease diagnosis. One thing I’ve been surprised about is how angry it has made people. I tend not to talk about it with others though unless confronted with situations where people ask me to explain my choices (say, when we’re out to lunch together & and I turn down something). It’s interesting the aggression that will come out when I do explain my choices (which I want to emphasise, I don’t thrust upon people but only explain when asked “why don’t you eat X?”). I always have to apologise and make it clear that I’m not judging them or their choices, I’m just making a different choice for myself.
It’s frustrating that I feel I always have to defend myself but healthwise I feel 100% better, I’ve lost 15 kilos of excess weight and on track to losing more excess weight, I have tons on energy and am way more productive – all because of my personal, informed choices. I understand if people don’t want to listen to people preach at them but don’t begrudge people for the choices they make over their bodies. I don’t preach but will explain the nuances of my dietary changes if asked (paleo/primal in case anyone is interested).
Now that I think about it, it’s similar to the time I did the Hello Sunday Morning Challenge and quit alcohol for 3 months and had people yell and scream at me for not drinking (seriously), try and force me to drink by pouring drinks at my face, stop inviting me to functions where there may be alcohol because I was a downer for not drinking (though I was still usually on the dancefloor till 4am partying). After that experience I shudder to think of how we treat people with substance abuse problems.
Mia, please don’t fall into a trap of begrudging people their choices – surely you could have framed your opinion article more about people being more informed and empowered to exercise their food choices. Isn’t this what we should be promoting – don’t be a passive consumer, take charge of your health and diet decisions as you are in charge of the body you have etc.
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Hi Jay,
Congratulations on your positive lifestyle changes. Thanks for sharing your experience. You don’t need to apologise to people for looking after your health. If you have a certain medical condition, such as an autoimmune disease, just be assertive about it. Just say: “I’ve got a medical condition so I can’t eat certain things like X that will exacerbate it.” Just be firm and clear. Let them know that you have been medically diagnosed. You don’t need to apologise for taking care of your own body. You’re saving the health care system money. Don’t go through your whole life apologising for something that was not your fault. I am sorry to hear that people tried to force you to drink. That was unfair on you.
Best Regards,
Nick
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Thanks Nick
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You’re welcome Jay.
Best Regards,
Nick
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Jay, Mia wasn’t begrudging everyone their choices — she was simply pointing out how silly it is when people choose to do something that has no rational or sensible basis. If someone is altering their diet for a good reason, like a medical condition or a diagnosed intolerance/allergy, that’s the smart thing to do. If someone’s randomly cutting out entire food groups because it’s the trendy thing to do in their circle of friends, well, that’s pretty dumb.
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how do you know if someone is cutting out something for a good reason, or just to be trendy?! there is a lot of benefits in cutting out sugar, gluten and lactose. you can’t judge people without having all the information
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I find Mia Freedmans columns boring.. I start to read them each week and then findmyself turn the page halfway through to find something more interesting. sorry!
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People will constantly talk about it because they want your support. the more people they tell, the more likely it is that someone will point it out to them when they’re doing the wrong thing. When my trainer wants me to stop eating so much shit, I tell my closest friends so they understand when I say no to that slice of cake.
But I do completely agree with the 22-year-old friend’s comment about being able to afford food, it’s more important to have food on my table then to care about how healthy it is, sign of the times.
http://boughtbybirdette.blogspot.com
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There must be some very sore bottoms out there, given all these knickers in knots.
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When I consume even a tiny bit of gluten, dairy, corn, and soy my body reacts with about a weeks worth of stomach pain, headaches, and a very painful skin rash that ends up lasting for a few weeks… Part of this blog offends me BUT I can relate to getting irritated with people who go on and on but aren’t doing what they need to be doing to match with what they are saying. I know there are people out there who are only doing it for attention but I believe most have real health issues. I recall getting particularly irritated with few diabetic coworkers every time we threw a birthday party because they would have a few very large pieces of cake and/or pie and then not shut up about their headache, dizziness, and sky high blood sugar for the rest of the shift. They were still legit diabetics but they were just incredibly stupid and didn’t care about their bodies. There are the same among those who have Celiac and are intolerant to certain foods. Not all reactions are as extreme as the next person so some play around like my diabetic coworkers I mentioned. If all I got was a little headache, a dizzy spell, and a really high number on some electronic contraption but then felt better the next day I’d be tempted to mess around too.
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The proof is in the pudding!
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No, the proof of the pudding is in the eating! Why can’t people get this right??
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I have no issue with genuine food allergies or an intolerance however I find it interesting that some are rather selective e.g. Waitress at my local Italian tells me that several times a weeks she will have requests for gluten free pasta or pizza (saying they are allergic) however they will then order tiramisu…. When she points out the flour in the biscuits they will say a little won’t hurt!! There is a difference in allergic, intolerant and just choosing not to have something.
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And therein lies the gist of the whole matter – CHOICE!
I certainly wouldn’t belittle, devalue, disregard or ridicule anyone who made an informed choice – particularly about their health.
If you’re lucky enough not to have to think about what you eat; then count your blessings.
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I’ve read this article three times and I can’t understand what people are getting so upset about.
I’m allergic to some nuts (Rescus room allergic) and intolerant with some foods. I didn’t think this article was aimed at me. I thought it was aimed at the pious people who don’t actually have adverse reactions to food but said they did, and those people who jump on the latest food fad bandwagon.
No?
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Did you know the National Health and Medical Research Counsel of Australia develop health guidelines based upon the best scientific evidence available. The process used involves critically and rigorously evaluating research using a 9-step process. For research to be included the research must meet validity requirements and statistical significance. Evaluation of the research and the development of guidelines takes a long time and much resources to undertake. Additionally, the NHMRCA are an independent body, which gains no monitory benefit from their recommendations (unlike the Health Foundation).
In regard to the NHRCA Dietary Guidelines for all Australians, the guidelines make recommendations about the types and amounts of foods we should eat, as well as food groups and dietary patterns. The aim is to:
▪ promote health and wellbeing;
▪ reduce the risk of diet-related conditions, such as high cholesterol, high blood pressure and obesity; and
▪ reduce the risk of chronic diseases such as type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and some types of cancers.
The dietary guidelines are now under review and the draft is available from
https://www.eatforhealth.gov.au/sites/default/files/files/public_consultation/n55_draft_australian_dietary_guidelines_consultation_111212.pdf
They were open for comment if anyone wants to question anything.
Basically the new recommendations (based on the best available research) show that we need to eat double the amount of vegetables and fruits; double the amount of wholegrain cereals; much more milk, yoghurt and low-fat cheese; and increase our lean poultry and fish intake.
The review of the research has also shown there is stronger evidence supporting the benefits of fruit particularly for cardiovascular disease; that there’s increasing evidence that consumption of sugar-sweetened drinks is associated with increased risk of weight gain; and that the consumption of milk is associated with decreased risk of heart disease in some cases. There’s also really good evidence now about the association of whole grain products and decreased risk of heart disease, excessive weight gain and also decreased risk of type-2 diabetes.
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Hi Lou,
While it’s great that they are updating the guidelines to acknowledge that sugar-sweetened drinks are a large contributor to obesity rates, they are still not pin-pointing the culprit behind all this. No word of fructose is mentioned as being a metabolic disrupter in the average Australian diet and how we can eliminate high levels of fructose from our diets. The science on how fructose is the cause of metabolic syndrome is very strong in the scientific literature. Obesity is only a symptom of metabolic syndrome. You can be rake thin and have metabolic syndrome.
The NHMRCA is supposed to be an independent body, but if you ask around you will find that they get their advice from groups such as the Heart Foundation and Dietitian Association of Australia, which both have ties to the processed food industry.
Regards,
Nick
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Nicholas that isn’t correct. I know for a fact that the NHMRCA is an independent body. They do not get their information from the Hearth Foundation. You need to get your facts straight! They put together an expert working party who meticulously go through the available research. All research on the topic is considered, but it is only included if it meets strict validity criteria. The research of the “experts” you think have all the answers would also be included if the research projects were of a high calibre.
You seems to ignore most of the research so that you can stick strongly to your belief!
Regards
Lou
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For the most part, they give Australians the same advice as trotted out by the Heart Foundation for the past few decades. Dietitians Association of Australia have members on this so-called independent committee. How are these people independent? DAA gives identical advice as the Heart Foundation. If you call the DAA, they will tell you that they have high regards for the Heart Foundation. They work with the Heart Foundation and make no secret of this. What exactly is the “strict validity criteria”? The Heart Foundation claims to do the same, yet it gives Fruit Fix, the healthy Tick!
Best Regards,
Nick
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Nicholas I think it is about time you did some proper research into how the NHMRCA works before you sprout off such rubbish. Or just keep your head in the sand! I don’t think there is any point continuing this debate.
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Hi Lou,
What research on the NHMRCA have you done? If so, please share what you know that is not just a press release from their Web site. Can you guarantee that none of the people on the Dietary Guidelines Committee do not any have conflicts of interest?
Best Regards,
Nick
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Mia, this is so, so disappointing.
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Your opinion on food intolerance is a cliche. I have Celiac Disease and hear ignorant banter like this all the time. Why don’t you do a follow up with a post about how stupid it is for diabetics to watch their diet…or how idiotic it is for people suffering from depression to be on meds…or maybe how annoyed you get with cancer patients…
Or maybe just google: what trending topic can I write about today? And continue on your cliche bandwagon.
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I think you missed the entire point of this. If your analogy was correct it would be a post on people who PRETEND to have cancer, or pretend to be diabetic. The post was about people who *pretend* they have food allergies etc, not those who actually do.
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How would we know they are ‘pretending’? Who are we to judge others? Self-righteousness is not an attractive quality…
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we know because people say it – i’ve had people talk to me about how they decided they’d been feeling tired so stopped eating bread. or sometimes they might be a bit bloated. being a little tired or a little bloated is nothing – ask any coeliac about their real symptoms and you’ll see there’s a huge difference and the symptoms are much more severe for those of us medically diagnosed (except for a very small lucky few). and it’s frustrating because those same bandwagon gluten freers will then decide to eat a cake or something if they think it looks really tasty. i don’t have that luxury, and the number of people who do this just delegitimises us real sufferers because people think all those avoiding gluten are doing it just for fad reasons. we diagnosed coeliacs aren’t.
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Yeah… pritty off it!!! …
Your post has annoyed me, hey lets go pic on people with depression and how anoining their new “happy statuses” are O.o blah, you really are narrow minded to only point out one side so clearly! this article has disappointed me.
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Seriously, i am real sick and have been for years, if people banged on about good health when i was a child then maybe just maybe they would have found out about my gluten intolerance from my underlying Pyroluria. Food “intolerances” are serious and it is so fricking depressing not being able to just eat a choc biscuit because it will stuff up you lunch and give you diarrhoea, so i tend to look in it in a positive light, i am one of those people that bang on about the new foods im on and stuff because i am so proud i havnt died of malnutrition from having such a complete immune failure. SO befor you winge and wine about how “annoying” we all are, take a step back and realise that most of us are going through hell, Food interelances are the first thing to flair up when your body sais no. It is linked to all physical and mental issues within the body. OH HOW I WISHED PEOPLE WOULD BANG ON ABOUT GOOD HEALTH AROUND ME!!!! frick i hate people the pic on the lil guys who are just trying to help.
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Well said Miffy