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food 380x266 Does anyone eat anything any more?

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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?

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737 Comments so far

  1. AmyKate

    I normally love your columns Mia, but this one has me very disappointed. You can tell this is just written to provoke discussion, rather than really cover the issue properly- both sides of it like a good journalist should. You haven’t really bothered to understand why one may have an intolerance to certain foods and why we are or what it could be in this lifetime we are dealing with this. At a time in history when we are the fattest, most unhealthy we have ever been and as one very interested in health and wellness, I think your opinion is a bit ignorant. Especially as someone of your position in the media spotlight. Disappointed.

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    • jennafelicity

      It’s a column. It’s her opinion. It’s not an investigative report. It’s meant to be thought-provoking.
      If every writer had to present every facet of every story, we’d never read anything under 2000 words long.

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      • Allison

        She still has a responsibility for balanced and fair journalism. This wasn’t really more than an ill-informed rant.

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  2. Liz H

    Can’t believe all you people! Sure, pop your head in the sand and eat all you like but don’t come complaining when you end up with heart disease, diabetes or cancer. Whilst there are certainly other risk factors it is scientifically proven that certain foods, yes sugar and trans fats in particular, place you in very high risk categories indeed. Don’t read the latest goss mag for facts…sit down and read Sweet Poison about how the whole sugar industry has us trapped, or Dr Libby Weaver’s books or Gary Taubes. And I am SO tired of hearing about all the people we grew up with say how we ‘used to eat it all the time’…heavily processed foods (which usually means sugar) really came into being in a huge way in the 70′s – so many of our older parents grew up on very bland (war induced) food with sugar being a very occasional treat so if they did get cancer they tended to be older. But – the people in say their 40′s, and 50′s today etc grew up pretty much bingeing on things like fruit loops and coco pops for breakkie and guess what – the incidence of cancer etc is getting younger and younger. Sweet Poison is a fantastic book – and it’s not fanatical and doesn’t mean you can never have a donut again – but it makes you decide to put treats like that firmly IN the treat box and not as a part of everyday life. If something was going to kill you after a while or put your life at risk you wouldn’t do it right? It MAY taste good but for goodness sake it’s only a little bit of will power. Doesn’t it make you feel good to think you ‘mainly’ have mastery over your cravings or mind? And if it’s boring to listen to, WHAT do all the rest of you talk about all the time? The colour of your new shoes?? We are lucky to live in these times where we now KNOW the risks of the sun, certain foods etc and it’s only natural if you are feeling great about reducing something in your diet to want to tell or help your buddies.

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    • I disagree that Sweet Poison isn’t fanatical. It definitely is. David Gillespie suggests that every time someone offers you something sweet, you should approach it as if that person is trying to poison you. To me, that is fanatical.

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      • Nicholas

        Well definitely if you got diabetes or high blood sugar, people offering you sugar will poison you. This can be proven with a simple device called a glucose meter. :-)

        If you eat too much sugar, you can end up with dental caries or kidney disease. These are two medical facts that no one disputes.

        In the days before we ate sugar for breakfast, lunch and dinner, it was the norm to keep most of your teeth into your twilight years. Now people are often toothless at an early age.

        Best Regards,

        Nick

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      • Anonymous

        Jesus Christ, he’s not actually suggesting you call the cops everytime someone brings a cake to work, he’s just using hyperbole to make a point that people pushing you to eat fructose aren’t doing you any favours.

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        • Hyperbole or not Anonymous, my view is that David Gillespie is fanatical, and drawing the analogy between being offered a piece of cake and being poisoned is extreme in my opinion.

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  3. Valerie

    Is anyone else thinking of the movie, ‘When Harry Met Sally’? “I’ll have the pie,’but not if it’s apple, only if it’s cherry. I’d like ice cream, but not on the top, on the side. If you only have cream, I’ll have it plain, but then I’d like the cherry pie”. Harry declares her to be the worst kind of high maintenance, the kind that thinks they are low maintenance.

    I know some relatives who are like this – high maintenance, but think they are low maintenance. Just hard work.

    I’m not talking about genuine food allergies and intolerances – I know some people who have these and it is hard work plus very stressful – just the ones who are picky and make life difficult for their hosts. I’m trying to raise my daughter to eat what she is given, and be grateful. We’ve worked a lot in developing nations and it sickens me that here in the west we are so self indulgent about our food. Just eat it and give thanks for it. We are beyond lucky to be so spoilt for choice.

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  4. K

    Wow Mia, if you were trying to offend people with genuine allergies and generally come off sounding condescending, you’ve succeeded! Attitudes like this that make life hell for those of us who struggle everyday with the simple act of feeding and nourishing ourselves. Laziness & ignorance from others only exacerbates the problem. Ugh.

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  5. Amy

    Love this!! Haha feel a bit bad that I laughed as my best friend has recently given up dairy as a naturopath discovered her lethargy, inability to lose weight and general feeling of ickiness was due to a dairy intolerance and has been do excited about her new food choices and how great she feels. But in general this is a really funny article and very true!!!

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  6. JellyBelly

    Guess it’s very bad that i’m eating Lindt chocolate while reading this article. Thank heavens i don’t have any allergies or intolerances! Giving up sugar, eating quinoa, drinking green health drinks etc are just not my thing. I’m pretty happy with my boring low gi meal plan, guess i’m not in the cool crowd after all ;-)

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    • Kylie R

      Is sugar low GI?

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  7. Clare M

    First time I read this it seemed a big sledge of Sarah Wilson and others who promote the whole sugar free thing.

    I came back to re-read it, and I do take your point, but on the flip side I find when I try to minimize my sugar intake, it’s other people egging me on to have that piece of cake, glass of wine etc, when I am trying NOT to draw attention to what I am or am not eating!

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  8. Milo

    I can’t drink milk, unless it has 5 teaspoons of milo in it, very inconvenient yet so hard to get others to tske it seriously

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    • JellyBelly

      Ooh i agree, love milo. I put in 3 heaped teaspoons. But it is low gi, if you follow the instructions!!

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    • Frances

      I agree! Hilarious! Like +++

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    • rainbow

      yay! someone with a sense of humour!!

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  9. Rose

    Louise from Table Tonic is very guilty of this lately… A blog about gorgeous interiors has turned into an irritating nutrtion rant.

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    • cos

      oh my goodness, could not agree more Rose. Her posts are pissing me off. It just comes off as a smug brag session to me.

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      • Rose

        It has been driving me mad!

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    • Erin

      And she is Mia’s friend too.

      Oooooooo controversy!

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  10. IM

    Im another lactose intolerant. When I was about 19 and on an overseas hoiday I got a virus/infection that supposedly made me lactose intolerant. I have had all the tests and everything. I miss being able to get a milkshake at maccas or eat new zealand or wendys ice cream (esp the sherbert cone or the flake shakes!) like i used to before. But it’s something I rather do because I dont like getting sick. But if I go out I rather drink black tea when I go out, eat sorbets rather than ice creams etc etc. I also think that if people want to cut out certain foods because they dont agree with them, thats not necessarily a bad thing, but its important to get blood tests every year to make sure you arent low/missing ceertain things.

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    • Allison

      It depends what is being cut out – you can’t get sick from avoiding dairy or gluten. There is more calcium in broccoli and wild salmon than dairy – just one example.

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  11. cass

    I have an autoimmune problem which has caused me to have multiple health problems, one of which being an extreme limitation on the foods I can and cannot eat, which cause my immune system to flare up and makes me feel like shit.
    I cannot have anything with wheat, gluten, dairy, soy, salt (iodized), caffeine, grapeseed soil, anything corn, or tapioca. There are probably more foods I can’t have but I don’t know exactly what. I react to foods that are supposedly “safe” for me but it’s so hard to tell exactly what it is I’m reacting to. I eat a pretty limited diet of mostly stuff I make at home.
    I don’t particularly like people knowing about my food problems or health condition, not because I have issues with people actually knowing, but because they tend to see me differently, but it’s difficult when you won’t eat anything around them and have to figure out what to say in response to their questions.
    It makes it very hard for me to eat out anywhere and I avoid doing so like the plague. People tend to think you’re extremely fussy and picky and it is so frustrating. I don’t want to inconvenience people.
    And I absolutely wish to be rid of this.

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  12. Petal

    I admire anyone who can give up sugar. How do you do it? Every Saturday my kids and I go out for coffee and donuts. I’ve tried just ordering the coffee but my weakness over comes me!

    I also read on the weekend that eating processed meat gives you the same risk of pancreatic cancer as smoking. Shit. I love salami….and ham…and bacon. I tell you, eating right is boring. But I justify it to myself that I don’t smoke or drink. Does one cancel out the other?!

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    • Biddie

      Hi Petal – I too felt depressed when I read about processed meats, I often use them as a snack for myself +hubby + kids.
      It seems like everywhere you turn you find another food thats bad for you…soon there wont’ be anything left!

      What I will say is…I have actually given up sugar (well, fructose) BUT before you roll your eyes let me tell you I was truly, truly a sugar addict (I have a cupcake business for God’s sake!)When I first toyed with the idea of giving up sugar I felt really down – I mean, i was that person who checked out the dessert menu first when I went out to dinner!

      What has absolutely gobsmacked me – and I did not believe it would happen, until it did – is that you do lose the urge for it!
      There is no way you will be able to give up your donuts without giving up sugar first,and in all honesty, if you don’t have a weight problem (which I do) or an intolerance, there really isn’t much motivation to give up the donuts is there?

      Its also not something i talk about much because its REALLY antisocial – I have friends who look at me like I have asked them to hold hands and join me in prayer when I talk about being sugar free….so I kind of just quietly get on with it, knowing that for me personally, its a really (surprisingly) good choice.

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  13. Hhutch

    Mia thanks for this post. I did a lot of head nodding when I read it. At 41 I have reached the age where everyone seems to be on a ‘diet’ of some sort. Honestly, for me it’s one big yawn! I heard a funny quote somewhere ‘I ‘d rather sit next to a funeral director at a dinner party than someone on a diet!’ Amen to whoever said that. My philosophy – the minute you tell yourself you can’t eat something, that’s what you want to eat! I think we should have a variety. However I realise I am a ‘live to eat’ sort of person, so I am sure many will disagree with me!

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    • Petal

      I reckon a funeral director would have some good stories to tell too!

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  14. Natalia

    I’m allergic to mornings. It’s very horrible and yet nobody ever understands.

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  15. RenzaS

    Oh – this is so true! I just blogged about this where I say that ‘gluten intolerance is the new black’. Everyone seems to have some intolerance that makes them ‘feel bloated’.

    http://diabetogenic.wordpress.com/2012/02/13/the-new-black/

    And this flood of people with psuedo-intolerances only serves to minimise the potential serious consequences of those with life-threatening allergies or conditions like coeliac disease.

    I live with type 1 diabetes which means that I have to consider how every bit of food I eat will impact on my blood sugar. But rather than bore people to death by discussing this, I do my calculations, inject some insulin and go on my way. Is there anything more boring (and first world problem) than hearing about someone’s diet?

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    • jingwen

      I started working for a type 1 charity mid-last year, and since then I’ve become more aware of what everyone claims to have. Really, people need to sit down and stop claiming imaginary intolerances and allergies until they’ve lived the life of one of our type 1 families and the difficulty of feeding yourself/a child who has type 1, and keeping control over BGLs, hypos, etc.

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    • georgiepie

      type 1 buddies! :D sneaky injections for the win

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      • RenzaS

        Woot! (I use a pump, though. Can we still be T1 buddies?)

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  16. Claire

    Yes please to cake!
    The whole food allergy thing drives me insane. I don’t remember anyone having an allergy when I was at school either and I’m only 26.
    I’m standing right beside your ‘bogan’ friend. I eat anything… except oysters (they’re too slimy).

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  17. Aleks

    I am trying gluten free, dairy free, sugar free and wheat free – finding it easy thanks to a book called supercharged foods.
    I’m recovering from chronic fatigue syndrome, pneumonia and a poor immune system for the last 8 years so I guess I am willing to try anything.
    I think it’s easy as long as you have alternatives.
    I’m baking chocolate cherry muffins tomorrow and I snack on chips all day – they are sweet potato chips. I find the food shopping is way more expensive but if it works – it’s worth it.

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  18. Cast-iron constitution

    I can eat pretty much anything and drink a fair bit too and nothing happens except I get fat. BUT there are a lot of people who just don’t feel well. They’re looking for answers and sometimes they find them in their diet. As long as the diet is nutritionally replete I don’t think the rest of us should worry too much about it. This column is a bit annoying because it basically dismisses people’s genuine distress. With all the strange food manufacturing processes and additives it’s amazing we don’t all have major problems.

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    • Ponykid

      ^^I think what you’ve said is absolutely right. And it should be said also that even though a gluten allergy is very rare there is an increasing body of research to show that gluten does in fact have many negative effects on the general population. Im talking studies in peer-reviewed publications, not just media interest pieces. As someone who is in the health and fitness industry, I actually dont get to see that many seriously overweight people. (unfortunately the gym environment seems to be too intimidating). What I do see is relatively in-shape people who are sick, tired, have auto-immune diseases, are infertile, carrying a few extra kilos that just wont budge (one or all of the above) and they just want to feel good again. When they finally do manage that by replacing food that is making them feel unwell with foods that increase their health, of course they are going to proselytize. Maybe more people should be listening?

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  19. Sarah-Jane

    I’m doing one of those annoying detoxes to try and sort my eczema out once and for all and I’m driving myself nuts talking about it. Every time I’m offered something I have to explain myself. Can’t wait until it’s over so I can have a full fat, full caffeine latte and a big squishy cake to go with and not say a word!

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  20. Corcol

    Thank you, Mia. One of your great pieces! As the ex-proprietor of a small supermarket in an equally small NSW country town, I probably shouldn’t mention the customer who drove us crazy to stock all the items which suited her current idea of what she and her husband should & shouldn’t eat. Her husband tolerated her whims in (what he termed) ‘the interest of a quiet life’ but could be seen in the pub at least 4 nights per week drinking many schooners of full-strength beer!

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  21. serena

    Mia, I am a huge Mamamia fan and a fan of your columns, however I was saddened to read Sunday’s. I have a 7 year old coeliac daughter and I think that articles like Sunday’s continue to make it difficult for her very real and chronic illness to be taken seriously. This creates real and ongoing health issues for a little girl who is still at a stage where the influence from other parents, friends and relatives (who may take your column as licence to cheat when she is in their care for sleepovers etc) is huge. I know you mentioned that some people had real issues about 80% through the article but the message was already well and truly handed over by this stage. Sadly that message was that most food allergies, issues or intolerances are a pile of twaddle! I know it was unintentional but dangerous in my opinion. Thank you so much for everything else you and your team share with us but I felt compelled to connect with you regarding this.

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    • Mia

      Hey Serena, thanks for the feedback. I can’t tell you how to feel about my column, all I can do is assure you that it came from a place of trying to defend people like you and your daughter who have to face cynicism from those who eye roll about allergies due to the vast numbers of people who claim them without basis.
      If that somehow backfired an made it somehow harder! I’m so sorry. Wasn’t meant to.

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  22. Pedrose

    My 3 y.o. son was recently diagnosed with Coeliac disease and I immediately put him on a gluten free diet. He responded immediately. My husband, who experienced similar GI symptoms followed suit and has improved out of sight. I too jumped on the bandwagon to support them. I have had a few forays off the diet (donuts, anyone?) but felt so headachey, sick and tired afterwards that I am now 100% GF. Oh, and did I forget to mention I have been a vegetarian for over 20 years? My other 3 kids eat a normal SAD (standard australian diet). I never thought I could ‘give up’ bread but it is easy when you know it is making you sick.

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  23. Yvette

    Mia .. i ate lollies and chocolate whilst reading both your books in bed!!! I loved your books cant wait for the next one….I snack on something sweet every single night , usually i wake up at midnight craving sugar as my blood level must drop i ate a sweet buscuit or chocolate ( last night it was M&M’s) and iut sends me straight back to sleep.
    All these foods that are gluten free etc.. All too hard for me. I am all in moderation.

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    • Jo

      Wow, that doesn’t sound like moderation to me, but addiction./real blood sugar issues. You wake up at night craving something sweet – that is terrible!!!

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  24. Lana

    I cannot tell you how many people I know who are detoxing, juicing or cleansing. I eat chocolate while listening to them.

    I tried to go off sugar. It never worked and I started to bore myself with not only my diet but my constant need to research the evils of sugar

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  25. a different dee

    I have the same problem Mia, except its not people and their diets, its people and their exercise regimes.

    All of a sudden all my friends are gym junkies… and to be honest I couldn’t care less about how badly their legs hurt after RPM or how many calories you can burn in a pump class. BORING.

    Its about as tedious as my other conversation pet hate, discussing your labour.

    Mia I’ll happily chat to you about ‘How to Be a Woman’ my mum brought it back from the UK for me last year – she probably bored people (including me) about in the same way as your friends and their diets, but after reading it, I’m converted. Maybe you should give up sugar and see if it is as potent an ideology as Moran’s. ;)

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    • Lu

      Nothing worse than people harping on about how much exercise they do when they dont look any fitter or slimmer than before they started.

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    • suzie84

      Agreed!!

      This article appeared in the SMH a few weeks ago.
      http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/society-and-culture/fitness-fascination-stretches-the-truth-20120202-1qvii.html
      When I first saw it I sat there nodding. As I did when I read Mia’s column. One of my friends husbands is coeliac and will politely tell you most people who claim to be celiac and arean’t and tell you his side effects (not pretty).
      For those people who have been negative towards Mia’s article I believe they have not read it properly…Yes people have genuine allergies / intolerance but food has become some fashion / social status that eco’s our beliefs and philosophies of what people believe.

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      • Lu

        Great article and so true! I’ve lost count of the number of exercise junkies I know these days, and to be honest the only ones who look better for their efforts are the ones who’ve changed their diets. When some of them prattle off how many walks and training sessions they’ve done in the last week it does make me question why they bother because they may feel good for it but they dont look like they’ve lost weight.

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        • Anonymous

          ‘…it does make me question why they bother because they may feel good for it but they dont look like they’ve lost weight.’

          Perhaps becuase they feel good, it improves their quality of life and increases their life expectency? Excerise is really important for your health and wellbeing and goes a long way in preventing physical and mental illness. Losing weight isn’t the only reason people exercise.

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  26. jessdrake

    i have done this in a way, just with chocolate and Maccas and Hungry Jacks. I know I was eating way too much of both and so decided it was time to give it up. I dont go on about it though with other people, if they offer me chocolate I just politely say no. If I go to either fast food with friends it is simply not order. I couldnt imagine cutting out a whole chunk of food though….

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  27. Jamie

    Food avoidances and faux intolerance are pretty much just a socially accepted form of disordered eating. Whatever happened to just eating a balanced diet and a bit of everything in moderation?? Food is morally neutral. Stop pathologising it and eat a donut already!! ;)

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    • Anonymous

      This is a truly patronising and ill-informed statement.

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      • Kris2040

        Why? It IS trendy to claim faux allergies and intolerances. I’ve caught heaps of people out with their claims and then seeing what they’ll eat.

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    • Biddie

      The thing is, moderation is really, really subjective.
      Yvette (above) thinks she does things in moderation yet is waking up at midnight to eat M&M’s. Other people think having a mini mars bar once a week is moderation.
      At the end of the day, I think diet is of most importance to people who have weight or health (intolerance) issues.
      If you have neither of those and can eat whatever you want, good for you!

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  28. IJ

    Clever article, cleverly written.

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  29. M&M

    Geez Louise, this really gets peoples knickers in a knot.When i was younger our diet consisted on the cheapest fruit, vegetables, meat, salad, no name bread, no name tuna, no name milk and cheese.The occasional chocolate cake on the weekend, and occasional treat in the school box.It was economical! Now it’s so difficult with so many choices to make and things to restrict.I don’t know weather my name is Organic Arthur, Gluten free Louise or Martha the angel who doesn’t need caffeine to get through the day.What ever works people! And don’t forget the good old frozen chicken kiev which includes them all!

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    • Anonymous

      Might I say, that by default a true economical diet (not the diet of people who say “healthy food is too expensive, so I just buy sausage rolls”) is actually the healthiest way to eat in my opinion!

      Fresh fruit and veg bought by the kilo, eaten as is or extended in stews and sauces with smaller portions of meat. It never ceases to amaze me when I make dishes my grandmother made how such a small amount of food can be made to go such a long way! This means we eat LESS food overall – (much of western) society’s biggest problem is that we OVEREAT all kinds of food!

      Btw, economical eating includes the occasional treat which is essential for enjoyment of food and life in general (in my opinion once again!)

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      • Frances

        “Healthy food is expensive, so I just buy sausage rolls”. Hilarious.

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  30. Rach

    I’m the person that talks about my diet, but only because people ask! I was unbelievably sick all the time from all foods for a long time, I had parasite tests, blood tests, a colonoscopy, endoscopy, antibiotics, vega testing with a natropath and nothing I have is diagnosable.

    BUT a dietician put me on the FODMAPS diet – http://shepherdworks.com.au/disease-information/low-fodmap-diet

    and through experimenting I can eat again and I’ve lost 12kg!
    But lordy if I have something I shouldn’t I AM SICK.

    People ask me about my food and I tell them, because they always comment on how much healthier I look compared to 12 months ago.

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    • Anonymous

      Totally agree! I had to stop eating gluten six months ago and almost everytime I eat out with friends I don’t see often someone asks me about why I can’t eat gluten, my symptoms etc. They’re trying to understand it and I appreicate that!

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  31. Mel

    I didn’t realise it was suddenly such an issue for other people if someone wants to feel their absolute best!
    I admit, I am in the category of ‘annoying’ people – I do my best to avoid gluten and sugar. And NO, it is not to be trendy or get attention. It’s because eating gluten and sugar make me feel like shit. I’ll spare you the details.
    The biggest challenge I’ve had is NOSEY people who continually question why I am eating the way I am – why won’t you have cake Mel? Are you on a diet Mel? What’s wrong with you? I’d happily go about my own business looking after my own health if nosey people didn’t continually force me to discuss my eating preferences.
    Oh, and re the Sarah Wilson bashing – if anyone actually read her blog and her (fabulous) I Quit Sugar book, you would quickly find one of her first comments is how she strongly encourages any followers not to be preachy – she recognises this, and strongly advocates that people just do what’s right for them. I’m pretty sure most of us are just trying to do what is right for ourselves, so how about we let people be and just concentrate on ourselves?

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    • picardie.girl

      Agreed! Too many people make it about them and take it as a personal insult when you choose not to eat like them.

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    • Emma

      I completely agree with you. I have a number of intolerances and I cut that out of my diet so that I feel my best. I didn’t realise that was anyone else’s business.

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    • Kasey

      Here here! Well said Mel!

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  32. Chellebelle

    I have a lactose intolerance that I manage by having soy milk in my coffee or forgoing a hot drink if there’s no soy available. If I’m out and someone feeds me dairy I’ll just eat it. Luckily my intolerance is mostly manifested in weight gain, acne, bloating and stinky farts. So it doesn’t affect me in the moment and my host doesn’t feel bad. If I don’t want to suffer then I eat as little of it as possible.

    I have gone on the fructose-free bandwagon since learning about it. I firmly believe I have an uncontollable fructose addiction. If I eat it (even a small amount) I get intense food cravings, feel bloated, feel contstantly hungry but never full/satisfied, engage in self-destructive secretive sugar-seeking behaviors, have zero appetite control and generally feel like a junkie looking for my next fix. If I stay fructose free then I have none of these symptoms, my body slowly goes back to a healthier weight, and I feel wonderful. It’s a big deal, and bloody annoying to manage as fructose is in so much processed food. Yes, it’s a choice, but one I liken to an alcoholic avoiding alcohol- I’m choosing to behave in a certain way to manage my addiction. So when I am out I won’t eat anything that I know to have fructose in it. I politely refuse dessert etc. I don’t make a big deal, or demand special meals or quiz people. I just quietly try to be as unobtrusive as possible about my problem. So far it’s working well for me, and I hope I haven’t annoyed anyone!!! The difference between an allergy, an intolerance or an addiction are significant, but I think they can all be managed similarly – don’t make a fuss, bring my own whenever I can, choose the best option for me and try not to disrupt other people too much. It’s a way of life I’m comfortable with.

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  33. Miss B

    ‘“I am a bit embarrassed to say I eat anything. Makes me sound like a bogan.” Hahaha, quote of 2012!
    You’re right Mia, this is just another fad, and anyone with half a brain knows that at the end of the day, the conclusion will be the same as every other time the cool kids decide to go on a carb-free diet or only eat spinach: everything is fine, in moderation. Not hard to figure out, but people just can’t seem to wrap their heads around it.

    It comes down to people wanting a quick fix. Can’t think of the name of that president of that weird country? Google will have it to you in less than a second. Feel like pizza? It will be at your door in 30 minutes. Trouble in your relationship? Online counselling will fix that, quick smart.

    Food is just another way society is trying to solve their issues without putting in any real effort. But unfortunately it is not that simple.

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  34. picardie.girl

    I’d also like to add that people ‘give up’ things like sugar, gluten, dairy, meat, caffeine, and processed food because they ARE NOT GOOD FOR YOU.

    Can’t we focus on what you can have instead, instead of making people who try to eat better feel like they are raining on everyone’s parade?

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    • Stylus

      Meat, dairy and certain kinds of sugar (eg glucose) are good for most people!

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      • picardie.girl

        With respect, I think there is a difference between ‘does not cause a reaction or illness in’ and ‘good for’ people.

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        • Anon

          Of course there is. And I think that science has been pretty conclusive that meat and dairy are beneficial to humans.

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    • Jayne

      There are loads of ways in which meat and dairy are good for you. Lean red meat provides protein and iron while dairy provides calcium. I would be interested to know why you think eating these things, provided of course they are eaten in moderation, are bad for you.

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      • picardie.girl

        There are also lots of ways in which they are not. Moderation is of course key – most people have no trouble with these things in moderation.

        But many people have trouble digesting both of them, in some form or another. I wish dairy agreed more with my digestion, because I love it – but it does not love me back.

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      • Simone

        Maybe you should watch the documentary ‘Knives Over Forks’ or read the book by Dr. T. Colin Campbell called ‘The China Study’ and perhaps you might change your mind.

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        • Jayne

          I doubt it. I believe in eating a variety of foods in moderation, including meat. I do not believe in a philosophy where entire food groups are cut out or any one thing is completely forbidden. I also love the taste of meat. This works for me. I have been the same size and weight since I stopped growing around 15 years ago.

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  35. picardie.girl

    All the hatred flung towards people who ‘give up’ something makes me feel really uneasy about doing so, as much as I would like to (and need to). People can be so unsupportive sometimes. If I were to say that I had been diagnosed as coelic and could no longer have gluten, people would be sympathetic – but if I said I had decided not to have sugar, people would very likely feel threatened, be aggressive, and take me to task over it.

    Maybe I’m not suggesting you do so as well – and maybe I’m not criticising or judging your choice to eat 1L tubs of ice cream in the privacy of your own home, or a slice of cake at work – maybe I am just making a change for my own health, something that is not easy to do. And maybe I don’t need someone saying I’m ‘banging on’ about it when all I’ve said is that I’m going off something.

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    • Wendy

      You’re wrong. You only get taken to task for giving up alcohol ;)

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      • picardie.girl

        Thanks Wendy. I’m already regarded as weird in that way because I don’t really drink alcohol. ;)

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  36. Anonymous

    I am ‘actually’ allergic to shellfish (ie. I go into full anaphylactic shock and have less than 30 minutes to get to hospital before I stop breathing). I’ve worked out that I have to physically show waiters my epi-pen to avoid the eye roll when I ask them whether a dish has any shellfish in it… So frustrating!!

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  37. Vanessa Monaghan

    People who pretend to have allergies and intolerance as a lifestyle choice create enormous problems for those who really do have coeliac disease or a life threatening food allergy.

    It dilutes the importance of food safety when people with these condition try to eat anywhere outside of their home.

    If only they knew how awful it is to live with coeliac disease or a life threatening allergy they would never claim to have one.

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    • Pedrose

      I agree with this Vanessa. People do not takes me seriously when I tell them no, a little bit WILL hurt my son and laugh when they see I have a separate margarine container labelled GF in my fridge. It is too risky for my family to eat out.

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  38. Zip

    Even though I now realise I can be guilty of this (opps), Im feeling really bored of the diet talk by everyone esp the endless reality shows of larger people being flogged on tele for ratings. Im also bored of the ‘celebrities’ who are one minute ‘comfortable with their curves’ then two weeks later looking skeletal.

    If people just ate well most of the time, kept their treats (wine, chocolate, Tim Tams) to occasional, and did some kind of movement / exercise most days of the week, they should feel and look fine. If you eat more calories than what you burn through, you store fat, so you get fat. Easy.

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    • Hairy

      I agree esp people who say theyre on a diet as they are eating chocolate cake, or worse, say theyre gluten free ‘most of the time’.

      My daughter ended up in casualty after eating peanuts so now we have an Epi-pen for her and even though I tell all of her friends parents about her being peanut free etc, they still put our peanut M&M’s out at parties etc.

      Whilst its an individual’s responsibility to manage this, it also helps if people listen. Allergies are serious if theyre real but these fashionable claims make it all a joke.

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  39. Emma

    I have a number of food intolerances and thanks to people like you, Mia, it just gets harder. It’s already hard enough without people pulling the ‘it’s all in your head’ line.

    I understand that you’re talking about people that don’t have intolerances and choose to make these changes to their diet, but how do you know that they don’t really have an intolerance? And what right do you have to judge what people eat or what people talk about?

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  40. Karis

    Greatest article ever! I completely agree…there are people who think they are allergic to gluten but really their body just doesn’t agree with process flour…if they try other kinds of flour they are fine. I don’t remember ‘nut-free’ schools when I was a school…

    Problem is, parents don’t let their kids climb trees anymore let alone have peanuts…so no wonder they can’t handle peanuts when they are older.

    I’m on a diet, yes…but I haven’t cut anything out…I just eat better and eat the bad stuff in moderation.

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  41. sweatlikeapig

    Sugar is NOT a food group. People have been wrongly targeting fat as the food to avoid for years, when it is really the sugar pumped into low-fat products that they should have been watching out for. Spend just an hour researching what sugar does to your body, and I’ll be amazed if you ever touch the stuff again. I’ve been sugar free for a year and the overall changes I’ve seen in my body are incredible.

    Fruit is NOT an exception. I only have one serve of fruit on the days I work out, and immediately after I’m done. Anything more than two pieces a day is excessive, especially for someone who is sedentary. Just because it’s fruit doesn’t mean you can eat as much as you like. Ultimately, it is sugar and it will be converted to fat if you eat too much of it.

    I have blogged about my experience in giving up sugar here:
    http://sweatlikeapig.com/2011/07/03/the-book-that-changed-my-life/

    The other thing that irks me is just because something is gluten-free does not mean it is healthy. I’m sick of people posting pictures of their ‘healthy’ GF muffins and cakes. 99% of the healthiest foods never contained gluten to begin with.

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    • Cinnamon

      Thank you! I’m currently doing Sarah’s 8 week I Quit Sugar Program and I hate having to justify myself to others for why I’m doing it. It’s not a fad diet and there has been plenty of research on it which I won’t bang on about now. But I will say I have never felt better, no more afternoon slumps, no sweet cravings, no more crazy period pain or craving every single sweet thing in site during my period. More energy, better sleep etc.

      Btw I don’t find Sarah Wilson preachy at all as some people have mentioned below. In fact I think she is the total opposite, gives you the info and let’s you decide. Personally I’m happy I took the journey and no I don’t bang on about it to everyone…my husband eats what he likes (sugar included) and I don’t force him to do any different. I choose to eat what I eat and don’t need to justify it to others if it makes me feel good.

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    • kiwichick

      spot on

      recently three US scientists have estimated sugar is a direct causal agent in up to 35 million deaths each year

      compared to appoximately 6 million deaths caused by tobacco

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  42. MDW

    Oh how I wish my gluten free diet was just a ‘fad’ that I could choose. Often if I have to tell someone that I don’t eat anything containing gluten I’ll get “Oh I did that, but if I saw something that looked tasty, I’d eat it and just have the consequences”. Well the consequences for me are hours of agonising stomach pain and diarrhoea, nothing is THAT tasty! Most true coeliacs I know, don’t take ‘the consequences’ lightly. I also hate having to tell people because you instantly get the skeptical attitude. I never expect people to change a meal for me, I will happily eat before I come, or eat what I can (you’d be surprised how much food actually is gluten free), or not eat at all. When I am offered food I can’t eat, I’ll just politely say ‘no thank you’ without telling them why, but often I’m pressured to take the offered food, so I feel like I have to explain why I’m refusing it! Can’t win either way really…lol.

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    • elli

      I totally agree.

      My symptoms are less gastrointestinal and more all-over. Lethargic doesn’t begin to describe it, I’m in bed for 2 days; I’m constipated; I can’t put a sentence together, have to think about every single word; I can’t even add up.

      Nothing is worth that.

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    • K80Boo

      I wish my gluten free diet was optional too MDW… Coeliacs disease is real and not just in our heads… there is major medical complications for those of us who are medically diagnosed with it who still eat Gluten. Those that jump on the gluten free bandwagon for giggles need to get a life… I would give anything to eat a great doughnut that I don’t have to cook myself!!!

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    • Naomi

      CouLd not agree more. I went out for lunch on Friday and had a ‘gluten free’ meal. Well I spent the next 36 hours of my weekend with crippling stomach cramps and diarrhea. It sucks that I can hardly eat out anymore because I’m too scared whether the meal will really be gluten free or not even though it says it is on the menu. It’s not something I can take lightly unfortunately because if I do just eat that little bit of gluten it increases my chance of developing stomach cancer later in life. Not something to be relaxed about unfortunately.

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  43. Vicki

    I totally agree with you Mia. It’s so freaking boring.

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  44. Fairy Princess

    I eat everything! and so does my fiance! I love the fact that whatever I cook he will eat and vice versa.
    I have so many friends that I don’t even want to invite over for a dinner party now because it is just too hard and too complicated.
    I remember when I was little and my parents were having dinner parties, they never even had to ask people what they could or couldn’t eat. A vegetarian was a rare and exotic thing. haha
    shame we can’t go back to those days.

    And don’t feel like bogans for eating everything. Feel flexible, adventurous and non fussy. They’re all great qualities.

    (disclaimer- I know, I know, allergies, intolerances etc etc…. I’m talking about those who are fussy by choice…)

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  45. Amber

    I think it’s alarming the number of people giving food ‘advice’ on the internet who are not nutritionists or doctors or dieticians.
    Be careful what you believe.

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  46. Yeah!

    I, now, for the first time in my life, have a special diet – but I thought this column was hilarious!

    I definitely agree that having people over for a simple cup of tea and a piece of cake has now become a minefield. I also agree that people make decisions to cut whole food groups out of their diet for no good reason. (My sister is a coeliac, so I know all about the genuinely good reasons.)

    Doctor’s orders: I am now on a sugar-free (and when I say ‘sugar’, that does NOT include fruit – fruit is good for you – and I can have natural sugar supplements such as stevia, agave and coconut sugar), dairy-free, refined carb-free, chemical-free, mostly caffeine-free, mostly alcohol-free and almost vegan diet (allowed to have meat/chicken/fish/eggs three times a week). Also, if I wanted to go one better, I could go completely raw (I’ve gone about 50% raw). Why? For my hormonal health (ie. physical premenstrual symptoms) – and by god, it’s working! I am so thankful to my doctor, as she’s the only one who’s ever been able to fix this problem of mine, which has been going on for over a decade.

    The difference between me and my sister (who is a coeliac), however, is that I CAN have everything without getting sick. I am extremely thankful for this, as I love EVERYTHING and would hate to never have a piece of cake/bread/cheese/ice cream/normal coffee ever again.

    Here’s how I do it: I follow my diet when I’m at home and I loosen up when I go out (which isn’t super often). I’ve told my friends about it as a topic of conversation (and one’s already off to see my doctor), but if I never said anything, they wouldn’t even notice, as they’d still see me eating and drinking everything.

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    • kiwichick

      congratulations

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  47. Lynette

    Forgot to mention….sugar is not a food group!!!

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    • Rosie

      Lynette – speak for yourself
      ;)
      In my world it is!
      Yum yum yum….

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  48. Betsy

    I am gluten intolerant and sensitive to dairy. I HATE when people think that because I’m not full-blown coeliac it’s not a “real intolerance”. I went to various doctors for stomach pains for three years and nobody could tell me what was wrong, one even tried to put me on ulcer medication just to “see if it worked”. I went to a chiropractor and straight away we started talking about my eating habits, we cut out wheat totally and cut down dairy and now I feel better. So no I haven’t had an official allergy test (Unless your count muscle testing but apparently nobody does) but as far as my intolerance goes, the proof is in the pudding… or lack thereof. I don’t think that people should be put down for listening to their bodies as opposed to doctors. Most doctors I have been to don’t know how to treat anything unless it involves taking a pill, and with a prevalence of multidoctor clinics it’s hard to spend enough time with one doctor to get them to take your concerns seriously. I don’t bang on about gluten intolerance – I will ask which dishes I am able to eat but that is about all – and I reject the idea that someone would manufacture a thoroughly inconvenient intolerance just because they felt like being part of the intolerance gang. It’s not fashionable, it’s bloody annoying for everyone concerned. Trust me, when I go for Japanese I would much rather tuck into.. well, anything really… besides a plate of steamed cabbage. I agree that people who bang on about cutting out ingredients or alternative diets like they’re evangelicising are thoroughly obnoxious, and thinking that anyone else cares about what your are eating enough to see it posted all over facebook is just self centred. However I understand how thrilling it is when you make a change and it becomes obvious how much better you’re feeling, and that is information you feel like sharing with people that care about you and have been on the journey of illness and stomach pain with you, or people that have discussed the presence of similar symptoms, but not everybody in your world needs to know. Just because you’re thrilled that you’re newly vegan doesn’t mean that anyone else particularly cares or wishes to join you on your new soy filled journey – but power to you and god on you for finding an eating style that works.. FOR YOU.

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  49. Jayne

    Yes, yes and YES!!!! I have commented before on this blog about the prevalence and dangers of the binge/fast culture in Australia.

    I recently received a sermon from a co-worker as I was enjoying my afternoon tea and biscuits about how she had felt “sluggish” (my most hated modern bullsh*t word) so had given up carbs, sugar and caffeine, all three of which I was consuming at the time.
    This person had also admitted to not having done proper exercise in 2 years. Seriously, if you are feeling fatigued, do not blame the carbohydrate family without medical advice. It’s on the bottom of the food pyramid for a reason. Taking regular exercise is one of the most effective ways to feel energised and amazing.

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    • Sophie Boon

      We’re always looking for the quick fix aren’t we?
      Quitting sugar is just the latest manifestation of that.

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    • Fairy Princess

      my most hated modern bullshit word is “bloated”
      Umm yes, you’ve just eaten a whoel meal, of course you’re going to feel “bloated” while your body digests it. derrrrrr

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      • Cate

        Clearly you’ve never actually been bloated in it’s true sense, other than the “oh I ate too much” sense.

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  50. Lynette

    Hi Mia, you should get your facts straight. But that may get in the way of a good story.
    Removing sugar from one’s diet is not a fad. It’s about getting back to basics. A sugar free diet removes all the expensive processed foods, so actually it is way cheaper to eat sugar free. I have been sugar free for more than a year & yes some people think it’s a fad. I don’t volunteer this information but if people wish to inquire I will explain. Most of us sugar free converts know that people think we are cranks so are loath to freely advertise our change in lifestyle. Before putting us down for wanting to improve our health…which is based on scientific research….perhaps you could do your own research. Youtube Professor Lustig for more info. If you want a good story…why don’t you do one on the National Heart Foundation & it’s tick of approval program….which is very skewed.

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    • Mia

      Hi Lynette,
      You misunderstand me.
      I said it was “fashionable’ which is another way of saying popular. A year ago, I knew nobody quitting sugar. Now, after David Gilespie’s book, lots of people are doing it and talking about it.
      Nothing wrong with that.
      Whatever floats your boat and make you feel better, I would argue is a good personal choice.
      My beef is with the proseletysing and the talking about it incessantly.
      Again, do that if you want to – I undersatnd what it’s like to feel like something has ‘changed your life’ – I feel that way about Caitlin Moran’s book How To Be A Woman!
      But I’m simply stating that it is boring for me to hear about.
      Just like it may well be boring for people hearing me bang on about Caitlin Moran (PS: SHE IS BRILLIANT!!!!)
      Statement of personal fact FOR ME.

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      • elli

        Mia, I think ‘fashionable’ was a very poor choice of words. Many people, especially those of us who can’t eat something, think of ‘fashionable’ as being dismissive and ridiculing of our needs. If you mean it’s becoming more common, you should have said that.

        It might be more common because it’s more publicised and more people realise they don’t have to put up with feeling the way they do, and/or they’re sick of conventional medicine’s “tests are negative therefore you’re fine therefore anything else is in your imagination” attitude.

        If it’s boring for you to hear about, imagine what it’s like for us to have to explain it every time we need to put something in our mouths!

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      • luckyducky

        Mia – off topic but I just finished How to Be A Woman on the weekend. Excellent book, I think I am going to turn to the front page and read it again. So many messages that need to be shouted from the roof tops to all of us modern, successful, smart women who seem to take equality so much for granted that perhaps parts of it are slipping it away? I read the book on your recommendation – thank you and I am not on the watch out for some sexism happening to me!

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      • Lynette

        Mia, the difference between people that eat sugar & those who do not eat sugar is people who do not eat sugar generally don’t care about what the sugar eaters eat. We know it’s not a fad….to say it’s a fad is to say that the foods that were eaten before we started processing the crap out of everything is a fad. We have gone back to basics….and it’s good. Having been sugar free for more than 12 months I know how to eat out at restaurants or friends places without any trouble. I do get pee’d off when people look at me like I’m an alien because I don’t want the sauces or dressings & then start to question me. I usually say something like “I’m diabetic or fructose intolerant’ to get them off my case. You say the non-sugars talk about it incessantly….I feel it’s the other way around. Looking at some of the comments on here it is obvious that a lot of your followers are not overly educated in health & diet. I think it would be more responsible of you to present both sides in a fair way. If anyone takes the time to look at the latest research they would discover that Ansel Keyes got it wrong all those years ago. This is highly embarrassing for governments & health bodies…..are they going to admit they got it wrong? Rather than a fad….I think the truth is slowly getting out there.

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      • Anonymous

        If this topic bores you so much, why would you write an article about it ? That’s just going to provoke more people to discuss it, wouldn’t you think?
        It’s really not anyone’s place to say what bores them about other people, especially if the person is talking about ‘said issue’ because it is a topic that genuinely concerns them… (for example, how they feel when they do or do not consume sugar, gluten, carbohydrates ETC)
        We can’t all expect to be 100% riveted by what people other people are discussing, but we listen and try to understand because that’s part of being an understanding human being. There are numerous other ‘bores’ that are far more worthy of a rant – I’d use narrow-mindedness as an example.

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        • Anonymous

          sorry what was that? I fell asleep………

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    • Cate

      When you say you “don’t eat sugar” are you simply referring to processed foods or are you referring to all sugar types such as lactose, fructose, raffinose, sucrose, galactose etc? Because that cuts out an awful lot of food groups.

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      • Anon

        David Gillespie’s program is based on fructose, not the other types of sugar you stated.

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      • Lynette

        Cate, sugar (sucrose) is made up of 50% glucose & 50% fructose. Fructose is the bad one. Soft drinks are one of the major culprits.

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