Another 4 Letter Word - Soda!
Liz and I have been doing many different things in our lives to have a simpler and healthier lifestyle. We are making changes all across the board to be happier and more focused. From reducing the amount of daycare kids (or re-arranging days they are here), no television in the living room (we did this right before Christmas and we're good), and we are working towards having meals prepared at home....the list goes on. We were forwarded an email regarding soda and how bad it really is for kids AND adults. I don't have the article from the forwarded email yet...but it got me looking. Below, I found the TRUTH regarding SODA! We aren't going to immediately stop right this second (we just bought two 24-packs), but since we are addicted...we are going to slowly reduce the amount we drink in a day. I had already done so (I used to have about 6 in a day) by reducing down to 3-4. My next goal is to have 2 per day this next week...then, just 1 per day until I run out. Here is the article:
Soda. It's become the four-letter word of beverages. Of all the drinks on the market, soda probably has the worst reputation. Science and medical research point their collective finger at soda, and blame it for everything from diabetes to tooth decay, hyperactivity to childhood obesity. But is soda really that bad for you? When asked if soda is inherently unhealthy for people, board certified nutritionist and author Jonny Bowden, PhD, CNS, said, “Yes. Simple, unequivocal answer, yes. Yup. Affirmative. Absolutely.” What's so unhealthy about many Americans' favorite beverage?
To get to the truth, let's start with the ingredients. The average cola contains carbonated water, caramel color, natural flavors, caffeine, phosphoric acid and high fructose corn syrup. Carbonated water is plain water infused with carbon dioxide, which creates the bubbles. Caramel color is a natural additive that tints food products, providing the familiar color consumers expect to see. Natural flavors are often of the citrus variety and added for taste. All of these are simple, harmless ingredients. Next is caffeine, a diuretic and stimulant known to be addictive.
What's left on the list of ingredients is what solidifies soda's bad name: sugar. Phosphoric acid is a chemical that adds a tangy or sour flavor by breaking down starches into sugar. According to Bowden, we should consume as little sugar as possible, especially refined sugar. “Zero would be a bull's-eye but is pretty much an unobtainable goal,” says Bowden. Why is it unobtainable? Because almost every product on supermarket shelves contains the final ingredient on our soda list: high fructose corn syrup. “It's included because it is a way cheaper form of sweetener than anything else,” says Bowden. “It is also one of the single most horrific ingredients in the food supply.” Adding high fructose corn syrup to foods provides little nutrition and lots of calories.
If this is the case, then what about diet soda: Does it help or hinder weight loss? “There's no hard-core scientific evidence that it hinders,” says Bowden.“But there is a ton of anecdotal information and intelligent observation that leads one to think that might be so. New research shows that noncaloric food and beverages deregulate our innate ability to judge caloric intake. Secondly, there's the psychological part: Many people subconsciously think they're taking in less calories by drinking these crappy drinks and then subconsciously allow themselves more food. Third, there is some suspicion among nutritional scientists that sweet tastes — through a Pavlovian conditioning method — might signal insulin to release even though there are no actual calories or sugar. This is a theory I think has a lot of merit.”Taking all of this into consideration, soda just doesn't add up to be a beneficial drink. Even the label on a can states that it is “not a significant source of fiber, vitamin A, vitamin C, calcium and iron.”
Now that you have the facts and you're staring at a month's supply of soda you just bought, don't panic. Your purchase need not go to waste. According to numerous household cleaning Websites, soda can clean your toilet, eliminate rust from a car bumper and remove grease from clothing.
Thursday, June 14, 2007
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3 comments:
The last paragraph of that article is what really makes me think...do I really want to put something in my body (willingly and numerous times) that cleans toilets, eliminates rust, and removes grease stains??? That just doesn't sound right!
Oh Michael!!! Why did you have to go and post such a truthful ugly article about one of my best friends... coke?
It's not what I wanted to hear while I am trying to pry my eyelids open enough to stagger into the kitchen for my delicious sonic ice with ice cold coke poured over. Just the perfect start to a day, and who needs breakfast right?
Seriously, I have known for a while I need to decrease my intake of coke, probably just stop it altogether. Matt drinks maybe one coke per month, seriously. He hates that I drink it and thinks it is bad for teeth and body etc.
I am going to work on reducing the coke I drink too, that diet devo I'm posting talks so much about our bodies being God's etc. I don't think it makes sense to put something so bad in God's body.
Thanks for the info.
What a great post..You are doing wonderful things for your family.
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