Haverhill Public Library

Good sugar, bad sugar, how to power your body and brain with healthy energy, Christopher Vasey, N.D. ; translated by Jon E. Graham

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Content
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Label
Good sugar, bad sugar, how to power your body and brain with healthy energy, Christopher Vasey, N.D. ; translated by Jon E. Graham
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary form
non fiction
Main title
Good sugar, bad sugar
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1089966752
Responsibility statement
Christopher Vasey, N.D. ; translated by Jon E. Graham
Sub title
how to power your body and brain with healthy energy
Summary
A guide to replacing bad sugars in your diet with good sugars for physical, emotional, and mental healing and more energy. • Explains how to easily replace bad sugars, including white sugar and artificial sweeteners, with good sugars, such as those in fruit, honey, and whole grains. • Explores the difference between fast sugars and slow sugars and the regulating role of proteins to slow down the body's use of sugar. • Reveals the harmful effects of bad sugars, including hypoglycemia, diabetes, obesity, cavities, thickened blood, acid-alkaline imbalances, hyperactivity of glands, mood swings, phobias, depression, and delusional states. One of the most valuable nutritive substances we can consume, sugar supplies the essential energy the body and brain need to function. But there are good and bad, healthful and harmful forms of sugar. Good sugars are those found naturally occurring in foods such as fruits, honey, maple syrup, and whole grains. These unrefined sugars not only provide energy but also trace elements, minerals, and vitamins--nutrients crucial to helping the body process sugar. Bad sugars are those that are man-made or refined, such as white sugar, white flour, and artificial sweeteners. Pervasive in the modern diet, bad sugars are difficult for the body to metabolize and lead to a host of health issues, including tooth decay, type 2 diabetes, brain fog, mood swings, and weight gain. In this practical guide, Christopher Vasey, N.D., explains how to successfully replace bad sugars with good sugars as well as how to reduce sugar cravings and break your sugar addiction. He reveals how refined sugars not only cause well-known, sugar-related health issues such as obesity but also lead to acid-alkaline imbalances, hyperactivity of glands and organs, chronic fatigue, nutrient deficiencies, thickened blood, and mental disorders such as fits of rage, phobias, depression, and confused states akin to dementia--conditions uncommon before white sugar was introduced into the world's food supply more than 200 years ago. Vasey describes how sugar, in the form of glucose, works in the body and explores the difference between "fast" sugars and "slow" sugars, emphasizing the importance of slow sugars for ensuring a constant energy level all day long. He looks at the glycemic index with regard to good and bad, fast and slow sugars and the regulating role of proteins to slow down the body's use of sugar. He explains how dehydration and imbalance in the body's pH level can trigger bad-sugar dependency and provides steps to correct both issues. Offering a path out of sugar addiction and easy steps to power your brain and body with healthy energy, Vasey gives you with the tools to take ownership of your own health
Table of contents
PART 1. Understanding the Harmful Effects of Bad Sugars. The Over-consumption of Refined Sugar: A Brief History -- The Good Sugars and the Bad Sugars: Whole vs. Refined -- Carbohydrates: The Major Sugar Family -- Blood Sugar Level: Variations and Regulation -- Diseases Caused by Bad Sugars: From Deficiencies to Diabetes -- Reactive Hypoglycemia: Body Disturbances and Sugar Dependency -- Test Yourself for Reactive Hypoglycemia: Diet and Symptoms Questionnaires -- The Glycemic Index: Food Rankings and Their Effect on Blood Sugar Levels -- PART 2. A Practical Guide to Replacing Bad Sugars with Good Sugars. -- Identifying and Eliminating Bad Sugars -- Eating Good Sugars--Options and Replacements -- Eating Enough Slow Sugars -- Adding Proteins to Extend the Glycemic Curve -- Making Breakfast a Priority -- Evaluating Other Causes of Energy Depletion and Sugar Cravings

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