Sugar is a Plague

I am absolutely serious. Sugar is a plague. To take just one example, on 20 February 2016, Australia newspapers reported that “Children as young as five are having all their baby teeth pulled out due to decay, leading frustrated dental experts to call for a sugar tax to stop irresponsible parents. Australia’s sugar crisis is so bad that half of all six-year-olds now have decay in their baby teeth.” This is heart-breaking. The poor kids have no choice; they are given this poison by their parents who either don’t know better, haven’t bothered to know, or have been taken in by the fact that the products are promoted and pushed in seemingly reputable places like shops, and imagine that if it was bad for you, it would have been banned.

But the damage sugar does is slow and cumulative: ideal conditions for the human tendency to turn a blind eye, especially things our bodies like the taste of. That being so, then, yes, we tend to turn a blind eye.

The situation is getting worse. It was bad enough when I wrote an academic article dealing with sugar and its equivalents from a legal and ethical point of view, which was published in vol. 17 of the Journal of Law and Medicine (May 2010, pp.784-799).

In that article, I contended that there is a crying need for legislative intervention to actually tax sugar, ban sugar products from schools, require full disclosure of sugar content in any food (even in bread), with health warnings on confectionary, and more of the same. You can read the facts about sugar in the late John Yudkin’s readable classic Pure, White and Deadly. My article summarises some of the latest evidence, the vast bulk of which supports his conclusions about the relation between sugar, diabetes and cancer (not to mention dental caries), and some of which shows that sugar is addictive in much the same way that narcotics are.

The Effects of Sugar  

Sugar is wreaking havoc on our civilization. It’s just doing it slowly and enjoyably (at least for those who are addicted). Gary Taubes, whose work in this area seems to me to be excellent, writes: “Through their direct effect on insulin and blood sugar, refined carbohydrates, starches, and sugars are the dietary cause of coronary heart disease and diabetes. They are the most likely dietary causes of cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, and the other chronic diseases of civilization.” (The Diet Delusion, n 27, p 454) The italics on “dietary causes” is Taubes’ own.

Over time and in sufficient doses, sugar can do great damage to a person’s body and emotions. Indirectly, sugar will even damage how one’s mind works, because the workings of the mind, body and emotions cannot ultimately be separated (although the organism is very adaptable, and can often reach extraordinary levels of intellectual and emotional functioning despite even near-fatal physical damage). Indirectly, through diabetes and, it seems, other diseases, sugar can even be fatal. And if it does indeed contribute to diseases such as Alzheimer’s, what have we unloosed upon ourselves?

When I say that “over time and in sufficient doses, it can do great damage to a person’s body and emotions”, we must bear in mind that how much time and what doses are sufficient depends upon the person, their health, their genes, the balance of their diet, the exercise they take, their sleep, their lifestyle, and other factors.

Our organisms are like cars: all the moving parts have their own tempos. The wheels, fan-belt, ignition, battery, all work at different speeds, or more precisely, within different ranges of speed. In fact, they can only perform their proper function without damaging the machine if they remain within their specific speed ranges. If one could arrange all these parts so that they operated at one identical speed, the car would be useless . Tempo is a relative speed. Tempo is meaningful only as comparing the speeds, rhythms or rates of a particular activity.

Sugar disrupts our bodies’ tempos to an extent which was not, I believe, contemplated by nature, and which is not under conscious control. Interestingly, anecdotal evidence suggests that if taken naturally (i.e. directly from sugar cane), it is not nearly so noxious, if at all. This makes sense: one researcher says that refined sugar is a “genetically unknown food”. That is, it is not a use but an abuse of nature. Further, you get a load of sugar a lot faster drinking soft drinks than you ever can by chewing on sugar cane. In the right dose, and for some people the right dose is an extremely small one, sugar causes a nervous energy within the body and disrupt emotional equilibrium.

Because sugar is (apparently) the only food which provides energy and no nutrients, there is nothing good to say about it which cannot be said for anything else which makes food more palatable (e.g. cinnamon and vanilla). On the other hand, those foods have positives which sugar does not. The glucose in sugar is oxidised in the cells, and the bloodstream cops the released energy. This is the basis of the “sugar-fix”. And this disrupts the tempo of the body, and the all-important tempo of the blood circulation.

Observe carefully what happens inside you when next you ingest confectionary, cake, sweetened biscuits, soft drink or anything else to which you’ve added sugar. You may be surprised to find that what you thought were part and parcel of your natural fluctuations of mood are in fact abnormal but familiar results of sugar ingestion. We all take so much sugar, and we see so many people who take it, that we don’t know how jumped up we are.

There is more. I could do a social analysis and say that we live in a “sugar-coated” society. And I believe we do: but that is another area.

 

 

5 comments

  1. Thanks for this article, and I could not agree more. I have been experimenting, reading and researching on sugar effects for a certain while now, and your observations resonate with my experience.
    It would be interesting to hear from you what you think about Gurdjieff’s (very) generous use of sugar.
    All the best, D.

    1. Thanks. I think that Gurdjieff cannot have understood the dangers of sugar. The earliest warning I could find was an article in The Lancet, dated 1961 if I recall correctly. What I find harder to appreciate is how even today so many people in the Gurdjieff tradition just ignore the dangers of sugar. To ignore it contradicts the first Being-Obligolnian-Striving (p.386). We simply are not a very reasonable people. Regards

      1. There is a passage from the book “Our Life with Mr. Gurdjieff” by Thomas de Hartmann that could be of your interest (my book is in Portuguese, so I’ll have to retro-translate in English and probably will not be exactly like in the original). It’s in the beginning of the book, on section “August, 28, 1917”:

        “Gurdjieff remarked, while we’re drinking tea, that I drinked mine with two tablets of sugar. Tell me then: “- You should not eat sugary things, otherwise will get the sugar disease.” Certainly, he didn’t allude to diabetes, […]”

  2. Hi, there is a recently available memoir by Diana Faidy Huibert that cointains an anecdote concerning Gurdjieffs opinion on sugar. She was a member of Toomers Chicago group, a professional dancer, who interacted with Gurdjieff on several occasions . In a New York encounter in 1935 Gurdjieff dramatically conveyed to her the necessity to minimise her consumption of sweets to avoid illness:

    I arrived at Gurdjieffs apartment at around 3pm as I recall. He received me and said ‘to go to the front room and be seated’. A few minutes later he appeared, lookes at me in a hypnotic way and proceeded to go through the followind manoeuvres:
    Keeping his eyes fixed on me, he stealthily approached the high-wall bookcase, looked around the room as if to see if anyone else was watching him, and climbed up the bookcase on certain vacant spaces on the shelves. Again he looked at me and reached onto one of the high shelves and stealthily from a hidden corner drew forth – a box of chocolates. He thrust the box to his cheas and climbed down, came over to me who was wrapt in astonoshment, proceeded to open the box very slowly, thrust the box towards me, and in sepulchral tones pronounced O N E. I extracted a chocolate and Gurdjieff shut the lid with a great noise, then climbed back in the same stealthy manner, put the box in is corner, and coming down approached me. “”if you not watch carefully,you too suffer liver complaint, such as my own mother suffer. This come on you later in life”
    The message could not have been more explicit.I as well as most dancers craved sweets,especially chocolates, and had always over-indulged. Sugar we know to be a quick means of supplying energy, and exhausted dancers always turned to this source for quick replenishment.
    This dramatic episode made a considerable impression on me. I am still reminded ofGurdjieff’s elaborate means to warn me. Twice when I went beyond all caution, I went without candy for three years. i have not limited myself to ONE, but I have cut down considerably.

    1. How interesting. I had no idea of that. Indeed, it surprises me a little given how lavish Gurdjieff was with sugar in Paris. Also, I did not know of a link between sugar and liver disease: but there are many other problems it is related to. Thank you

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