A few weeks ago, I tried an experiment, and I'd like to share the results with you.
Although I consider myself very healthy for my age . . . well, for any age, really . . . I do have occasional aches and pains. A couple of months ago, though, occasional had become constant. I was very stiff in the morning when I got up -- I actually found it difficult to get out of bed sometimes, and the stiffness would persist well into the morning. My fingers ached and were so stiff that I often couldn't tie the bags when I filled them with produce at the grocery store. My wrists lost strength and were unreliable for lifting even a single pan off the burner. I was beginning to worry that perhaps I had not arthritis, as both parents do, but rheumatoid arthritis, as my maternal grandmother had.
I don't want to start with medications or aspirin, but I had a hunch...something I wanted to try. I have always limited my sugar intake -- except when I don't. I'm one of those people who can't stop eating those wonderful sweets once I get started. I realized that I had kind of slipped off the no-sugar wagon in recent months and on a hunch, decided to eliminate sugar from my diet -- added sugars, that is. And of course, anything made with white flour goes right along with the sugar since it turns so quickly to sugar. Really, it was just a matter of getting myself back on the path I've always followed with regard to eating: only whole grains and limited or no added sugar.
And here's the news: after just one week, my aches and pains disappeared and with them my worries about RA! I mean, really and truly -- and completely -- disappeared. I can get out of bed easily in the morning. I can tie the grocery bags. I can flip omelets! Hooray!
There's a logic in this, I believe. Sugar is inflammatory. Sugar, both cane sugar and the sugar additives we don't even recognize in processed foods -- has been linked to so many inflammatory conditions: diabetes, of course; cancer, heart disease, Alzheimer's, and more. If sugar is implicated in one kind of inflammation, why not in others? I would be curious for someone to test the connection between sugar and arthritis.
In any case, I continue to stay away from sugar, and I continue to be pretty much pain- and ache- free. I shared this information with others, and at least one other person has tried this experiment and had good results. So simple . . . and so effective.
I plan to stay off the sugar and white flour -- and am happily contemplating all the other good things it will do for my body!
Monday, November 14, 2011
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