I’m not a fan of extremes. Having claimed the book Nutrition as my only guide to food in the last couple of years, I tend to be sceptical at the least when hearing about diets that exclude one or more of our five basic food groups. Having that said, I am a fan of dietary schemes that seem smart and different to what I’ve already read and discarded as ludicrous. So when my friend Lana picked up a copy of Sarah Wilson’s I Quit Sugar, I was fascinated. Here was a woman who had finally got it right, I thought, scanning through the 8-week program of giving up sugar in its entirety. I would have bought the book hadn’t it been for money, and went home feeling like this was something I definitely would think of trying. When I told Ariz about the length to which Wilson quits sugar, however, he reminded me of my utter disbelief in extremes, and I remembered that while quitting sugar may seem smart, quitting fruit and honey along with it does not.
Saturday, March 16, 2013
All natural
I’m not a fan of extremes. Having claimed the book Nutrition as my only guide to food in the last couple of years, I tend to be sceptical at the least when hearing about diets that exclude one or more of our five basic food groups. Having that said, I am a fan of dietary schemes that seem smart and different to what I’ve already read and discarded as ludicrous. So when my friend Lana picked up a copy of Sarah Wilson’s I Quit Sugar, I was fascinated. Here was a woman who had finally got it right, I thought, scanning through the 8-week program of giving up sugar in its entirety. I would have bought the book hadn’t it been for money, and went home feeling like this was something I definitely would think of trying. When I told Ariz about the length to which Wilson quits sugar, however, he reminded me of my utter disbelief in extremes, and I remembered that while quitting sugar may seem smart, quitting fruit and honey along with it does not.
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