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  • As much as we hate to admit it, we all know that too much sugar is bad for our health

  • yet we still consume a lot of it.

  • So... why do we love sugar?

  • Back in the 1970s, researchers gave a group of one hundred babies three harmless solutions

  • with different tastes; sweet, sour and bitter.

  • After the sweet solution, the babies showed positive facial expressionsthey smiled

  • and licked their lips.

  • But after the sour and bitter tastes they pursed their lips, wrinkled their noses and

  • stuck out their tongues. Studies like this show newborns and infants have an innate preference

  • for sweet tastes.

  • We seek out energy-dense foods like sugar; because the sweet taste signals there’s

  • lots of calories we can use to survive.

  • On the flip side, sour and bitter tastes signal that we should avoid somethinglike rotting

  • food or off-milk.

  • So were kind of hardwired to love sugar. And today, we consume a lot more of it than

  • ever before.

  • For our ancestors, finding sugar wasn’t so easysugar from fruit was only available

  • at harvest time, and honey was hard to access.

  • In the 13th century, sugar made its way from Asia to Europe and it was considered an exotic

  • spice.

  • In the 16th century sugarcane plantations were established in Brazil and between the

  • 18th and 19th centuries, sugar consumption in England increased by 1,500%.

  • Over the past 50 years, the consumption of sugar has tripled worldwide. Sugar sells because

  • it’s cheap and tastes goodit’s in the majority of processed foods we eat.

  • Butsome scientists say that sugar can be as bad for you as smoking or drinking a

  • lot of alcohol.

  • Here’s why.

  • When you eat sugar, you have sweetness receptors on your tongue, and in your pancreas and intestines,

  • that can sense two simple sugars: glucose and fructose.

  • Theyre found naturally in fruits, some vegetables and table sugar. Theyre also

  • added to soda, candy and a lot of processed foods.

  • Your body likes glucose, your cells depend on it for energy. When it enters your body,

  • your pancreas starts producing insulin and your brain understands youre metabolising

  • what you just ate. It tells your body that youre less hungry.

  • Fructose can only be metabolised by the liver. Because your body can’t use all that energy

  • there’s more fatty calories for you to keep. And the way fructose talks to your brain can

  • be deceiving.

  • When you consume fructose without the goodness of fibre in fruit and vegetables, it interferes

  • with the hormone leptin, which helps produce that feeling of being full.

  • So you think youre still hungry, and even though youve just had a lot of calories,

  • you keep eating.

  • And that’s not all. When these sugars hit the sweetness receptors on your tongue, they

  • also light up the reward pathways in your brain.

  • Neurotransmitters like dopamine are released and dopamine makes you feel really good. You

  • feel sooo goooood that you just keep eating that donut. Eatinthat donut. Ohhhh yeahhhh...

  • I can’t help it! We love sugar because it creates this feedback loop. When you eat it

  • you still feel hungry, and eating more of it feels so good.

  • And we know this cycle of sugar is bad for our health. Your liver can happily process

  • six to nine teaspoons of sugar a day. Butremember the average American consumes 22

  • teaspoons a day.

  • Because of our overconsumption, sugar contributes to the intake of excess calories which can

  • cause weight gain.

  • Higher intakes of fructose have been strongly linked to the obesity epidemic, a rise in

  • the level of type two diabetes and heart disease.

  • But more research and clinical trials are needed to show that it does cause them. The

  • only thing science can definitively say is caused by sugar is tooth decay.

  • We love sugar because our brain and body has this response to it that we can’t really

  • control. Cutting back on sweet stuff definitely helps your relationship with sugaryou

  • won’t crave it as much. And the next time you want something sweet, remember that

  • youre probably sweet enough.

  • Hey guysthis episode is the first of three that I’m making about sugar. There

  • was so much information out there and I have such a sweet tooth it couldn’t all fit into

  • one episode. On Monday: Can you be addicted to sugar? See you then.

As much as we hate to admit it, we all know that too much sugar is bad for our health

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