Re: re reading Potatoes not Prozac
In Response To: re reading Potatoes not Prozac ()

: Hi Allison,

It isa great that you are posting your thoughts about the book.

I would like to just add a few things....

A few weeks ago, I mentioned my
: intention to read Potatoes not
: Prozac again. I got sidetracked by
: a sick pet and things going on in
: my husband's family but now I am
: resuming.

: In the introduction, Kathleen talks
: about science versus experience.
: Scientists look at little tiny
: pieces of a puzzle, in controlled
: situations where they look at just
: one variable at a time, and then
: make little changes to test their
: theories. I can relate to this,
: because I used to do computer
: programming, and I would make just
: one tiny change at a time when I
: was trying to solve a problem,
: instead of making a lot of changes
: at once and seeing if it worked.
: The scientists are just looking at
: one little area, so the people
: studying addiction don't read the
: nutrition studies, and the people
: studying nutrition don't read the
: addiction literature etc. I
: picture the scientists in little
: isolated silos doing their
: experiments.

: Kathleen came from a clinical
: background, working with patients
: who were struggling with
: addiction. People's problems and
: lives aren't simple and you can't
: control all the variables.
: Kathleen read studies in a variety
: of different fields and based on
: her experience with addicts and
: what she read in the literature,
: she came up with the theory of
: sugar sensitivity.

Actually, her most compelling evidence came from. her own personal
experience with addiction, and the role it played in her life. :h11)
The reason I noticed all the stuff was it resonated with me on such a deep level.

(The following
: is quoted from the book.)
: • There is an inherited biochemical
: condition called sugar sensitivity
: that has predictable and specific
: effects on the brain and on a
: person’s behavior. What foods a
: sugar-sensitive person eats and
: when they eat them will affect
: them profoundly.
: • Sugar has the same pain-killing and
: euphoria-stimulating effect in the
: human body as opioid drugs do.
: These drug effects of sugar are
: heightened in sugar-sensitive
: people. Sugar addiction, like drug
: addiction, is real and can open
: the gate to other addictions.
: • Changing what a sugar-sensitive
: person eats and when they eat it
: can have a profound effect on
: their well-being and behavior.

: Even though there is no scientific
: study that proves this theory
: (just bits and pieces but not the
: whole thing together) I certainly
: believe it is true, based on my
: experience and other people's
: experiences.

+++Well since I wrote the book, there is now very clear evidence that
sugar is an addictive substance that affects the same neural pathways that
alcohol and opioid drugs do. So that part has been substantiated.
The *proof* of the impact of changing one's diet can heal the biochemistry comes
from our lived experience.

Even if you are brand
: new and haven't experienced how
: things change when you change your
: eating, parts of this theory
: probably make sense to you, based
: on your own experience.

: My favorite part of this section was
: how Kathleen took information from
: many different areas and
: synthesized them into a theory. It
: kind of reminds me of how when I
: was in college and was writing
: multiple final papers on different
: topics, in the middle of the
: process I'd find some connection
: between them even though they had
: started out seeming totally
: unrelated, although I never found
: anything like this, and of course
: her process was intentional.

: Allison

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