What You Drink Impacts Your Diet, Part Six: Soda - Page 5

Part of: Fitness Flash

If you abstain from soda altogether –– a wise choice –– there are other sugary drinks you may be consuming that deserve careful consideration.  These include other soft drinks like Kool-aid and Crystal Light, sports drinks like Gatorade, and juice boxes, which will be our next STOP.

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Article Author: Christine Lakatos

Mother of two awesome daughters, diet book author, ACE Certified fitness expert, and post at  Fitness Flash. My new venture –– ferocious researcher and "Green Corruption" blogger. I'm also a retired athlete, fitness competitor and American Gladiator's contestant, plus more.  

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Article comments

  • 1 - Brian aka Guppusmaximus

    Jun 27, 2010 at 7:24 am

    Nice Article....

    Though, I still argue that anything in excess can be very bad for you. With that in mind, your next article should cover 100% fruit juice because sugar IS sugar. Your body converts all sugars into fat and it doesn't discriminate nor can it tell the difference between glucose or fructose.

    So, people shouldn't feel safe in consuming an excess amount of fruit just because it is natural.

  • 2 - Christine

    Jun 27, 2010 at 7:34 am

    Yes, Brian, I agree. However, with fruit you get some vitamins and minerals, while "white sugar" is empty (stripped of all it's nutritional value). And if you eat whole fruit you get the added fiber. Again, not so with "white sugar."

  • 3 - Brian aka Guppusmaximus

    Jun 28, 2010 at 6:07 am

    Still, that doesn't change the fact that you could have weight issues if you eat too much fruit.Especially, if you choose the juice route or canned fruits. Again, moderation is the key (along with a proper exercise plan).

    As for your opinion about milk, I believe it totally depends on what your idea of a healthy diet really is. If you're looking to just to be thin with no concern about strength training then, in my opinion, that doesn't really support any of the claims that all fat is bad for you nor is it necessarily healthy either.

    When someone merely focuses on cutting out their fat intake but overlooks the amount of protein their cutting out as well then they really are doing a disservice to their body. Milk has plenty of nutrients that have been proven beneficial to a diet that includes a strength training regiment which isn't limited to just heavy duty bodybuilders. Again, skinny doesn't equate to healthy...

  • 4 - Brian aka Guppusmaximus

    Jun 28, 2010 at 6:13 am

    *Oops* I also meant to add:

    If you really are concerned about weight management issues when having dairy products, but you still enjoy them, have them in the morning for breakfast.

    Secondly, I really don't see the difference between supporting the consumption of yogurt & cottage cheese but not milk...can you explain?

  • 5 - Brian aka Guppusmaximus

    Jul 04, 2010 at 7:48 am

    Still no answer Christine?

    Oh and I want to apologize for not reading your article all the way through. But, now that I have, I am quite disappointed that you would take the alarmist / conspiracy route that you have in regards to artificial sweeteners. I could care less about the amount of books that Dr. Mercola has sold. His site screams of marketing propaganda based on fear & intimidation by way of conspiracies... Please, spare us.

    Again, I agree that no one should base their beverage intake solely on ones with artificial sweeteners(Moderation is key),but, to infer that this stuff could cause cancer without any hard evidence to prove it is, well, irresponsible. And, even though you try to dismiss your own involvement in perpetuating this propaganda by stating "to err on the side of caution" is rather pretentious.

    All I know is that right now, at this moment, that:

    "Aspartame, the sweetening ingredient in Equal has been documented in more than 200 objective scientific studies. The safety of aspartame has been confirmed by regulatory authorities in more than 100 countries, including the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Health Canada, and the European Commission's Scientific Committee on Food, as well as by experts with the United Nations' Food and Agricultural Organization and World Health Organization"

    And Splenda:

    "has been the subject of extensive safety testing, with more than 20 years of research and over 110 scientific studies. Its safety is well documented and the Food and Drug Administration, along with regulatory, health, and food safety authorities from around the world, have concluded that it is safe."

    So your claim that some of these "fake" sugars,"have not been on the market long enough to confirm whether or not they are truly safe and at what levels." is,again, irresponsible and shows your lack of research.

    Sorry Christine, I just don't appreciate that kind of propaganda or speculation from a fitness trainer / nutritionist.

  • 6 - Igor Griffiths

    Jul 04, 2010 at 12:40 pm

    As someone who hates to gym style exercise, swimming lengths irritates me, why bother going to the other end just to swim back again! I managed to lose 4 waist inches using a low carb diet whilst my foot was dead for 3 months due to a trapped nerve after exercising on a rowing machine.

    However my digestinal tract is now hyper sensitive to polyols as result of switching my body to lower carb diet, so I have to avoid a lot of sugar free foods.

    As regards diet drinks, especially the colas I would much rather drink water, but half the time at vending machines, its cola or nothing and then its back to the addiction with cola and caffeine. At my worst I was drinking 6 litres of Diet Coke most weekends.

    Whatever you eat it would always be better to choose the real food item and avoid the foods that need science degrees to understand.

    However, being a healthy eater does not make me a good consumer and therefore the market will try and keep me addicted to cola and fast food, it is doing well.

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