(Type 1 and Type 2 Diabetes Articles. Information you need to know)
Reversing diabetes means making tough choices in foods, nutrition and exercise
In this article we will talk about how dietary sugars (white flour, corn syrup,
table sugar, etc.) alter blood sugar levels and how the body tries to regulate blood sugar
through glycogen storage, insulin secretion and body fat creation.
Specifically, we're exploring the causes of adult-onset diabetes and how
people can both prevent and even reverse diabetes by applying fundamental knowledge of how the
human body deals with dietary sugars and refined carbohydrates.
This process of storing sugar as glycogen or converting it to body fat is
initiated by a hormone produced by the pancreas. This hormone, of course, is called insulin.
If you consume refined carbohydrates on a regular basis, your pancreas will become
overstressed. It's just like if you run your car 24 hours a day and keep revving the engine --
eventually something's going to wear out and break. This is what happens with the pancreas,
and people who have adult onset diabetes often have an overstressed pancreas. You could call
it a worn-out pancreas, although technically that's not an accurate metaphor.
The other problem is that type 2 diabetics have decreased insulin sensitivity
in the cells of their body. That means that even though insulin is being produced and
circulating through the bloodstream, the cells in the body aren't responding to it. That's
why reduced insulin sensitivity is a physiological marker that indicates a person is about
to become diabetic. If your insulin sensitivity is reduced, you are on the track to diabetes.
In the medical community this is called pre-diabetes. And once again, it is not a genetic
disorder -- it is something that is directly caused by the foods you choose to consume and
the level of physical activity you choose to pursue.
If you are pre-diabetic, that means you have reduced insulin sensitivity but
haven't yet been diagnosed with full-blown adult onset type 2 diabetes. In most cases, you can
directly reverse this condition and return to a healthy metabolic state by making new choices
in your foods and physical exercise. Remember, diabetes is a disease that is quite easy to
reverse if you catch it early enough. And if you're pre-diabetic, you have an opportunity
to reverse the situation right now.
Reversing it means making some tough choices in your life. It means, first
of all, getting out and engaging in physical exercise on a regular basis. That's 45 minutes
a day of walking, or something more strenuous if you can handle it. If you can't walk 45
minutes a day, walk 30 minutes a day. If you can't walk 30 minutes a day, walk 5 minutes a
day. If you can't walk 5 minutes a day, just get up out of your chair 3 times -- do
something to increase your exercise stamina, and work towards walking 45 minutes a day.
Everybody can do something. Sitting around doing nothing is no excuse, and it will directly
lead you to full-blown diabetes. (Diabetics are really good at making excuses. I know, I
used to be pre-diabetic. I would find every reason in the world to avoid physical exercise.)
The second thing people can do is give up all foods that promote diabetes.
This means foods that contain ingredients like refined white sugar, sucrose, corn syrup,
high-fructose corn syrup, dextrose, white flour, enriched flours, and so on. So that means
getting rid of all ice cream, cakes, cookies, sweets, desserts, candy bars, etc. These foods
are causing your diabetes. Now, you won't hear this from the American Diabetes Association,
because that organization is, to put it bluntly, actually thriving on the skyrocketing trend
of diabetes in the United States. I've never found the ADA to actually give beneficial
nutritional advice that would help people reverse diabetes. Remember, they are funded in
large part by pharmaceutical companies who would actually lose customers if people reversed
their diabetic conditions. It's not a conspiracy: it's just plain old corporate greed.
If you want to reverse diabetes, and you want to know the truth about it,
keep reading articles like this one, because I'm going to give it to you straight. I'm
telling you that you've got a make a list of all the foods and food ingredients to avoid
for the rest of your life. And then you must commit to avoiding those foods. No exceptions.
By the way, another side effect of all of this sugar consumption is, of
course, rampant weight gain. If you're suffering from obesity (or a very high level of
body fat), chances are you got that way by consuming refined carbohydrates. This is why
the Atkins diet has been so successful for people who are willing to stick with it. I'm
not a huge supporter of the low carb lifestyle as practiced by most Americans, although I
do support the avoidance of all processed carbohydrates as recommended by the Atkins
program and other low carb dieting systems such as the Hamptons Diet.
Consuming refined carbs and added sugars (see related ebook on added
sugars) will put weight on your body faster than any other nutritional strategy. The way
to take it off is to avoid these foods for the rest of your life. By the way, if you're
going to eat low carb foods, be sure to check out my book called Low-Carb Diet Warning,
at TruthPublishing.com, because there's a safe way to eat low carb, and then there's a
very unhealthy way to eat low carb, and sadly, most Americans who are pursuing low carb
diets are eating the unhealthy way.
Here's another interesting point in all of this -- when your body adds
fat during this process of converting blood sugar to body fat, it has a blueprint of
where to put that fat. For most women, the fat goes on the buttocks and the hips, potentially
on the breasts, and eventually under the arms. For men, most of the that weight goes right
to the belly, the gut, and only later will it move up to the chest area, the bottom of the
neck, and maybe the buttocks and legs as well. The point is, your body has a blueprint of
where it is going to store fat, and that blueprint is unique to you. You cannot change
this blueprint.
Some people foolishly believe that if they do a bunch of sit-ups, they
are going to somehow remove body fat from their abdomen. That's not true at all. Your body
decides where to put it on and where to take it off. Other people, who are just as foolish,
think that if they go get liposuction, they're going to remove all the body fat from their
thighs or their stomach or some other area where it's not cosmetically appealing.
But what happens is now they're missing those fat cells that have been
ripped out of their torso through liposuction, but they keep on eating the way they've
been eating that made them fat in the first place. They keep on eating all those sweets
and ice creams and sugars and other refined carbohydrates. So what happens? Well, the body
has to put the fat somewhere, so now all of a sudden, the body is putting this fat in
strange places where the fat cells still exist. A woman might end up with massive deposits
of fat hanging off of her arms, or the back of her legs and thighs might balloon in size
even though her midsection is now apparently much thinner because she doesn't have fat
cells there.
Liposuction is one of those surgeries that looks good at first, but if you
don't change your lifestyle, you're going to look like some sort of Frankenstein monster in
the long run. You're going to have to change your diet sooner or later if you want to look
normal again, and if you'd just make the decision to change your diet earlier, you wouldn't
need the liposuction surgery in the first place. So, in my book, liposuction is absolutely
useless. In fact, it's worse than useless -- it's a dangerous procedure that scars your
body and that disrupts the normal fat storage system your body was designed for.
Source: http://www.newstarget.com/z002035.html