Wednesday, December 05, 2012

You Can Do Pull-Ups


Yes, You Can Do Pull-Ups For Major Reps. Here's How!

What if a single movement could rock your entire upper body, from the biceps to the back to the core? It can. It's your old enemy the pull-up, and it's time the two of you made peace.


A perfectly executed pull-up looks crisp and smooth and has been known to induce excessive gawking from onlookers. Besides radiating to-the-bone badassery, this exercise is arguably the ultimate measure of upper body strength.
Think about it: how many folks do you know who can bust out a set of 10 pull-ups with perfect form? What about weighted? People who can do them with perfection, you may have noticed, tend to be leaner and more muscular than the average gym-goer. This is no coincidence.
I'm not just talking to the gentlemen. Ladies, I'm talking to you—yes, you. I know there are just as many women as there are men out there who are shaking their heads thinking, "but women can't do pull-ups." What a load of bull! Just like the belief that being out in the rain can give you a cold (you actually need to catch a virus) or that stress makes you sprout grey hairs (sorry, mom—that's all genetics), the idea that women aren't made to do pull-ups needs to be effectively trampled to death.
You can do them, and what's more, you should do them. Now let's make it happen.

Why Do A Pull-Up?

A pull-up is more than just a great way to show off. It recruits every muscle in the upper body and is, surprisingly, one of the greatest activators of the core. Besides torching the lats (aka "wings"), the pull-up also hits the shoulders, arms, and traps. If you're looking to build strength and get the most bang for your buck for your time in the gym, ditch the bro curls—or at least save them for dessert—and make pull-ups the main course.
Yes, it's true that women have poorer relative upper body strength as compared to men; it's the way our bodies are built. But if anything, this makes the pull-up even more important for women than it is for men.
Remember: There's a difference between hard and impossible. It is quite the jump for a female to cross this chasm for the first time. But I can tell you that it's been done over and over, by myself and many other fit chicks out there.

What's A Proper Pull-Up?

I've seen it all: legs flailing about, kipping (don't even get me started on those), and a half-range of motion or less. With any of these methods, you're either cheating or making the movement way more difficult than necessary.
The pull-up—as compared with the underhanded chin-up—uses an overhand grip on the bar. I like to put my hands shoulder-width apart, because a grip that's too wide can place excessive stress on the shoulders and elbows. Start in the dead hang position and cross your legs behind you. Before you pull yourself up over the bar, keep the following cues in mind:
  • Look straight ahead. This will keep the chin tucked. The last thing you want is to strain your neck.
  • Think of using your lats, not your biceps. All this will take is having a friend poke you in the lats a few times right before you begin the movement.
  • Pull your shoulder blades back and down.
  • Draw your chest up toward the bar. Clear your chin over the bar at the top and squeeze.
  • Control the movement on the way down.
At the bottom of the movement, stop just shy of lockout—keep a slight bend in your elbows.

The Build-Up To The Pull-Up

Not there yet? No problem. Luckily, there's a lot you can do to help yourself get closer to doing that mythical set of "8-10 pull-ups" you see in all those workout programs.
Many people treat the lat pull-down or the assisted pull-up machine as an acceptable substitute for the pull-up, or a way to build up to pull-ups. I'm not one of them. While the lat pull-down has its time and place, it places the individual in a fixed position and doesn't use any of the core stabilizers. With the assisted pull-up machine, assistance is provided throughout the whole range of motion. In contrast, the methods I prefer only help at the bottom of the movement, the most difficult portion.
I know that what I say runs contrary to what you see happening in your gym every day, but for my money, these four options will get you there faster, and stronger:

/ Resistance Bands

Get your hands on a whole set of these if you can. The bands are color coded by thickness. The thicker the band, the more assistance you will get. Loop the band over a pull-up bar and get one knee—or a foot for even more assistance—into it.
Now perform a pull-up as normal. You'll find that the band provides progressively less help as you pull your body up, and it's essentially all you by the time your chin clears the bar. The set is finished when you feel like you can bust out only 1 or 2 more reps without cheating.

/ Jump Negatives

This exercise places the emphasis on the eccentric portion of the movement, which will help you improve the quality of your reps. Stand on a stool and get into position. You'll skip the concentric (i.e., going up) movement and simply jump up to get your chin over the bar. When you come down, you'll resist gravity as much as you can and make your way down slowly over a count of 10.
If you do these properly, you'll hate yourself by the end. Perform anywhere between 6-to-10 in a set.

/ Improve Your Grip

For pulling exercises such as pull-ups, rows, and deadlifts, grip strength tends to be the limiting factor. To strengthen your grip, try practicing variations of the farmer's walk.
Grab a pair of heavy dumbbells and walk as far as you can. Fifty yards or so is a good length. Do multiple sets to wrap up your workout 2-3 times per week.

/ Strengthen Your Back With Other Exercises

The inverted or supine row has great carryover to the pull-up, as do other variations of the row. Dumbbell rows, barbell rows, Pendlay rows, Kroc rows—they can all help. Incorporate these into your training sessions.

Make Progress On The Home-Front

So how do you master your first pull-up? The short answer: practice, and practice often. Like just about every other skill in life, mastering the pull-up requires that you consistently execute the behaviors that will bring you closer to your goal. In the case of the pull-up, this means high volume and high frequency, but never to the point of failure.
This method, called "grease the groove," was invented by Pavel Tsatsouline. I've found it to work exceptionally well. Pavel puts it mathematically:
Specificity + Frequent Practice = Success
This means that if you're really on a mission to master your first pull-up, then you should sprinkle your sets throughout the day, nearly every day.
You don't have to work in a gym where you have all-day access to a bar in order to pull this off, but you should consider buying—or building—an at-home pull-up bar to hang over your bathroom door or somewhere similar. Every time you pass the bar, or at least 4-6 times per day, do some jump negatives or band-assisted pull-ups.
The key to greasing the groove is to never let yourself get to the point where you feel like you're grinding it out. If you look like you're having a seizure as you attempt to pull yourself up, it's time to call it quits.

You're Almost There!

So when do you make the transition from resistance bands to strict bodyweight pull-ups? If you're using an inch-thick band and you can bust out 6-8 clean reps with ease, chances are you're ready for your first pull-up. Go on, give it a try. When you're feeling fresh, wrap your hands around the bar and get your chin over that damn thing. Feels good, doesn't it?
Once you make it through this barrier, getting 3-5 reps is a breeze. Continue practicing the "grease the groove" method described above—but again, never go to failure. As long as you're consistent, you'll earn looks of respect from even the biggest meatheads in the gym.
As you get better, you'll quickly realize that besides actively working on pull-ups themselves, dropping body fat will help you tremendously. Think about it: The leaner you are, the more lean mass you can utilize, and the less total bodyweight you have to pull. Of course, this feat will have to be accomplished largely in the kitchen—but that's a story for another time.
VIEW AUTHOR PAGESohee Lee holds a Bachelor's of Science in Human Biology from Stanford and is a NSCA certified trainer who loves living a fit life and helping others.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Gluten: Friend or Foe?


Experts debate whether gluten-free diets are a good 

weight-loss strategy

Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/384684-gluten-friend-or-foe/#ixzz2ClPkVtmU

Sep 26, 2011 | By Renee Roberson

Imagine a life in which your favorite comfort foods, such as pasta, bread, cereal and cookies, could cause you to become violently ill. This is reality for an estimated 3 million Americans who have been diagnosed with celiac disease, an autoimmune disorder that involves a severe reaction to foods containing gluten. Growing awareness of the condition, combined with consumer demand, has brought an increasing number of gluten-free products to store shelves in recent years. While people with celiac disease have little choice but to avoid gluten, others may be avoiding gluten in an effort to trim pounds. That may work -- but it may not be the best way to lose weight.
If someone just substitutes gluten-free versions of typical gluten-heavy foods (such as waffles, cereal, dessert mixes or baked goods), long-term weight loss is unlikely.

Where Gluten Hides

Gluten is the common name for the proteins found in specific grains, and it is found in all forms of wheat. Ashley Koff, a Los Angeles-based registered dietitian, uses the acronym "BROW" (barley, rye, oat and wheat) to help clients remember where gluten is found.

Examples of gluten-containing foods include breads, cookies, crackers, cake mixes, cereal, ice cream, packaged meats and cold cuts, pasta, and even soup broths and bouillon cubes. Koff says anyone with celiac disease must also be cautious about purchasing products that were manufactured in facilities that also process gluten products. They're often labeled with statements such as "contains wheat ingredients" or "made on shared equipment that also processes wheat."

Oats do not naturally contain gluten, but they're on Koff's "BROW" list for a reason. They're often grown near fields of wheat and rye, and farmers may rotate the fields, said Marlisa Brown, a registered dietitian in New York and author of "Gluten-Free, Hassle Free" and "Easy, Gluten-Free." She recommends that people who need to avoid gluten eat oats only if the oats are from certified gluten-free sources.

A Battle Within the Body

When a person with celiac disease eats foods containing gluten, his immune system attacks the small intestine. The resulting damage to the small intestine impairs the body's ability to absorb certain nutrients. The condition can cause fatigue, weight loss, abdominal pain, bloating, constipation or diarrhea.

In addition to those with full-blown celiac disease, some people have non-celiac gluten sensitivity. "Symptoms can be the same as someone with celiac, with the most typical symptoms being gas, bloating and irritable bowel syndrome," Brown said. "It is estimated that there are more than 20 million [people] with a non-celiac gluten sensitivity."

Other conditions may also involve a gluten reaction, at least in some individuals. "Diseases in the autoimmune class, such as fibromyalgia, Type 1 diabetes, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and rheumatoid arthritis, have also shown positive results when removing gluten from the diet, so many now follow that protocol," said Koff, adding that anyone suffering from irritable bowel syndrome might also want to consider a gluten-free diet.

No Weight-Loss Magic

With all the talk of gluten's negative aspects, people who aren't particularly sensitive to it but are simply looking to lose weight may give up foods containing gluten in hopes of shedding pounds. But does a gluten-free lifestyle automatically mean a smaller waistline? Experts say it depends on what gluten-free foods you eat.

Brown says that if a person goes on a gluten-free diet, giving up all pasta, packaged foods, cereal, desserts, bread and thickening agents such as gravy, and opts instead to consume more fruits, vegetables, lean meats, fish and low-fat dairy products, then, yes, weight loss could result.

But she points out that if someone just substitutes gluten-free versions of typical gluten-heavy foods (such as waffles, cereal, dessert mixes or baked goods), long-term weight loss is unlikely. In addition, many gluten-free foods are lower in vitamins and fiber than the foods they're replacing. When you're looking for gluten-free alternatives, consider adding healthful choices such as amaranth, buckwheat, legumes, teff, quinoa and sorghum.

Koff recommends replacing what she calls resistant-starch content (such as certain types of rice and potatoes) with whole foods for a greater chance of dropping pounds.

It Isn't All Bad

If you don't have a medical condition that requires you to avoid gluten, keeping gluten in your diet while improving the quality of foods you eat will make eating out and shopping for foods a lot easier. Some pros of gluten include being able to eat whole-grain breads and cereals that offer necessary fiber and nutrients such as B vitamins.

Bonnie Modugno, a registered dietitian in private practice in Santa Monica, California, points out the challenges of eating a gluten-free diet if you don't have to.

"You'll spend a lot of time reading food labels," she said. "You might get the same effect by limiting your starches and sugars. Moderation takes a lot of skill and discipline. My recommendation is to stick closer to the earth with beans, legumes, starchy vegetables, nuts and seeds."


Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/384684-gluten-friend-or-foe/#ixzz2ClPZv0QV

Monday, November 12, 2012

Competition Winners

Congratulations to the winners of our fitness competitions:

Ultimate Fitness Challenge
#1- Stacie Thrasher
#2- Jennifer Salinas
#3- Laura Blust

Ultimate Weight Loss Challenge
#1- Sherri Snyder
#2- Keegan Snyder
#3- Edna Ruiz


Friday, November 09, 2012

Awards Ceremony

Tomorrow at 10:00AM we will be having an award ceremony for UWLC/UFC winners in the conference room. 

Wednesday, November 07, 2012

Squatting Tips


Secret Of The Perfect Squat – Widen Your Stance


Squats are a staple of any sound weightlifting program. Whether gobletfront, or back squats, the value of this classic exercise is undoubted, not only in terms of quadriceps growth but also functional capacity in life. That's why what I'm about to say might sound like blasphemy: It's time to rethink the way we squat.
Most squats you see in gyms today are performed with the feet planted at shoulder-width or narrower. These types of squats give a good burn to the quadriceps, and some people use varying narrow stances to target specific areas on the quads. But squats are a movement, not a specific muscle developer. The entire body should be activated in the lift, and especially the posterior chain and core.
Taking a wider stance than shoulder-width has been shown to provide the same level of quad activation as a traditional "narrow" stance, but squatting wide also provides distinct advantages.
A wide stance works a greater number of muscles. Go wide, and you'll feel it in your glutes, your overall strength, and maybe in the back and knee pain you don't feel.

Go Wide, Young Man

Perhaps a better question to ask is "Why go narrow?" It could be argued that the narrow squat better mimics life applications, but the goal with a wide stance is muscular development and strength. There's always room in life for more strength.
If you decide to step out, you will notice the benefits:
1/
Glute Activation
If you want to think of squats as "developing" a certain muscle, it's better to think of the glutes than the quads.
The glutes are a tremendous source of power and strength, and if you can use their strength in a movement, you almost always should.
Take a wider stance when squatting, such as 140-150 percent of shoulder width. This allows for greater posterior displacement of the hips.
This displacement activates the glutes to a greater degree than narrow squats when depth is reached, according to research from the University of Abertay, in Dundee, Scotland.
A study at the University of Padova in Italy took the conclusion a step further, suggesting that "a large width is necessary for a greater activation of the gluteus maximus during back squats."
2/
Quadriceps Activation
Much of the popularity for narrow-stance squats is based on personal opinion and "feel." This is understandable. We train because we enjoy the challenge and the burn. We're taught that pain leads to success. A wider stance might not stimulate the same feeling on your quadriceps, but the activity is there.
The University of Padova study concluded that a wide stance produces the same muscular activation as a narrow stance in the quads, adductor major, vastus medialis and lateralis-everywhere but the glutes.
Make no mistake: Changing the stance changes the movement. Narrow stances require an anterior tracking of the knee, and while this is not inherently a bad movement, it does place a greater stress on the knee. Over time, the recessive forces exerted on the knee could lead to patellar tendon strains or tendonitis.
By comparison, reaching squat depth with a wide stance requires a lifter to maintain a more vertical shin position than a narrow stance. This stance places far less stress on the knee.
3/
Ankle Mobility
The narrow range of motion of the human ankle can be a limiting factor when performing a narrow-stance squat. A wider stance alleviates this issue by maintaining a more vertical shin position, providing an easier trip to reach depth.
Of course you could and should address your tight calves and lower legs with mobility drills andfoam rolling, but there's no reason you should limit your squatting pattern just because you can't reach depth in a narrow stance. Bump those feet out!
4/
Power Production
Power is what we're after, right? It is the heart of athletics, and no matter the activity, powerful players perform well. By activating more muscle fiber, and different muscle groups, wide squats provide a clear advantage for hypertrophic gains which can transfer to competitive athletics.
Wide squats are also more powerful, period. A recent study published in the Journal of Strength & Conditioning found that the squat power produced at 150 percent of shoulder-width was "significantly higher" than at 50 percent width, 100 percent, or at 200 percent.
This raises an important point: Some argue that ultra-wide stances such as 200 percent have value in geared lifting, but they are not generally thought to be best for power development.

It's All in the Hips

Hip strength and function have recently been getting much-needed attention in strength and conditioning programs. More trainers are emphasizing movements rather than muscles in an all-encompassing approach to training.
This is a fantastic way to combat the quad dominance and glute weakness that plague sedentary populations. Wide squats allow for more comprehensive movement that better works the hips than traditional squats.
The hips are multidirectional joints, producing force in three planes of motion. The wide-stance squat provides the best option to train the hips in all three planes. The wide movement exhibits greater hip flexion and smaller plantarflexion angles than narrow-stance squats. It also produces significantly larger hip extension movements.
Wide-stance squats are achieved with a posterior tracking of the hips, which leads to greater hip extension to return the bar to the original position. Wide squats have been shown to produce greater abduction and adduction, with greater internal and external rotation of the femur during the lift than narrow squats.
Spreading movement across all three planes of motion helps to create a stable hip joint that can handle a tremendous amount of stress, not only in the gym but also in life.

Save Your Spine



Some argue that the horizontal positioning of the torso during a wide stance squat creates larger loads on the lumbar, as compared to a narrow stance. This is believed to increase the risk for low-back injuries. Recent studies do not support this conclusion.
When performing a narrow squat, the distance to parallel is greater than in a wide squat. Reaching depth in a narrow squat requires tucking the lumbar under the torso to facilitate hip flexion. The resulting flexion of the spine under a load puts pressure on the L5/S1 area, which could be linked to bulging discs and other spinal complications.
This is not to say that a traditional squat will cause low-back injury, but without consistent development in this squatting pattern, the greater force placed on the spine can take a toll over time. The posterior movement of the hips in a wide stance can contribute to a more neutral back positioning without tucking your lumbar.
A wider stance also recruits more muscles to perform the task, and is a more encompassing movement compared to a narrow stance. The goal of any compound lift should be engaging as many muscles as possible, and it is clear that a wider stance better accomplishes this task.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

On Sugar


From: Paleo Diet Lifestyle

Introduction

It sneaks in everywhere, hiding behind a long list of different names and clever disguises. It creeps into tomato sauce, lurks in every salad dressing, and infiltrates otherwise-innocent canned soups. Even bacon isn’t safe! If you spend any time at all on the Paleo diet, you practically start to see sugar peering out from behind every corner, shrouded in a black trench coat and hatching nefarious schemes to trap you in its clutches.
Assigning personality to a food can itself be unhealthy, but in this case, the food doesn’t even deserve all its bad press. Of course, like any other food, sugar is unhealthy when eaten to excess, or when eaten in a processed, refined, and artificial form. Some people would do better to avoid it – just as some people would do better to avoid nightshades, dairy, or eggs. But in the context of a diet rich in nutrients, sugar – especially sugar from whole foods like fruit or dairy – is not the kiss of death.

What Is Sugar?

Most of us think of “sugar” as the white powder we like to add to our coffee, but in biological terms, sugar is nothing but the building blocks of carbohydrates. Sugars come in several different types, including single sugars and double sugars (combinations of two single sugars). Since your body digests them all differently, the distinctions among all these types of sugars are actually quite important.
Any food with a carb content greater than zero will have some sugar in it. Even foods we don’t usually think of as “sugary,” like potatoes, contain sugar in the form of glucose. Refined foods like white flour and table sugar are called “simple carbohydrates” because their molecular structure includes single or double sugars. Whole grains and legumes are called “complex carbohydrates” because they’re made of three or more sugars. When you eat simple carbohydrates, your body can use them for energy right away (this is why you can get a “sugar rush” from eating too much candy); when you eat complex carbohydrates, your body has to break them down into simple carbs first. Since this process takes some time, most people don’t get the same immediate rush of energy from complex carbohydrates.
The role of these complex carbohydrates, also called starches, in the diet is itself a fascinating topic, but this article will focus on simple carbohydrates and the way we break them down. Understanding what sugar is, and the different forms that it can take, is important for everyone attempting to maintain a healthy diet in the face of the post-industrial food environment. As sugar has come under intense scrutiny for potentially contributing to the modern obesity crisis, this knowledge can help us interpret the reams of conflicting studies and chart a sane and healthy course between binging on Jolly Ranchers and panicking over every strawberry.

Sugar and the Science of Obesity

The number of studies on the relationship between sugar and weight gain is enormous, but unfortunately, this mass of scientific literature has not managed to produce anything like a consensus. The studies that exist are frustratingly inconclusive, and seem to contradict each other more than they agree. An hour of searching for scientific studies will give you a huge pile of evidence that sugar is the underlying cause of every modern health problem, and an equally huge pile proving that sugar is actually harmless – in some rodent studies, a higher sugar intake even appeared to promote leanness!
Making sense out of this huge mass of contradictory data is daunting. One fairly comprehensivereview of studies on sugar and weight gain concluded that the decisive factor is not sugar, but calories: only hypercaloric trials (trials where sugar intake caused a net increase in caloric intake) produced weight gain, and that this might just as easily be due to the calories. Thus, it’s important to separate the effects of sugar specifically from the effects of simply adding calories to the diet.
This is especially true if the subjects are already overeating, as in this study. In a conclusion that shouldn’t surprise anyone, scientists discovered that a group of overweight and obese adults experienced all kinds of negative effects (including weight gain and metabolic damage) when they added sugar-sweetened beverages to their diet as 25% of their daily calories. However, this study is a perfect illustration of the many complexities involved in determining the effect of sugar in the diet. First, obese people are already metabolically deranged: people with a healthy metabolism might not react the same way. Second, 25% of calories is nowhere near a moderate sugar consumption; finally, the consequences of drinking highly processed sweetened beverages do not necessarily extend to natural sources of sugar like fruit.
All of these confounding factors suggest that something much more complicated is at work than the simplistic idea that “sugar makes you sick and fat.” Anthropological studies of traditional hunter-gatherer diets have also failed to find a conclusive link between sugar and health problems: while some hunter-gatherers do eat a diet very low in sugar, others, such as the Hadza in Tanzania or the Kuna in Panama, eat a diet fairly high in sugar without any noticeable difference in health or body composition.
The reams of contradictory evidence about sugar consumption make it clear that just talking about “the effect of sugar on the body” is very imprecise, because it fails to specify three very important points. What type of sugar, how much, and whose body? The effects of sugar also depend on what kind of food you get the sugar from: chugging a liter of Coke is a world away from eating an orange, even though they both contain sugar. Making a blanket statement about how all sugar is always harmful for everyone sounds very tough-love and inspiring, but it isn’t necessarily true.

What Type of Sugar, How Much, and Whose Body?

As noted above, “sugar” is a term that can actually refer to one of several different compounds. Table sugar is just one of these compounds. Instead of assuming that all types of sugar are the same, it’s important to read any research on “sugar” with a crucial question in mind: what kind?
As noted above, sugars are generally separated into two broad categories: single and double. Single sugars include glucose (found in fruits and starchy carbohydrates), fructose (found only in fruits), and galactose (found in dairy). Double sugars are combinations of these single sugars: one very common double sugar is sucrose (table sugar), which is a 1:1 mix of glucose and fructose. Lactose is a mixture of glucose and galactose. High fructose corn syrup sounds like it should be 80 or 90% fructose, but the ratio of glucose to fructose that it contains is closer to 1:1. Honey is another double sugar, but the ratio of glucose to fructose in honey varies, depending on the bees that produced it.
Each different single sugar is digested differently. Glucose, for example, can be sent directly into your muscles and other cells, and either used immediately or stored as glycogen for future energy.Fructose, on the other hand, needs to be processed by your liver first, and either turned into fat (in a process called de novo lipogenesis) or glucose. Because it’s harder to metabolize, many people have trouble digesting fructose, while negative reactions to glucose are much less common. Seeing fructose metabolism as nothing but a less efficient way of getting glycogen, many Paleo researchers have concludes that fructose is the “bad sugar.” Glucose (the sugar found in “safe starches” like yams and white rice) might be acceptable, but fructose is out.
The problem with this approach is that it ignores another important question: how much?
Excess sugar or a huge dose of fructose is clearly harmful. If nothing else, eating too much sugar makes it very easy to eat too many calories – especially if you get that sugar through sweetened drinks that don’t fill you up for very long. Metabolizing large amounts of sugar, especially fructose, is also stressful to the body: too much fructose can put a heavy strain on your liver, and cause oxidative stress and inflammation. Excess fructose interrupts your normal production of leptin (the hormone that tells your body when to stop feeling hungry), making it very easy to gain weight. Too much sugar of any kind – glucose or fructose – can also lead to all the problems of a high carbohydrate diet: insulin resistance, weight gain, inflammation, and diabetes.
Eating too much sugar is dangerous, but this doesn’t necessarily prove that any level of sugar consumption is bad: eating too much of anything is problematic. Vitamin A could also be considered a “dose-dependent toxin” (something that harms your body if you eat too much of it), but this doesn’t mean we should avoid it altogether!
So how much sugar is too much for the body to process safely? The answer depends on yet another question: whose body? Many foods do not have the same effect on everyone who eats them. A perfect example of this is dairy. If you don’t have the gene that allows you to produce lactase, the lactose in dairy can make you feel very sick. If you do have that gene, you can enjoy dairy products without a problem. So it’s silly to say that dairy is a “safe food” or a “harmful food:” whether it’s safe or harmful depends on the person eating it.
In many ways, the same is true of any kind of sugar. Since digesting sugar requires a healthy metabolism and a certain degree of insulin sensitivity, the upper boundary of a healthy sugar intake is probably much smaller for people who already have trouble with insulin metabolism, such as diabetics or people who are already obese. On the other hand, people with a healthy metabolism might not have any problems digesting a moderate amount of sugar.
As with any carbohydrate, the amount of sugar that you can eat healthily also depends on your activity level: very active people frequently burn through the glycogen stored in their muscles, so when they eat carbohydrates, the glucose goes to replenishing the glycogen stores, not to creating fat. On the other hand, sedentary people need to be much more moderate with their carb intake, since they don’t have as great a need for glucose in the diet.
Additionally, some people with specific digestive disorders should avoid certain types of sugars. People with Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) very frequently suffer from a problem called fructose malabsorption, an intolerance to fructose that can cause a variety of digestive problems. In this case, avoiding fructose can provide significant relief of IBS symptoms. People sensitive to FODMAPs should avoid foods high in fructose and several other types of sugars like sugar alcohols, since these can irritating to the gut. It can also be beneficial to steer clear of sugars in general if you’re struggling with an overgrowth of harmful gut bacteria like Candida: since sugar is these bacteria’s favorite food, avoiding it can help get your gut flora back under control.
Physical problems aren’t the only reasons why someone might want to avoid sugar. It can also be a very problematic food for anyone recovering from a binge eating disorder. Switching to a Paleo diet high in nutrients and cutting out all food toxins and processed foods can do a world of good for your body, but it doesn’t remove the emotional and psychological issues that underlie an eating disorder. It’s not uncommon for recovering binge eaters to have trouble moderating their intake of some foods on the Paleo diet, and foods high in natural sugars (like fruits) are among the most problematic. Thus, if you’re recovering from an eating disorder, it might be helpful to restrict your sugar intake, at least at first.
In short, the answer to “What effects does sugar have on the body?” is, “It depends.” It depends on what kind of sugar, how much of it, and exactly whose body. An overweight, diabetic, and sedentary office worker digesting a bowl of ice cream and a lean, healthy athlete digesting a bowl of strawberries are both, technically, metabolizing sugar. But these two situations are so different that they barely deserve the same name.
Watermelon

Where is it From?

The example above illustrates another important consideration with sugar: how you get it. Think of the difference between meat and protein shakes. There’s nothing wrong with eating meat that contains protein, but protein powders and shakes are generally harmful. Why? Because protein powders provide protein in an artificial, processed, and highly concentrated form that our bodies don’t digest well, accompanied by a hefty wallop of preservatives, sweeteners, and other chemicals. There’s nothing wrong with eating protein, but where you get it from matters. The same is true for sugar. People don’t eat pure fructose or galactose; they eat foods, and foods have much more to them than sugar.
First, some sugar-containing foods also contain other valuable vitamins and minerals: one orange, for example, contains 12 grams of sugar, but also significant amounts of Vitamin C, Folate, Calcium, and Potassium. Four ounces of Coke provide the same amount of sugar, no vitamins or minerals, and a Nutrition Facts label full of unpronounceable chemicals and additives. It shouldn’t come as a surprise that the orange and the Coke will have a very different effect on your overall health – especially since many people eat one orange and then stop, while almost nobody drinks just 4 ounces of Coke at a time (a standard can is 8 ounces; a bottle is 20 ounces).
Studies that try to link sugar and obesity seem to have come to the same conclusion. Natural forms of sugar don’t appear to be reliably linked to obesity; the problem comes with refined and processed forms like high fructose corn syrup. Most studies that attempted to correlate overall sugar intake with weight gain in humans couldn’t find a clear connection, but sugary drinks (which contain very highly processed sugars) were clearly linked to a higher rate of obesity. This is why hunter-gatherers eating traditional diets can include sugar as a high percentage of their daily caloric intake, but stay lean and healthy with none of the metabolic problems associated with the first world. Many of these groups are even famous for the great efforts they make to get honey – and yet they don’t see the same health problems from it as we see from the sugar in Coke and Skittles. In other words, where you get your sugar matters.
One possible explanation for this has to do with food reward. As discussed in a previous article aboutobesity, the food reward theory states that “hyperpalatable” foods (processed food products that present us with tastes and textures much more intense than anything found in nature) cause obesity because they confuse our natural appetite regulation systems. Highly processed foods and beverages definitely fall into the category of superstimuli that we aren’t designed to handle. Fruit and other natural sources of sugar, on the other hand, are not hyperpalatable, so they don’t cause the same negative metabolic reaction. One study even fed the same sugar water to two groups of mice: one group that was capable of tasting sweetness, and another group that wasn’t. The group that could taste sweetness got fat; the group that couldn’t, didn’t.
Whether or not the food reward theory can adequately explain the difference between natural and artificial sugars, it’s clearly important to consider what kind of foods we get our sugar from. Sugary drinks do promote obesity, but this doesn’t mean that a whole, natural food like a banana will have the same metabolic effect as a glass of soda loaded with all kinds of refined and processed chemicals.

Table Sugar Substitutes: Other Natural Sweeteners

Since processed sugar is so much more harmful than natural sugar from whole foods, one common question about refined table sugar is whether other, more natural sweeteners are preferable. The idea of these foods as “sugar substitutes” is somewhat misleading, since common “sugar substitutes” like honey and maple syrup do also contain sugars. We’ve chosen to refer to one type of sugar as “sugar” and another type as “honey,” but in the end they’re both biologically made up of sugars. All natural sweeteners contain some form of sugar, even if we call them by another name.
Nevertheless, some replacements for table sugar do have other advantages that are worth noting. Honey, for example, has several beneficial compounds (although the specific content will depend on the flowers available). Chemically, honey is approximately 40% glucose, 36% fructose, and 24% other sugars, although the exact proportions vary depending on what the bees ate. While the high fructose content can cause trouble for some people with fructose malabsorption problems, the fructose in honey is accompanied by an equal amount of glucose, which makes it much easier to digest. Furthermore, honey has the advantage of a long evolutionary history: humans have been going to incredible lengths to get it since we figured out how delicious it was. Several preindustrial peoplesconsumed a significant percentage of their daily calories from honey on a regular basis: one 10,000-year-old painting from Spain shows two men gathering honey from a beehive. Raw honey (as opposed to pasteurized honey) is also a completely unprocessed food, while even other natural sweeteners like maple syrup and molasses require some processing.
If there’s any such thing as a “Paleo sweetener,” honey is probably it. But honey is far from the only naturally-occurring sweet substance. Maple syrup is relatively low in fructose (making it a good option for the fructose-intolerant), and contains manganese, potassium, iron, and calcium. Molasses is essentially table sugar, but with nutrients: it contains minerals like iron, calcium, and magnesium that are stripped from table sugar when it’s refined and processed to get its white, powdery consistency.Coconut palm sugar is a relative newcomer, and not very common, but it contains higher amounts of magnesium, nitrogen, and Vitamin C than any other natural sweetener.
Agave Nectar is a health-food darling, best known for its very low glycemic index. In other words, it doesn’t cause as large of an insulin rush as other sweeteners. On the other hand, agave is also 90% fructose, which can cause serious problems for people who don’t digest fructose well. It also contains saponins, one of the same toxins that make grains and legumes so harmful. Although the lack of an insulin spike is tempting, agave is definitely the worst of the “all-natural” group: avoid it when you can.
Thus, although all of these natural sweeteners contain approximately as much sugar as the table sugar, some of them do at least give you a significant amount of nutrients along with the calories. This makes them preferable to the refined, chemically processed table sugar that most of us think of as “sugar.” Even though they aren’t healthy to consume to excess, honey, molasses, and maple syrup are superior to table sugar, and can make relatively harmless replacements in the occasional Paleo treat.
Honey

Table Sugar Substitutes: Artificial Sweeteners

Since all of these natural sweeteners do contain sugars, many people searching for a non-caloric sweetener turn to artificial compounds instead. The major types of artificial sweeteners are Aspartame (added to diet soft drinks or sold as Equal and NutraSweet), Saccharine (Sweet’n’Low), Stevia, and Sucralose (Splenda).
As with actual sugar, artificial sweeteners are hotly debated. Their main selling point is, of course, that they have no calories. As with the studies supposedly demonstrating the evils of salt, studies linking these sweeteners to cancer are not seriously concerning: they showed that rats who ate the equivalent of several hundred cans of soda every day did get a form of bladder cancer, but humans don’t even have the specific protein that causes this cancer, and nobody eats that much Splenda anyway. On the other hand, “no calories” doesn’t always translate into “no insulin response:” many types of zero-calorie sugar substitutes (with the exception of sugar alcohols, discussed below) may still contribute to metabolic problems and weight gain even though they don’t have any caloric value themselves. Essentially, when your body senses that you’ve eaten something sweet, it releases insulin, expecting to have some kind of carbohydrate (sugar) to digest. Even if you don’t follow up the sweet taste with any calories, the sudden rush of insulin can contribute to insulin resistance, and confusing your body like this can prompt you to overeat later.
Sugar alcohols are one type of artificial sweeteners that avoid this problem. These include xylitol, sorbitol, malitol and erythritol (if it’s a sweetener that ends in –ol, it’s probably a sugar alcohol). These chemicals have a much lower glycemic index than sugar, because they’re very difficult for the body to digest. This isn’t necessarily a point in their favor, however: except for erythritol, sugar alcohols arepolyols (the P in FODMAPs), meaning that they’re not the best choice for people with FODMAPs intolerance. Even people who don’t otherwise react to FODMAPs can have trouble with sugar alcohols: one study, for example, found that subjects who drank a xylitol-sweetened beverage reported higher rates of nausea, bloating, and other digestive troubles. Thus, sugar alcohols aren’t necessarily harmless for everyone, and if you react to them, they’re best avoided.
One noncaloric sugar substitute that gets slightly better press than the others is Stevia, an herbal extract frequently promoted as a natural alternative to products like Equal and Splenda. Although the raw leaves of the plant are also sweet, the “stevia” (sold under several brand names, including Truvia) that you can buy at the store as a liquid or a powder is a processed, refined version of those leaves. The scientific evidence on Stevia is just as self-contradictory as the evidence about sugar: some studies seem to demonstrate that Stevia does cause an insulin spike, and others suggest that it doesn’t. It may also have some beneficial effects on hypertension, memory, and blood lipids, but on the whole, the research doesn’t conclusively support one side or the other.
In short, artificial sweeteners are somewhat of a mixed bag, and more research is clearly needed on their effects before anyone can say with any certainty that they’re either harmful or harmless. If you do choose an artificial sweetener, erythritol seems to be one of the better choices – the jury is still out on chemicals like aspartame and sucralose, but sugar alcohols definitely don’t spike blood sugar, and erythritol is the sugar alcohol least likely to cause gastrointestinal problems and IBS-like symptoms. Stevia is another intriguing option that may be just as good – especially if you can get the whole leaves rather than the processed powder form. In general, while these substitutes won’t add anything nutritious to your diet, they probably won’t cause significant harm either, so consuming small amounts of them isn’t problematic for most people.

Conclusion: Dietary Recommendations for Sugar

Since the effects of sugar in the diet can vary so greatly depending on the source and composition of the specific sugar in question, the health of the person eating it, and the amount of sugar consumed, there is no one-size-fits-all recommendation. Not all people need to avoid sugar entirely. In many ways, it’s useful to think of a healthy sugar intake as falling on a spectrum: on one end of the scale is a very low-carbohydrate diet (meat and non-starchy vegetables) with as little sugar as physically possible. This kind of diet is perfect for diabetics and people with metabolic syndrome, people who react very poorly to starches and sugars in general, and some people trying to recover from an eating disorder.
A step above that would be a diet with some sugar-containing foods (fruit) but no added sweeteners. This more moderate approach is probably fine for healthy people who get regular exercise, especially if they don’t react poorly to fructose. Some people can even go further than that, and use small amounts of added sweeteners like honey, maple syrup, or even sugar itself without a problem. Serious athletes do need higher levels of carbohydrates than most other people, and even people who don’t enjoy endurance sports won’t see much harm from the occasional treat. Beyond this level, sugar consumption probably becomes unhealthy: eating large amounts of added sweeteners, especially processed chemical sweeteners like high-fructose corn syrup, isn’t good for anyone.
Ultimately, the most important consideration with sugar is your own reaction to it – and the only way to discover this is by experimenting. Try some Paleo chocolate pudding sweetened with a small amount of honey, or this meatloaf with a honey sauce and notice how you feel afterwards. Unless you’re diabetic or have another life-threatening metabolic disorder, there’s no need to be demonically strict about avoiding all sugar – and as we head into sugar season (the unholy trinity of Halloween, Thanksgiving, and Christmas), a sweet Paleo treat might even help banish cravings for candy corn, and chocolate Santas, helping you stay on track with your diet but keep your sanity intact.