Why does giving up sugar solve the problem of American malnutrition

The paradox of the American diet is that despite abundant food, people remain undernourished. Cutting out sugar becomes the key to solving this contradiction. The excess weight of millions of Americans is not due to hunger but to poor nutrition, where the body receives calories but not the necessary nutrients. It’s not about the amount of food, but its quality and composition.

In America, there is no true food culture, although many families maintain “family dinners” as a ritual. But breakfast is often quick and calorie-dense, lunch is takeout, and dinner is the heaviest meal of the day. Burgers, pizza, steaks, grilled dishes are everyday fare. The problem is that fast food has displaced balanced nutrition, bringing with it sugar, trans fats, and a lack of fiber.

Carbohydrates as an energy battery: simple vs. complex

Carbohydrates provide energy — without them, a person cannot work physically or mentally. The adult brain consumes about 20% of the body’s total energy, which is roughly 100–120 grams of glucose per day. Limiting carbs leads to exhaustion, but not all carbs are the same.

Complex carbohydrates are digested slowly; the body takes time to unpack and break them down. That’s why they provide long-lasting satiety for several hours. These carbs are found in buckwheat, oats, brown and wild rice, whole grain bread, whole wheat pasta, beans, lentils, chickpeas, and starchy vegetables.

Empty carbs (simple sugars) provide instant energy because the body doesn’t need to process them—they enter the bloodstream immediately. This includes pure sugar in candies, cookies, cakes, sugary cereals, white bread, sweet drinks, juice boxes, and fast food. They contain almost no beneficial substances or fiber.

A typical American breakfast (cereal with milk, white bread with jam, eggs with bacon) is an illusion of fullness. It looks filling on paper, but the body doesn’t get what it truly needs. The result: hunger returns in 1–2 hours, leading to repeated eating and a cycle of overeating.

Protein without activity: why meat doesn’t solve the problem

The American diet is rich in protein — chicken, pork, beef. Meat is accessible and cheap: some stores sell a kilogram steak for less than $7. Due to this availability, people replace proper nutrition with meat, and barbecue becomes a way of life.

The issue isn’t the protein itself — it’s necessary for muscle, skin, joint, and vessel repair. But excess protein is not beneficial; it becomes a burden. Unlike fats and carbs, protein doesn’t accumulate in the body. To utilize excess protein, strength training and physical activity are needed. Without them, all surplus protein is simply excreted.

If someone eats 1000 grams of meat, but their body needs only 50–60 grams of protein (equivalent to a 200-gram steak), the remaining 800 grams go to waste. At first glance, this seems good — nothing accumulates — but the body isn’t prepared for such volumes.

Consequences:

  • Kidneys suffer first. Excess protein produces more nitrogen waste, which the kidneys must eliminate.
  • If it’s red meat and processed products, saturated fats and salt intake increase, raising “bad” cholesterol and the risk of cardiovascular disease.
  • Excess protein combined with a lack of fiber disrupts digestion — constipation and discomfort occur because meat contains no dietary fiber needed for gut microbiota.
  • The risk of gout rises, especially with high consumption of red meat and offal, due to increased uric acid levels.

Fats: essential for life, but choosing the right ones

Anti-fat propaganda is so pervasive that fats are despised worldwide. But fats are vital for hormonal health. Deficiency can cause menstrual irregularities in women, erectile issues in men, and emotional disturbances: irritability, depression, anxiety, and decreased motivation.

Healthy fats — monounsaturated and polyunsaturated (omega-3 and omega-6) — support heart, vessel, brain health, and metabolism.

The problem lies with trans fats — altered forms of regular fats. Liquid oils (sunflower, soybean) are hydrogenated at high temperatures with catalysts, changing their molecular shape into straight, solid forms. This process creates margarine and cooking fats used in baking and fast food. Deep-frying or overheating such oils produces trans fats.

Hidden sugar in fast food: how quitting sugar begins with understanding

The entire American diet is protein + empty carbs + trans fats. This kind of food provides short-term satiety but lacks vitamins, minerals, and micronutrients. The body protests: “You’ve deceived me! There’s nothing I need here!” and triggers hunger again.

The body cannot convert sugar into anything but fat. Excess sugar/glucose rapidly turns into fat stores. Trans fats are stored as fat, while protein is processed and excreted, burdening the kidneys.

Where is sugar hidden in fast food:

  1. Sauces and dressings — ketchup, barbecue sauce, mayonnaise can contain several teaspoons of sugar per serving.
  2. Buns and bread — burger and hot dog buns are sweetened; a typical bun has 2–5 grams of sugar.
  3. Drinks — soda, sweet tea, energy drinks are obvious sources.
  4. Side dishes — French fries are often treated with sugar for color and flavor.
  5. Processed products — chicken nuggets, breaded cutlets contain sugar in breading and marinades.

Even if someone thinks they’re only eating “a burger and fries,” their daily sugar intake quickly exceeds the recommended limit.

Experimental proof: what happens when you quit sugar

Canadian film “That Sugar Film” conducted a revealing experiment:

  • First participant: ate fast food, strictly following calorie limits — no overeating.
  • Second participant: ate healthy, balanced food: vegetables, protein, complex carbs, healthy fats.
  • Duration: 4 weeks.
  • Assessment parameters: weight, energy, mood, blood sugar levels, blood tests.

Experiment conclusions:

  • With the same calorie intake, a diet high in sugar and fast food leads to weight gain, even without overeating.
  • Even without overeating, high sugar consumption causes: increased fat mass (especially around the abdomen), insulin and blood sugar spikes, reduced energy, and poor well-being.
  • Healthy eating is not just about calories but about nutrient quality, which stabilizes blood sugar, maintains energy, and supports proper metabolism.

This proves: quitting sugar is not a diet but a transition to truly nourishing food.

Vitamin deficiency amid calorie excess: the hidden hunger

Many Americans get insufficient vitamins, minerals, and fiber from their regular diet. According to the national NHANES (National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey):

Prevalence of deficiencies among adults:

  • about 95% lack sufficient vitamin D
  • 84% lack vitamin E
  • 46% lack vitamin C
  • 45% lack vitamin A
  • 15% lack zinc
  • deficiencies in copper, iron, and B vitamins are also common

Consequences:

  1. Weakened immunity. Without vitamin C, zinc, and selenium, the body fights infections less effectively, illnesses last longer.
  2. Poor appearance. Deficiencies in vitamins A, E, B group, biotin, and iron cause dry skin, brittle nails, hair loss.
  3. Lower energy. Iron, B12, magnesium, and iodine shortages lead to weakness, fatigue, dizziness, concentration problems.
  4. Fragile bones and teeth. Lack of calcium, vitamin D, and phosphorus impairs mineralization; growth issues in children.
  5. Nervous system issues. Deficiencies in B vitamins and magnesium cause irritability, anxiety, sleep and attention problems.
  6. Anemia. Iron, folate, and B12 deficiencies cause pallor, shortness of breath, weakness.
  7. Metabolic slowdown. Iodine deficiency hampers thyroid function, leading to fatigue and weight gain.

Symptoms develop gradually and are hard to notice early on, but they accumulate over time.

Toward balanced nutrition: practical steps to quit sugar and trans fats

The solution is simple but requires understanding and consistency. Quitting sugar isn’t a harsh diet but a shift to truly nourishing eating habits.

Key steps:

  • Replace empty carbs with complex ones: white bread with whole grain, cereals with oats, white rice with brown.
  • Include vegetables, protein sources, and healthy fats in every meal.
  • Reduce trans fats and saturated fats; choose fish, avocado, nuts.
  • Drink water instead of sugary drinks.
  • Check labels — sugar is hidden everywhere.

Quitting sugar doesn’t mean eliminating all sweets but choosing foods that support stable energy, healthy weight, and well-being. Americans can avoid the paradox of overeating while undernourished if they start eating truly nourishing food.

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