Reducing sugars may necessitate adjustment to medications. Consult your doctor.

Reducing sugars may necessitate adjustment to medications. Consult your doctor.


This summer, Cory is accepting a sugar free challenge. From the end of the day July 4th, after a vegan barbeque and some apple pie, Cory will go without added sugar until Labor Day.
Cory has taken on this challenge as both a personal experiment and a public effort to highlight how much our diets have been invaded by incredible amounts of added sugar - especially compared to the diets of generations of Americans before. Much has been documented about the negative effects of processed sugar on our health - from our brain health to heart health to links to cancers and more. The costs to our health and our society are staggering when seeing how diet-related diseases are making health care costs skyrocket in America.
Cory was challenged to be the change. He was challenged to see how his body will function and even improve without the inflammatory adverse health-impacting effects of added sugar like high fructose corn syrup and more - substances that receive so much of our tax dollars through government subsidies.
We are becoming a poorer nation by paying twice: we pay our tax dollars to make sugary, ultra-processed foods cheaper than healthier options, and then we pay again for the health care costs such foods can cause.
Stunningly, so many of the foods we eat every day are full of added and ultra-processed sugar, including ketchup, mustard, salad dressings, pasta sauces, drinks, breakfast cereals, breads, chips, dips and so so much more.
Change starts with us. Join Cory in this challenge. Take on this life experiment.
See what effects it has on your health and grow in awareness of how truly prevalent sugar is in our diets — and how much it truly costs our nation. Perhaps after, both you and Cory can be better agents of change for your family, for your community, and for our larger national food policy.
The rules are simple. Between July 4th and Labor Day, there should be no added sugar in anything you consume.
This does not mean giving up fruits, alcohol, or other naturally occurring sugars in our foods. Nor do you have to give up artificial sweeteners — though Cory will be going hardcore and giving up his beloved Stevia in his tea.
Progress, not Perfection. One day at a time.
DaysDays
HrsHours
MinsMinutes
SecsSeconds
Yay, Us!!
%20Summer%20Sugarfree%20Challen.png/:/)
(NOTE: GoDaddy wrote the first post as a sample, and it's spot-on. ~Rea)
svelte - slender, attractively thin, gracefully slender (as an alternative to "skinny")
simple carbohydrate vs complex carbohydrate - Simple carbs are sugars that your body can use very quickly. They give fast energy, but can run out fast, too.
Complex carbs are made of longer chains of sugar, so your body breaks them down more slowly. That means they give steadier energy for longer.
Easy way to remember:
- Simple carbs = fast energy, like candy, soda, white bread
- Complex carbs = slower energy, like oats, brown rice, beans, potatoes
A good rule: foods with more fiber are usually the better complex carbs because they keep you full longer. (by Ai/GPT-5.4 mini)
aphanizomenon flos aquae (AFA for short) - a type of "blue-green algae". In this case, "blue-green algae" is a misleading nickname, because they aren't true algae or plants, they're cyanobacteria (the proper biological term). They do photosynthesize, which is why they were historically lumped in with algae.
AFA is used as a nutritional supplement in powder, capsule or tablet form.

When you reduce sugars, you may need an adjustment to your medications. Consult your doctor.
We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.