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Melissa H.'s Twitter Updates

@kirstamcpherson @Coltsmamma true dat! 248 days ago
@coltsmamma Maybe I shouldn't have given mine to IT ... I kid, I kid. Insane! 248 days ago
@yumyucky PR fail. I get crap like that all the time. #DELETE 248 days ago
@johnkochmanski it is damn creepy. plus you can't opt out & have to see what people say to people you aren't friends w/ and vice versa 248 days ago
@bradcarlson oh man ... little monkeys! 248 days ago
 

Junk Food As Addicting As Heroin?!

Posted Nov 29 2009 10:01pm

Friend and blog reader Yas passed this blog post from FitSugar on to me and I wanted to share it with all of you.

Since we’re coming off one of the traditional food-fest holidays where sweets and treats are abundant, I thought it’d be an appropriate and timely piece.

Per FitSugar, “A new study says that eating junk food can fuel an addiction that is on par with what a cocaine or heroin junkie feels. The study, conducted by the Scripps Research Institute, followed the behavioral patterns of lab rats that were given an unlimited supply of junk food.

Over time, the rats had less sensitivity in their brain’s pleasure centers and needed to up the amount of high-fat and high-calorie foods they were eating, in effect, to get high. Not surprisingly, the rats got really fat too — doubling their initial weight.”

You can read  more about the whole study here.

I’ve heard of similar studies, and have always been of the mind that there is truth to junk food being “addicting.”

Though I don’t chew and spit anymore (not since March!!) I admit I still find it hard to stop once I buy juk food that I used to chew/spit. I end up budgeting it into my day’s Points, but usually that means swapping out something else more nutritious in favor of what I already consumed to stay within my “budget.”

The better option is clearly not buying said addicting junk food at all, but there’s a part of me that wants to learn how to co-exist with treats; moderation. Sometimes I am more successful at this incorporation than others.

How about you? What do you make of this study? In your experience, is junk food addicting and if so, do you see it on par with addictive drugs?

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