Is there any particular reason you want to get your calories and nutrition in liquid form? If you actually do, there’s a large variety of smoothies and such that you can make.
People “addicted” to soda are actually “addicted” to the sugar rush (usually enhanced by a bit of caffeine). Subject to all the usual caveats about people not being all the same, I don’t think that a habit of regularly consuming a fair chunk of glucose and fructose in a rapidly-absorbed form is good for one’s health.
yeah, everyone with a crappy diet gets told to drink water instead of soda, guess how often that actually works?
In the interim of cutting down empty calorie intake, replacing those sources of sugar with milk, OJ, and bananas is much more practicable advice than drink water.
Unless you have had extensive practical experience of actually dealing with real people who attempted to replace soda with water and with real people who attempted to replace soda with juices, I have to doubt your opinion on what’s “practicable” and what’s not.
Oh, and everyone with a crappy diet gets told to improve it. Guess how often that actually works?
I was never a real soda person, but I used to drink mostly juices, and now drink almost entirely water. I didn’t even find it particularly difficult, and it was a big part of how I lost a significant amount of weight. There’s a huge amount of calories in there, and I can get more enjoyment from eating half as many as I used to from drinking them.
Water.
Is there any particular reason you want to get your calories and nutrition in liquid form? If you actually do, there’s a large variety of smoothies and such that you can make.
People “addicted” to soda are actually “addicted” to the sugar rush (usually enhanced by a bit of caffeine). Subject to all the usual caveats about people not being all the same, I don’t think that a habit of regularly consuming a fair chunk of glucose and fructose in a rapidly-absorbed form is good for one’s health.
yeah, everyone with a crappy diet gets told to drink water instead of soda, guess how often that actually works? In the interim of cutting down empty calorie intake, replacing those sources of sugar with milk, OJ, and bananas is much more practicable advice than drink water.
Unless you have had extensive practical experience of actually dealing with real people who attempted to replace soda with water and with real people who attempted to replace soda with juices, I have to doubt your opinion on what’s “practicable” and what’s not.
Oh, and everyone with a crappy diet gets told to improve it. Guess how often that actually works?
I was never a real soda person, but I used to drink mostly juices, and now drink almost entirely water. I didn’t even find it particularly difficult, and it was a big part of how I lost a significant amount of weight. There’s a huge amount of calories in there, and I can get more enjoyment from eating half as many as I used to from drinking them.