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Some thoughts from a 20 year Dr Pepper addict.

Posted on 7/13/19 at 9:41 am
Posted by CFDoc
Member since Jan 2013
2107 posts
Posted on 7/13/19 at 9:41 am
Thought some of you might find a summary of a Dr Pepper addict, and how it’s affected various parts of my life, interesting. First of all, I’m not addicted to any other type of soft drink. It’s only Dr Pepper that I crave. I’m 36 years old and my current status is that my Dr Pepper intake is ‘down’ to ‘only’ about 12-20 ounces per day. At my worst, I’d easily guess I’ve been as high as 40-50 ounces per day. Hot summer days on the water for 8+ hours, I know I’ve crossed the 100 ounces in a day several times. My current BMI is about 23. I’ve been as high as about 32.

My addiction started in high school; however, I wouldn’t say that I noticed much of anything since I was a multi-sport athlete and stayed very active. I also went to college on a golf scholarship where my golf coach stressed endurance training so we would run at least 3 miles per day with non-tournament weekends requiring 5-7 mile runs each day. Looking back, this coach getting me into long distance running is the reason I’m not in a very serious health situation at my age.

My golf career was short-lived as I quickly realized I would starve if I pursued professional golf. Luckily, math and science were always strengths of mine so off to LSU I go for a mechanical engineering degree. It’s here where I start to understand that I am drinking a lot of Dr Pepper, but again, I’m now a long distance runner so I’m not concerned about health. In fact, I’m now running very long distances and training for marathons with a steady diet of protein drinks and, of course, Dr Pepper. Although I’m in incredible shape at this point in my life, me ignoring the addiction that’s building is going to cost me.

After graduating in M.E. at LSU, I leave and go to grad school at Clemson to get my PhD in M.E. and this is where I start to really notice just how powerful my addiction is and just how unhealthy Dr Pepper can be. Working on a PhD requires a lot of time at a desk and ability to stay focused. This ended up with me drinking 40+ ounces per day and not exercising as much. It was amazing how quickly I went from great shape to good shape to bad shape and considerably overweight. At my worst in grad school, I was probably 30+ pounds overweight which lead me to my first serious self reflection on my life where I said ‘f it’ and took control of my weight, but not my Dr Pepper addiction.

I got back into running. Got back into marathon training. And got back into great shape. All while still drinking gallons and gallons of Dr Pepper. So my success was short lived.

After grad school, my career comes calling. A PhD in M.E. allows me to go do some really cool things on F1 race cars, ballistic missiles, hypersonic aircraft, etc. Unfortunately, this career also puts me in very high stress environments with tight deadlines and long working weekends where I’m essentially sedentary. My Dr Pepper addiction is the worst it’s ever been and I turn into a ballon. My waist goes from 32 to 40. My weight goes out of control. Looking back, it’s amazing to me just how fast an insane amount of sugar can put on pounds. I went from in shape to 50+ pounds overweight in probably a year. That’s how bad Dr Pepper can be for your diet. Think about that.

After 5 years of doing the insane career and insanely unhealthy thing, I have my second serious life reflection. I leave my high stress job and take another job that does similar things in similar industries but is way less stressful. I also get back into running. Like I said earlier, I owe a lot to my golf coach for forcing me to run at a young age. I am lucky that no matter how overweight I get, I can go out and run 5, 6, even 7 miles without stopping. Granted I will be barely moving, but I have the mental strength of a long distance runner so I can get it done.

So here I am, down 50 pounds from this time last year. I’m running almost every day but this time I’m scared. My Dr Pepper addiction is still here. I know as soon as I stop running, the weight is right behind it. I’ve got every sign of being an addict. Telling myself I will quit tomorrow, it’s only this time, etc. I used to think it was stupid to say Dr Pepper was an addiction but that shite is real.

If anybody else has conquered a soft drink addiction, I’d love to hear your story.
Posted by aldawg2323
Lafayette
Member since Jan 2010
419 posts
Posted on 7/13/19 at 9:50 am to
for about 18 months ive been on a 90% meat diet. that has helped to curb my cravings for sweets, though i still cheat perhaps 2 days a week. i would recommend trying a high fat, high protein diet for a month. The satiating effects of fatty beef knock all my other cravings way back.

nothing happens overnight, just stay with it
Posted by oleyeller
Vols, Bitch
Member since Oct 2012
32035 posts
Posted on 7/13/19 at 10:54 am to
Well this was an easy one. Swap to diet dr pepper. Taste exact same, no sugar. Problem solved

quote:

steady diet of protein drinks
not a very good diet
Posted by MrSpock
Member since Sep 2015
4384 posts
Posted on 7/13/19 at 12:38 pm to
Uhhh....Don't buy it.
Posted by Hu_Flung_Pu
Central, LA
Member since Jan 2013
22237 posts
Posted on 7/13/19 at 1:20 pm to
Get the DP 10. It's delicious.

Go on a keto diet for a little bit. It really curbs sweet cravings.

Also, drink tons of water. That carbonation will get tough enough you'll not want to drink it all the time.
This post was edited on 7/13/19 at 1:21 pm
Posted by CorkSoaker
Member since Oct 2008
9819 posts
Posted on 7/13/19 at 1:47 pm to
If I were ever forced to drink a soft drink, diet Dr Pepper would be my first choice. Diet Barq’s root beer would be a close second.

At least you picked a good flavor to become addicted to. In all seriousness, practice self control, limit your self, until you can totally be off of the junk. Flavored waters can help.
Posted by LSUAlum2001
Stavro Mueller Beta
Member since Aug 2003
47192 posts
Posted on 7/13/19 at 3:36 pm to

If you want a sure fire way to kick the DP habit, go out and order nothing but flaming Dr Peppers all night until you are puking. The thought of drinking a DP after that will make you gag for a while.

I like DP, too, but I curtailed drinking soft drinks by drinking tea sweetened by Splenda or Stevia.
Posted by Shepherd88
Member since Dec 2013
4607 posts
Posted on 7/13/19 at 5:25 pm to
I used to be addicted to DP when I lived at home bc my mother would consistently buy them. When I moved to college I quit buying them and slowly kicked that habit.

My advice is to consistently have a bottle of water with you and quit buying DP. Don’t switch to diet DP cause that shite is just as bad for you. The worst part is the energy crash but you can substitute that for coffee.
Posted by eng08
Member since Jan 2013
5997 posts
Posted on 7/13/19 at 8:17 pm to
Why not drink diet Dr Pepper?

I drink 3-4 diet cokes a day.
Posted by TigerMonkey
Beach
Member since Jul 2005
7253 posts
Posted on 7/14/19 at 8:01 am to
Take control of your nutrition and your sugar cravings will subside dramatically. Keep yourself full with clean food on a balanced macro diet and I wouldn’t be shocked if sugar cravings go away completely.
Posted by Vyvanse
Baton Rouge, LA
Member since Aug 2014
240 posts
Posted on 7/14/19 at 8:17 am to
Do you incorporate weight training? What’s the rest of your diet look like? Do you drink water as well?
Posted by Buckeye06
Member since Dec 2007
23162 posts
Posted on 7/14/19 at 9:56 am to
Curious what do you do when you refuse to buy it weekly? Do you go to a 7/11 or the soda machine?
Posted by aileron
H-Town
Member since Apr 2018
236 posts
Posted on 7/15/19 at 9:47 pm to
Our paths have been very similar (LSU ME, distance runner, etc) however my addiction was to Coca Cola instead of DP. After grad school and into desk job career I was at 6-8 cans per day. I'd get headaches if I didn't have a coke by 11AM. I started to get really bad heartburn so I started taking antacids. One day I just decided at lunch I didn't want the heartburn so I skipped the coke. That day led to another and another and so on. It's been 7 years since I've had a soda of any kind. I never thought I could go cold turkey but I did. Maybe you should try it one day at a time like the AA stuff. Also if the carbonation is important, Topo Chico is really great and has no sugar or calories. I dropped a lot of weight just due to the soda and I don't get heartburn any more. Also because of me, my wife quit drinking sodas and my daughter has never had one (hopefully not for a long time).

Good luck!
Posted by lurk9000
Member since Nov 2011
46 posts
Posted on 7/16/19 at 1:19 pm to
Now I know why the suspension sucked!

Just kidding.

Quiting all sugar was more difficult than quiting smoking. However both have been always short lived for me.
I think it has a lot to do with the habit and finding healthy new habits to replace the bad.
Posted by Possumslayer
Pascagoula
Member since Jan 2018
6230 posts
Posted on 7/17/19 at 7:22 am to
My sil, 48 yo drinks 12 20oz sun drops a day.... she’s killing her self.
Posted by Complete Linebacking
Parts Unknown
Member since Dec 2004
980 posts
Posted on 7/21/19 at 9:12 am to
Man, I drank a can of coke each day for many years. Ended up having to pay oop for a couple root canals and quit cold turkey. Was really tough for about 2 weeks but now I don’t miss soda at all. In fact, my tastes changed and I don’t even enjoy it anymore. I’ve found tea is a good substitute for the caffeine. Unsweetened. You won’t regret quitting soda.
Posted by Roger Klarvin
DFW
Member since Nov 2012
46626 posts
Posted on 7/25/19 at 11:24 am to
The thing I’ve found most effective for patients addicted to soda is having them slowly transition to flavored carbonated water and black coffee. Usually within 3-6 months they’re off soda completely.
Posted by TexasTiger34
Austin, Kind of
Member since Mar 2008
11338 posts
Posted on 7/27/19 at 8:35 am to
Just stop buying the god damn thing. Our society is just weak as piss these days. No wonder our whole country is obese and people are resorting to a message board to figure out how to stop buying sugar. Take control over your mentality and act like a man with a choice
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