
Cold Season, Flu Season – Sugar Season?
Guest blog by Diane Letchworth, CGP
Ahโฆautumn. That lovely time of year when the leaves show off their extravagant, brilliantly colored wardrobe before they โundressโ for the winterโฆ.
Fall is also the time when the sounds of summer โ lawn mowers, weed whackers, splashing of swimming pools โ undergo their annual transformation too.
*cough, cough*
โAchoo!โ โGesundheit.โ
(Blowing of noseโฆ.)
Iโve been thinking about those classic Warner Bros. cartoons where Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck argue about whether itโs โrabbit seasonโ or โduck season.โ
While Elmer Fudd stands by, waiting with his shotgun in hand, ready to shootโฆ.
In reality, the arrival of autumn is more likely to be met by poor Elmer Fudd tucked in bed with a box of tissues and some hot tea with lemon, nursing a case of the sniffles or this yearโs variation of the fluโฆ.
So why is it that the change of seasons brings with it this annual rite of passage known as โCold and Flu Seasonโ?
Thatโs easy, you say:
Itโs the roller coaster of the thermostat โ early overnight frosts followed by Indian summer.
People go from wearing their sweaters, smelling of cedar or mothballs from a summer in storage, to t-shirts and shorts, soaking up some late season sun.
Of course everybody gets sick: they donโt know how to dress from one day to the nextโฆ.
Oh, and the kids are going back to school โ and โeverybody knowsโ that all those kids crammed into classrooms together are sharing their germs freely and widelyโฆ.
Well, okay. Butโฆ.
Why are all those germs out there in the first place? Why now?
It hardly matters how dense the population is if they arenโt susceptible to those pathogens in the first placeโฆ.
If our immune systems are strong enough to do their jobs properly, itโs not really going to matter if weโre a bit under-dressed one morning, or sitting next to a child with a runny nose.
But thereโs another annual ritual that rolls around this time of year, one Elmer Fudd might have wanted to keep in mind:
Itโs also the start of โsugar season.โ
Yep, no sooner are the kiddies back in school than Halloweenโs right around the corner.
As Dr. Ritamarie Loscalzo pointed out recently, we spend 2 billion dollars on Halloween candy, candy loaded with toxic ingredients.
One of those toxic ingredients isโฆsugar.
(Yes, I know a lot of people think โtoxicโ is too strong a word, but the list of other reputable anti-sugar advocates seems to increase by the day: JJ Virgin, Jamie Oliver, Dr. Mark Hyman, Alex Jamieson, Dr. Robert Lustig; just to name a few.)
After the sugar/chocolate/candy binge of Halloween, we head full-swing into the holiday seasonโฆ.
Thanksgiving, with its traditional favorites of candied yams and pumpkin pie.
Office parties, school partiesโฆ.
Cookies, cupcakes, chocolateโฆoh my!!
Most people know that sugar can cause a host of problems, most notably dental caries, and that too many sweets arenโt going to be good for the waistline.
But you may not know that sugar has been linked to a host of other health problems as well, including decreased immunity.
Hmm, โdecreased immunity.โโฆ
Right around the time of year when the common cold and influenza rear their ugly heads in earnest.
Are there more germs around this time of year?
Maybe.
Or maybe our sugar-depressed immune systems are simply unable to fend off whatโs around us all the time.
You might want to keep that in mind before you root through Juniorโs โtrick or treatโ booty, trying to find that last chocolate barโฆ.
Or before that second helping of pumpkin pie or pumpkin cheesecakeโฆ.
And certainly before over-indulging in the eggnog โ alcoholic or otherwise โ at the company Christmas partyโฆ.
Unless you want to replace that lampshade on your head with a hot-water bottle the next morning.
โCause the โsugar hangoverโ โ and its subsequent cold or flu infection โ might just be worse than the other kindโฆ.

For more information, please visit www.dsquaredwellness.com or contact Diane at [email protected].








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