• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Traditional Cooking School by GNOWFGLINS

Dish up the simple joy of healthy, down-home foods your family will LOVE… tonight.

Join 12,000+ families served since 2010!

  • Join Now
  • About
    • About Wardee & TCS
    • Our Team
    • FAQs & Help
    • Contact
  • Recipes
  • Blog
    • Recipes
    • Archives
  • Podcast
    • #AskWardee
    • Know Your Food with Wardee (retired)
  • Shop
    • Bible-Based Cooking Program
    • Print Textbooks
    • eBooks & eCourses
    • Recommended Tools & Supplies
    • More Books We Love
    • Complete Idiot’s Guide To Fermenting Foods
      • Errata
  • Login
You are here: Home » Health & Nutrition » Healthy Living » The Great Sugar Deluge, Part 1

Make a healthy dinner in 30 minutes or less... while spending $0 extra! Click here to get the Eat God's Way “30-Minute Skillet Dishes” worksheet + videos FREE!

The Great Sugar Deluge, Part 1

We only recommend products and services we wholeheartedly endorse. This post may contain special links through which we earn a small commission if you make a purchase (though your price is the same).

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

The Great Sugar Deluge, Part 1 | As if sugar, sweets, treats and junk food aren’t around enough on a regular day-to-day basis — from snacks at baseball games to birthday parties to the doughnuts at work. But as soon as the holidays hit, sugar is everywhere! And it’s all well meant. For me, this is where it gets tough. | TraditionalCookingSchool.com

October is here and the holiday season is just around the corner… and you know what that means, right? The Great Sugar Deluge is about to begin! As if sugar, sweets, treats and junk food aren’t around enough on a regular day-to-day basis — from snacks at baseball games to birthday parties to the doughnuts at work. But as soon as the holidays hit, sugar is everywhere!

You may find that, like me, navigating unhealthy treats and candy on a regular basis isn’t that hard. But the holidays come and it’s a steady barrage of cakes and cookies, chocolate bars and truffles, pies and tarts, candy corn and candy canes, lollipops and bubblegum… and more!

Friends merrily give your kids holiday candy, the dentist hands out sugar-free lollipops, at the pre-school co-op you make marshmallow and gum drop turkeys for a Thanksgiving craft, and then there’s the church group Christmas cookie exchange and the gingerbread house making party complete with loads of icing and mountains of high fructose corn syrup, dye-ridden candy!

And just when you’ve reached your limit, the doorbell rings and it’s that friendly neighbor down the street come to wish you “Merry Christmas!” with a plate of cookies and a box of fudge.

And it’s all well meant.

The Great Sugar Deluge, Part 1 | As if sugar, sweets, treats and junk food aren’t around enough on a regular day-to-day basis — from snacks at baseball games to birthday parties to the doughnuts at work. But as soon as the holidays hit, sugar is everywhere! And it’s all well meant. For me, this is where it gets tough. | TraditionalCookingSchool.com

It’s Tough

For me, this is where it gets tough. How do I value and love the people around me, yet not consume (or allow my kids to consume) every single dessert and treat offered? How do I receive the 10th plate of cookies generously offered by still more kind neighbors down the street or that wonderfully sweet family from church when I’m already on sugar overload?

How do I make memories with my family and friends when it seems that nearly every community activity or holiday craft is centered around sugar, and that’s not how I want it to be? How do I help my family relax and enjoy the feasting of the season but also nourish our bodies with healthy food?

I don’t claim to have figured this all out yet, but over the years I have landed on a few principles and a few practicals that have helped me greatly. Of course, they’re not “The Answer.” We each will differ in what we believe and how we approach things. But my hope is that what I’ve learned can encourage you and at least help get you thinking about the topic.

Today I’m sharing the principles that guide me in my decisions, and tomorrow (in Part 2) I will share the practicals that help me.

(Please keep in mind that my solutions will probably not help those with serious gut or health issues or those with food allergies or sensitivities.)

Go Forth In Faith (Not Fear)

While there is truth to the bad health affects of a SAD diet, I do not fear eating some unhealthy food on occasion. For the vast majority of the time, we eat nourishing, clean, healthy foods. When our bodies are healthy and nourished, they can handle and process a little junk without diving into a tailspin.

God made our bodies to be able to cleanse and eliminate toxins. God has also given us food not only for sustenance and nourishment but also to enjoy. Times of feasting are all throughout the Bible. Don’t allow fear to rob you of the joy of food and feasts.

While I would encourage everyone to eat healthfully, I would also remind us all (myself included!) that ultimately my family’s health does not depend upon what I do or don’t do. God is the giver of life and health. When I’m depending on myself for my family’s health and well-being, I am quickly prone to fear and anxiety and will find myself trying to manipulate and control.

But when I am trusting God for their health and well-being, I plod along in faith, diligently feeding them the nourishing foods I believe are best, and trusting God when I encounter situations beyond my control. Those are times when I choose to not worry but trust God and love others…which brings me to my next point.

The Great Sugar Deluge, Part 1 | As if sugar, sweets, treats and junk food aren’t around enough on a regular day-to-day basis — from snacks at baseball games to birthday parties to the doughnuts at work. But as soon as the holidays hit, sugar is everywhere! And it’s all well meant. For me, this is where it gets tough. | TraditionalCookingSchool.com

Love Others

The holiday season is a unique time of year when many people are more friendly and open than usual. What an opportunity to share the love of God with others!

Go to that neighborhood cookie exchange so you can get to know your neighbors better, despite the fact that you know you’ll be coming home with dozens of cookies. Joyfully accept the plate of boxed-mix brownies from your neighbor, because you are grateful for their thoughtfulness shown to you; invite them in and chat for a while. Enjoy the Thanksgiving Feast at your aunt’s house complete with boxed stuffing and sweet potato-marshmallow casserole, thankful for the many hands that prepared the food so everyone could gather to feast and laugh together.

There are times in life when I believe we need to choose people over food. Loving others over our personal preferences.

I Am No Better Than You

If you’ve read a lot about nutrition and nourishing foods and if you’ve changed your diet and experienced positive physical results, it is far too easy to judge others. “They LET their kids eat that candy all the time?!” “Don’t they know that’s terrible for them!” “They’d probably lose weight if they would just quit eating so much junk.” But that really just reveals the pride in our own hearts.

The truth is that I am no better than others just because I eat a certain way and they do not. God has given each person the freedom and responsibility to decide what we will eat.

And furthermore, what people believe is a healthy way of eating varies drastically — from just getting your basic food groups in, to a strictly vegetarian diet, from vegan to paleo, from whole grains to no grains, from daily cod liver oil to daily green smoothies… and on and on.

And along with that, people’s opinions on how much junk food is “okay” varies drastically — from none to some, from one dessert a night to one dessert a month, from no sugar to only natural sugars to some-sugar-ain’t-gonna-hurt!

My friend and I can both adamantly believe we’re feeding our families healthfully and be feeding them very different diets. These differences of belief and practice are good for us, because they keep us thinking and growing and learning…and humble.

When it comes to food, I simply do what I believe is the right thing for us. My best friend doesn’t have to agree with me. Her kids can have that whole bag of candy corn, while my kids have none. And, on the flip-side, I shouldn’t feel guilty when I find out my other friend’s kids have never touched a candy cane in their lives, when my kids just ate their second one of the season and it’s not even Christmas yet.

Let’s make our decisions based on what seems wise to us in our particular, unique situations, and resist falling into the comparison trap or turning to unkind judgements of others.

Tomorrow I’ll be sharing some practical tips for navigating this sugar-rich holiday season. For today, share your thoughts below — what principles guide you as you approach food during the holidays?

This post was featured in 82 Ways To Heal Your Gut.

We only recommend products and services we wholeheartedly endorse. This post may contain special links through which we earn a small commission if you make a purchase (though your price is the same).

Posted in: Health & Nutrition Healthy Living Simple Living

About Christy

Christy is a wife and mom of four who loves good food and loves to cook. Christy blogs at Whole Foods on a Budget, where she shares favorite recipes, tips on buying quality food on a small budget, information on gardening in small spaces and ideas for natural living, with an emphasis on encouraging her readers to do what they can to make small steps toward healthier living. Christy and her sister Jessica just released a new cookbook Whole Foods for the Everyday Cook. You can find Christy on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Raia Torn says

    October 21, 2013 at 7:36 am

    Thanks for the encouraging post! 🙂

    Reply
    • Christy says

      October 21, 2013 at 1:03 pm

      Glad you were encouraged today!

      Reply
  2. Jenny Cazzola says

    October 21, 2013 at 9:02 am

    “There are times in life when I believe we need to choose people over food. Loving others over our personal preferences.”

    Amen. From someone who has been on both sides of this issue: a giver as well as a receiver – this was an excellent post.

    Reply
    • Christy says

      October 21, 2013 at 1:03 pm

      Thank you, those are kind words!

      Reply
  3. Madelyn says

    October 21, 2013 at 1:52 pm

    Thank you so much for this post! I struggle so much with this all the time and especially during the holidays. I have a young daughter and I want to do what’s best for her, sometimes I just don’t know what to do! Thanks for the reminder to put love and God first 🙂 It will really help me over the next couple months! God bless!!

    Reply
    • Christy says

      October 21, 2013 at 4:50 pm

      Madelyn, I’m so glad you were helped today! I’ve spent many a holiday season wrestling through all the ins and outs of this issue myself.

      Reply
  4. Kelly says

    October 21, 2013 at 2:03 pm

    LOVE, love, love this, Wardee! Sharing it on Thursday via social media! What a blessing you are! xoxo, Kelly

    Reply
    • Christy says

      October 21, 2013 at 4:51 pm

      Kelly, I’m glad you were encouraged today!

      Reply
      • Kelly says

        October 21, 2013 at 4:56 pm

        Great post, Christy! Sorry, I realize now that you wrote this. Thank you so much for sharing.

        Reply
        • Christy says

          October 21, 2013 at 6:34 pm

          Not a problem at all! Totally understand, it’s not my blog. 🙂

          Reply
  5. Karli says

    October 23, 2013 at 8:44 am

    Awesome post (and #2 as well)!! I’m gonna share these on Halloween- so fitting 😉

    Reply
    • Christy says

      October 23, 2013 at 6:34 pm

      Thanks for the encouragement, Karli! And thanks for sharing the posts.

      Reply
  6. Rachel Lowrance says

    October 24, 2013 at 10:22 am

    Thank you so much for this post! I needed this:)

    Reply
  7. Amy says

    October 31, 2013 at 7:53 pm

    LOVE this! Sound advice; thanks for the terrific post. Faith not fear! Now where is the recipe for those choco-cherry treats…they look yummy! 😉 🙂

    Reply
    • Christy says

      November 1, 2013 at 6:00 am

      You’re welcome! …And, Amy, if you can find me a source for all natural maraschino cherries I would be happy to share that recipe!! 😉

      Reply
      • Amy says

        November 1, 2013 at 8:55 am

        Lol, Christy! Good point. I think what would be just as good, probably even better, is some fresh or dried organic cherries. I dried some I got from Azure – oh my word! They are soooo good, sweet like candy! And they’d pair wonderfully, I’m sure, with that yummy looking choco treat that is pictured. So…let me know if you decide to share, I’ll get my pencil & paper ready! 😉

        Reply
        • Christy says

          November 1, 2013 at 12:02 pm

          Amy, you’ve got my mind rolling now! I just might be experimenting with “healthifying” this old family favorite in time for Christmas.

          Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Hi and Welcome!

I’m Wardee Harmon and I help Christian families who know they should eat healthy but are tired of complicated, time-consuming, weird-tasting, and unsustainable “healthy” diets…

…who want to look and feel better, save time and money, and have more energy for enjoying family life and serving Him fully!… like I was. Click here for more…

Recently on the Blog

  • Fizzy Apple Cider Switchel (VAD)
  • VitaClay Review & Buyer’s Guide
  • How to Make Healthy Cookies #AskWardee 006
  • Bean and Barley Soup (Instant Pot, Stove Top)
  • Soaked Spelt Banana Bread (VAD)
  • Ancient Grains 101
  • How to Heal Digestive Issues Naturally (Leaky Gut, SIBO, IBS, Celiac & more)
  • How To Meal Plan In 4 Easy Steps (KYF103)
  • Debunking 4 Sourdough Myths (& How To Overcome Them)
  • How To Use A Pressure Cooker 101

Recently Commented

  • Rehoboth on Soaked Pumpkin Seed Butter (nutty, creamy, enzyme-rich!)
  • Rehoboth on MORE Nourishing Soups & Stews… For Special Diets!
  • Bunty on 6 Tips to Prevent “Sour” Sourdough
  • Danielle on Naturally Sweetened & Nourishing Chocolate Marshmallows
  • Stacey Hingson on Naturally Sweetened & Nourishing Chocolate Marshmallows
  • Lori Gintner on The Connection Between Mental Illness & Candida (+ why you need more than anti-fungals)
  • Tiranga on Homemade Sauerkraut In A Stoneware Crock

We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated sites.

Before Footer

g-NOWF-glinz

…are what we eat! God’s Natural, Organic, Whole Foods, Grown Locally, In Season.

We love working with other Christian families who love good food and want to eat according to God’s design…

Not only because we believe it’s the healthiest way, but because we want to give Him glory for creating good food as the best medicine!

Learn more about GNOWFGLINS here…

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IOcH27DM1dI

Eat God’s Way Cooking Program

Our Eat God’s Way cooking program is for Christian families who know they should eat healthy but are tired of complicated, time-consuming, weird-tasting, and unsustainable “healthy” diets…

…who want to look and feel better, save time and money, and have more energy for enjoying family life and serving Him fully!

Join 12,000+ families served since 2010! Learn more here…

Copyright © 2025 Traditional Cooking School by GNOWFGLINS • About • Help • Privacy • Partners