I'd get an email with a question about calcium and be like, «ummm, do you want to
talk about artificial sweeteners?»
But if you're
talking about some artificial sweetener, I don't believe that would work at all.
«And when I say sugar I'm also
talking about artificial sweeteners because it's been shown that artificial sweeteners cause a dysbiosis and promote the growth of not very favorable bacteria, bacteria that can cause inflammation and disease.»
Not exact matches
Things I'm thinking
about could be things like having his seat changed in class so he's next to someone he has conflict with, learning new skills at school that he's not confident
about and is struggling with, some new kind of food he's ingesting at school that has something that's irritating his system (
artificial dyes or
sweeteners would be my first guesses), something other kids are
talking about that are scaring him (movies or tv shows or stories).
Then, we have the habit of adding harmful
artificial sweeteners, additives and fillers that certainly no one
talks about on labels and online marketing campaigns.
We're not gonna do a lot of the
artificial sweeteners that may have been in a lot of these low carb products so if we
talk about it with the Paleo template attached, then we can make sure we're avoiding the trans fat.
I will
talk mainly
about the two most popular
artificial sweeteners, Aspartame, and Sucralose.
In my last article, Low Carb
Sweeteners: Choose What's Best For You, I talked about the differences between artificial swee
Sweeteners: Choose What's Best For You, I
talked about the differences between
artificial sweetenerssweeteners,...
And we just
talked about how
artificial sweeteners make foods weight gain foods.