Current:Home > NewsHow sugar became sexual and 'sinful' − and why you shouldn't skip dessert -Wealth Impact Academy
How sugar became sexual and 'sinful' − and why you shouldn't skip dessert
View
Date:2025-04-17 05:38:21
I love the bright pink box that encases a dozen donuts. Even in a break room, half-picked over with only the jelly-filled ones left – there’s something about it that signals joy, confection, sin.
Some say sugar is a cheap high, but for me, it’s a life force − and a mechanism for rebellion. We’ve shared a long and fraught love affair, splintering and finding our way back to each other a million times.
In early adolescence, I developed an eating disorder that stayed with me in some form for about a decade. On days when I’m not kidding myself, I'll admit that its remnants are likely still lodged stubbornly in the folds of my brain. The language of it certainly is.
In the war against well-fed women, rhetoric is a particularly lethal weapon. It breeds a culture of guilt− ordering a basket of fries becomes "Should we be bad?" and a rich chocolate cake becomes "sinfully sweet." Building a lexicon around shame creates an easy dichotomy − one that separates foods, and our desire for them, into good and bad, sinful and pure, moral and amoral.
Anorexia, which disproportionately affects women, is often associated with a certain vapidness. But the disease is pure brass knuckles. It wracks the body, halts the menstrual cycle, makes you shiver, and chews you up from the inside before spitting you out without ceremony. Propelled by an impossible math, every morsel that goes into your mouth becomes a tally mark on an invisible scorecard.
In clawing apart that eternal tie between dieting and virtuousness, I found a simple dogma that added sweetness (literally) back into my life: You should always eat dessert.
Is sugar in fruit bad for you?An expert explains.
The dieting dichotomy
If anorexia and bulimia are about punishment, dessert − the spirit of dessert, not just the item on the plate − is the opposite. It's about enjoyment for enjoyment’s sake; a quality I learned in my recovery the world doesn’t like to see in women.
“What does it say about our culture that the desire for weight loss is considered a default feature of womanhood?” journalist Roxane Gay writes in "Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body."
That fact becomes unsurprising when you consider the norm for fashion models remains below a U.S. size 2. While the average American woman's size cannot be pinned down, the CDC reports an average waist size of just over 38 inches − certainly not a size 2.
“This is what most girls are taught—that we should be slender and small," Gay writes, "We should not take up space. We should be seen and not heard, and if we are seen, we should be pleasing to men, acceptable to society."
That calculus can easily condemn healthy women of any size to an eternal state of starvation.
But dieting is as dieting talks. It's not just that we go hungry, it's that our hunger is bestowed great honor: It is gifted the language of correctness − "I've been so good this week," or "I'm eating clean." As opposed to what, eating dirty?
Easy bedfellows: Sugar and sex
Dessert specifically adopts a sexual language − indulgence and abstinence. That's no mistake.
Women are given two competing ideas about sugar, Dr. Sera Lavelle, a clinical psychologist who focuses on eating disorders says. One portrays an all-in approach; a pint of ice cream after a break-up, for example. The message is that this will make you feel better. And there's often a sexual connotation. The intimacy of romance is superimposed onto a sugary indulgence.
Lavelle references an ad for a food delivery service she once saw on the subway that depicted a giant ice cream sundae with the subtitle "Why don’t I come over and make you forget all about him." It's so clearly marketed to women and gay people, she laments. Scratch harder at it and you discover something more sinister. A tacit implication that without the male figure, you're empty, hungry for something more.
The other idea Lavelle says women are given is that sugar consumption will render you unattractive to men, or unlovable.
Ads for chocolate, burgers and other "indulgent" foods are often heavily sexualized. But the women that star in them are usually thin-bodied. It's another message meant to be internalized: participate in indulgence − both sexually and nutritionally − only in ways that are pleasing to those around you, or do not make people uncomfortable. Which, in a society that fears both fatness and uninhibited female pleasure, is a near-impossible balancing act.
The fear of indulgence thus becomes the woman's problem. It is viewed as a personal moral failing to be unable to perform enjoyment while also squeezing into the ever-shrinking confines of the beauty norm.
Why you should always have dessert
And so we return to the pink box. In the throes of my disorder, I would survey the donuts − just as sure that I wanted one as I was that I didn’t. Saliva waited anxiously at the corners of my mouth when I saw them, but I couldn’t, could I? Only the lowly crave sugar. Only the weak of resolution give in.
“The thinnest is the best" Lavelle describes the thinking pattern, "we’ve been able to control ourselves the best.”
God forbid I "indulge" fully, it might make me crude, too closely resembling my honest form. Women can be hedonists too, after all, and can delight in things that may shorten our lifespan.
I like the maple bar or chocolate donut with sprinkles. At least I think I do. How alienating to not even know the way around your own palate − each of your urges stuffed through the cogs of diet culture and mutated beyond recognition.
After years of feeling blindly around my own subconscious, trying to resurrect those original urges I've learned a few things.
My advice − to be taken with a grain of salt (or a spoonful of sugar) − is this: Turn in your aching body and let it feast. Maybe for the flavor or the presentation or even the ritual. But mostly for rebellion.
Always eat dessert.
veryGood! (2647)
Related
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- 2 striking teacher unions in Massachusetts face growing fines for refusing to return to classroom
- 'Treacherous conditions' in NYC: Firefighters battling record number of brush fires
- Powerball winning numbers for Nov. 13 drawing: Jackpot rises to $113 million
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Top Federal Reserve official defends central bank’s independence in wake of Trump win
- Texas man accused of supporting ISIS charged in federal court
- Halle Berry Rocks Sheer Dress She Wore to 2002 Oscars 22 Years Later
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Nelly will not face charges after St. Louis casino arrest for drug possession
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Ex-Marine misused a combat technique in fatal chokehold of NYC subway rider, trainer testifies
- Quincy Jones' cause of death revealed: Reports
- Donna Kelce Includes Sweet Nod to Taylor Swift During Today Appearance With Craig Melvin
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Justice Department says jail conditions in Georgia’s Fulton County violate detainee rights
- Jamie Lee Curtis and Don Lemon quit X, formerly Twitter: 'Time for me to leave'
- Bridgerton's Luke Newton Details His Physical Transformation for Season 3's Leading Role
Recommendation
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
'Treacherous conditions' in NYC: Firefighters battling record number of brush fires
Tennessee suspect in dozens of rapes is convicted of producing images of child sex abuse
Kentucky governor says investigators will determine what caused deadly Louisville factory explosion
Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
Mississippi expects only a small growth in state budget
2 striking teacher unions in Massachusetts face growing fines for refusing to return to classroom
New Pentagon report on UFOs includes hundreds of new incidents but no evidence of aliens