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Addiction in disguise: What if our food desires are more than a free choice?

The subject of addiction isn’t often part of our regular conversation around food. The word itself sounds too harsh and maybe just a little ‘over-the-top’ because we’re discussing something we do daily and have complete control over. Don’t we?

But what if we consider the views of Dr Susan Peirce Thompson, who says, “The brains of people who have been hooked on food look just like the brains of people who are hooked on heroin and cocaine.”

We first published those words in the print version of WFL four years ago and received some very negative response. At that time, many were still a long way from considering the idea that our food choices might be influenced by addiction.

Brian Hart, the co-CEO of the Esselstyn Foundation, has no doubt about the powerful conflicts we all face around our food choices and how tough it can be for some of us to change them. He is currently reviewing the possibility of creating a lecture on the subject to be included as part of the Foundation’s excellent series of Zoom presentations available to non-profit organisations worldwide.

In a recent online chat, I first asked about his work in the field of addiction and how he became involved.

So the fact is, where food is concerned, most of us are spoiled for choice. But not only that, Hart says, because we’re chemically altered by what we eat, our degree of ‘choice’ is being taken away.

He says the addictive processes that come together to make this happen are the key drivers of all the chronic disease killers we know of today.

But what about the role of men here? Unfortunately, many of us males tend to leave food preparation to our partners and don’t develop even the most rudimentary understanding of the incredible health-giving properties of real food, especially whole food.

Of course, all that can change if we’re faced with a life-threatening condition, but because of a period of conditioning to the tastes we’ve normally enjoyed, making the change may not be easy. In the following and final segment, Brian explains the driving force that makes everything happen.

Peter Barclay
Peter Barclayhttp://www.wholefoodliving.life
Has a professional background in journalism, photography and design. He is a passionate Kiwi traveler and an ardent evangelist for protecting all the good things New Zealand is best known for. With his wife Catherine is also the co-owner of Wholefoodliving.
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