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Birthdays don’t have to be corn syrup hell


Robyn Openshaw - Aug 10, 2012 - This Post May Contain Affiliate Links


This summer has been a whirlwind. Lots of activities and travel, and, oh I don’t even know why. BIRTHDAY SEASON has snuck up on me. That’s the three

weeks of August where ALL FOUR of my kids seem to require some attention, gifts, and a party.

The only pregnancies that “stuck” were the ones that commenced in November.

(I lost several along the way that were due when people PLAN pregnancies—in the spring!) Finally with my baby, Tennyson, we gave up on planning and just went with what worked: August babies.

So I rented Big Screen Game Center for a dozen boys to play video games on giant screens. We had the usual stuff everyone else serves at birthdays, except I also had a big veggie tray and Tennyson had to eat a boatload of veggies before eating the birthday pizza-and-cake. I didn’t do ice cream, soda, candy, or treat bags, or a piñata.

It still wasn’t good. I’m not proud. With Colorado right before, and Pacific Northwest right after, I didn’t pull off Chocolate Beet Cake this year. (Ch. 11 of 12 Steps.)

I did send the remainder of the pizza and cake home with the first parent to show up at the end of the party. I did manage to not eat any of it myself.

a trash can full of sugarAnd Tennyson received, as gifts from friends, a bag of taffy, two

movie-sized boxes of candy, and a $10 Coldstone gift card.

Apparently it could have been worse. Dallin, who we once terrified by

driving down a steep hill and screaming, while pretending to lose control of

steering and brakes, said to me:

“This is the first birthday in two years that I HAVEN’T given the friend a

bunch of candy. My parents said it would be ‘inappropriate’ for your

child.'” LOL! Some people didn’t get that memo.

That’s okay. I bought the $10 Coldstone card from Tennyson.

Sheryl, my customer support manager, said, “Just regift it—isn’t the gift about what

the person wants, not what we want them to have?”

Yep. Done. I agree, and I’m not above regifting to a Coldstone fan.

But the candy? I paid Tenn $5 for the privilege of round-filing it, as you

can see here.

One boy heard me tell Tennyson the figure I would give him, and Tennyson’s

response. (“Cool.”) The boy, who knows that I give my kids $20 for their

Halloween candy for the privilege of getting drugs off the streets, asked:

“Do your kids ever get mad or refuse to let you buy their candy?”

Nope. They never have. They universally have preferred the buying power of

$20 over a bunch of junk. Plus I’ve done this their whole lives.

This is why I say in my lectures that the moms of young children have all

the power.

If you buy and feed your kids sugar, you lose that power. They’ll demand it,

regularly, forever. Nag, whine, drama. They know they can work you over.

In my house, there simply isn’t any sugar or white flour. We do have “fun

foods” sometimes—they just aren’t made with refined or processed garbage.

I think what they get at their dad’s house, at church, at school, at

parties, is excessive already. Why would I offer more of it in my HOME?

Just because we’ve lived another year doesn’t mean we have to make ourselves

depressed, fat, and fuzzy-headed with high-fructose corn syrup. (That’s the

main ingredient in all three candy varieties currently at the bottom of my

office trashcan.)

I like Chocolate Beet Cake better than buttercream-frosting cakes anyway. If

you quit eating corn syrup (HFCS) for a period of time, even a few weeks,

and observe the reaction of your body and mind when you eat it again, you

will know with certainty how much your body hates it.

Your body loves you when you say no to HFCS. It’s not just highly refined,

acidic, high calorie, and zero nutrition—it’s also genetically modified.

It inflames your cells. It ages them, and it erodes your gut lining. I never eat it anymore.

Even before I undertook the One-Year $10,000 Sugar Bet with Matthew nearly

11 months ago, I’d completely quit eating HFCS. Not only do I academically

know too much about its detrimental effect on health, but it sends my

lifelong anxiety, completely under control on whole foods, into

instantaneous orbit. NOT WORTH IT!

Posted in: Recipes, Relationships, Whole Food

3 thoughts on “Birthdays don’t have to be corn syrup hell”

Leave a Comment
  1. Anonymous says:

    I have LOVED grocery-store fruit-flavored yogurts my whole life. One time, I started eating plain yogurt with honey, lime, and walnuts. I eventually stopped that and tried to go back to the commercial yogurts. They tasted like pure chemicals! I’ve only had one a handful of times since then. I was disappointed that what I had loved was ruined, but I knew it was because of the chemicals/HFCS.

  2. Anonymous says:

    Thank you for your blog and who you are. (:
    I love what you said… “In my house, there simply isn’t any sugar or white flour. We do have “fun
    foods” sometimes—they just aren’t made with refined or processed garbage.
    I think what they get at their dad’s house, at church, at school, at
    parties, is excessive already. Why would I offer more of it in my HOME?”
    absolutely agree!

  3. Christopher says:

    I was just thinking that my kids would rather have $20 than a bunch of halloween candy. 🙂

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