A friend and I were comparing addictions Tuesday. He’s trying to quit smoking and I’m trying to give up sugar.
My friend started smoking when he was 13 years old — behind his parents’ back, of course — and he’s wanted to give it up for years. But now that he’s 60, he’s seeing serious medical consequences hit him. It’s suddenly become important to quit. He hasn’t had a cigarette for 11 days — and it’s the longest break his lungs have had since he was 13.
I’ve talked before about my ongoing struggle with poor eating. Sugar is my real problem, but it’s far worse because I use food like a drug to self-medicate when I’m feeling down. At some point in January, I suddenly realized I’d been eating well for a few days. It wasn’t a planned thing, but I seized the opportunity, because I know I’m going to kill myself if I don’t make a complete change
Over the last six or seven weeks, I’ve dropped all the sugar and most of the carbs. I’ve felt great and dropped 31 pounds, but I still have a long way to get where I want to go.
My friend and I both have great incentives to kick our habits. But neither of us could compare to the incentive that another friend of mine had. I knew that this friend used to smoke — years ago — and I asked her last week how she quit. It turned out her incentive was her daughter.

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New year is great time to resolve to cut toxic folks out of your life
Why do we often attract the folks who are most destructive for us?
Here’s a hot news flash: State ‘industrial policy’ still doesn’t work
Ten years later, it hurts to know she lost faith in me and gave up
Federal control of Internet security would put Barney Fife in charge
Let’s try a candid conversation just for the few who want to hear
Why do so many of us stay where we know we’ll remain miserable?
Our need for love lets us ignore past pain and feel hope instead