I'm getting older and some mildly bad habits are catching up with me.
I was never a big drinker but realized any amount of alcohol messed me up for a full day later, largely due to disrupted sleep. Also, all the latest research shows that no amount of alcohol is good for you, despite what we have been told most our lives. So, I completely stopped alcohol and I don't miss it much.
Now, I'm targeting caffeine.
Tea and coffee are about the only two things I don't like; just never acquired a taste for either. But about 20 years ago I started to drink diet soda in the mornings. Take a Diet Coke with me in the car for those long L.A. commutes, then have more during the day.
I knew this wasn't good for me but it's really about my only vice, and it's a minor one. I don't like energy drinks, and a Diet Coke has about 45 MG of caffeine, about half a cup of coffee or a Red Bull.
But...
I know it's not healthy and I don't need studies to tell me that. It's full of all kinds of chemicals and for me, it's really just a caffeine delivery system.
So, after a slow taper of several months, I just stopped buying diet soda altogether. I'm about a week in and I've been dealing with withdrawal symptoms from reduction, but they have been manageable. Now, I just feel low energy in the mornings but it seems I'm better in the afternoons, where I had always faded hard before.
There is a very extensive subreddit on getting rid of caffeine, which shouldn't be surprising because it wasn't that long ago there was no such thing as energy drinks or even drive-thru coffee places. Americans in particular seem to have a national caffeine addiction problem and now many are becoming aware of the consequences.
Have others cut caffeine from their diet?
I can tell you that I feel okay but also like I have low-grade depression. From what I've read, that can last a few months while your brain and body rewire from being overly stimulated (in bursts) for years on end. From the many personal accounts I've read, there are great long-term benefits.
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