You're probably better off with less easily-accessible sugar than cutting it out entirely. Sugar itself is useful, and a good source of energy.
The "slow-release" sort you find in most carbohydrates (breads), and the smaller amounts you find in fruit (for example--120 calories worth in a banana, versus the 300 in a candy bar), are generally the best sorts. I call the carbohydrates in bread "slow-release" sugar simply because they aren't sugar until your body actually takes apart the bigger carbohydrates, so you don't get the quick spike that messes with your blood sugar so much.
People who tend towards hypoglycemia are the ones who need to watch sugar intake the most (well, except for diabetics, naturally), because if you've got a tendency towards dysregulation of your blood sugar, you just don't want to give your body any surprises. Gradual influx of sugar into the bloodstream messes with your system the least. Of course, you get about the same amount and type of sugar from eating an apple that you do from eating a quarter of a candy bar; but chances are, you wouldn't just eat a quarter of a candy bar, right? You'd eat the whole thing. You're unlikely to eat four apples one after the other. That's why the refined sugar is a problem--it's not because it's "artificial" or anything like that; it's just that it's too much, too fast, and it can set some people's systems out of balance.
Last edited by Callista on 28 Feb 2010, 11:20 am, edited 1 time in total.