Let’s be honest, sugar is a part of life. From the birthday cakes of our childhood to the morning coffee that starts our day, it is woven into our happiest memories and daily routines. It gives us quick energy and a direct hit of joy. Our bodies are even designed to enjoy its sweet taste. But like many good things, too much of everything is not good and can sometimes cause crisis. This makes me ask, should we control sugar like we control alcohol? However, for us to find the answer, we must look at sugar’s role in our lives, the disadvantages, and how we can find balance.

First, it’s important to know sugar is not evil. In nature, it is found in fruits and honey. Our brains see it as a great source of energy. It makes food taste better and in a real way, it can comfort us.
To me, the problem is not sugar itself, but the Amount and the Form we now consume it. We went from occasional honeycomb to sugar in almost every packaged food, such as bread, sauce and drinks. It’s hidden, and most of the time we eat it without knowing.
I feel that, this is where it endangers lives. When sugar is eaten in these large constant amounts, our bodies suffer it. It can lead to weight gain. It is a major leading cause of type 2 diabetes, as our bodies struggle to handle the constant sugar rush.
It harms our teeth, contributes to heart disease, and can even affect our. Like alcohol, its harm is not always immediate. It builds up over years, a slow strain on our health that finally breaks us.*
So, after considering all these things, should the government step in with strict rules like those for alcohol? Ideas like high taxes on sugary drinks, age limits on purchases, or stark warning labels are debated. The goal is to make people pause and think, “This might hurt me.” It could work. When people see a warning, they might choose water over soda.
But on the other hand. For many, such rules feel like a loss of freedom. Sugar is not a substance that makes people lose control like alcohol can. It is in the food we share with family. Strict control might feel like a punishment, and it often hits the poorest the hardest, for whom cheap, sugary food is sometimes the only option.
Maybe, the real solution lies not in strict rules, but in Honesty and Choice. We need clear labels that show how much added sugar is in a product, in simple terms. We need to teach our children in schools how to eat well, making it as basic as reading and writing. We can make healthy food cheaper and more available to all communities, than making the unhealthy food cheaper and most available.
However, in all, it is about our own habits. We can cook more at home, where we control what goes in. We can retrain our taste buds to enjoy the natural sweetness of fruit. We can see the soda can or the candy not as forbidden, but as a sometimes-food, not an every day food.
I will say that, sugar is a friend that turned into a difficult neighbor. We cannot imagine life without it, but we cannot let it move in and take over. The goal is not to ban sweetness, but to restore balance. Through clearer information, better education, and our own small, daily choices, we can enjoy the pleasure of sugar without letting it steal our health. The power, finally, is on our tongues and in our hands.
The earlier people know that it's not the sugar that's the problem but we, how we consume it is the major problem here. The better we are able to curb health risk.
Sugar is almost in everything we eat, it might y difficult to regulate it but we can start somewhere
Clear labels will work if the government will agree because they also make money out of the companies.
Thanks for sharing