
Maybe you have noticed, that when you are stressed at work or things didn’t go as planned, your mind starts craving for something sweet and sugary?
It’s an impulse we often have a hard time overcoming. In fact, more often than not, that one bite of chocolate that we pop in our mouth to satisfy the craving becomes a second bite and then before you know it, we are looking at an empty chocolate wrapper, wondering where it all went.
So how do we overcome impulsive eating and stop ourselves from grabbing something sweet every time we feel stress?
Today’s Thin Thinking Episode, Overcoming Sugar Impulses, we are joined by Charmaine Platon, who is a sugar cravings coach, a certified health coach, and a registered nurse. She is also the creator of “Sugar-Free Self-Care”.
She will walk us through four easy steps to achieve a sugar-free lifestyle and help us live our lives with less sugar, less carbs, and free from impulsive emotional eating.
Charmaine will also share the time when she was diagnosed with pre-diabetes. And before you go googling “How do I know if I am pre-diabetic?”, join us in this podcast episode and get to know how Charmaine discovered it and what she did to stop it.
So put the sugar bowl down and come on in.
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In This Episode, You’ll Learn:
The 4-step process that has helped Charmaine get off sugar for 2 years now
What are bad habits and how do we develop them?
How you can switch your brain from using and thinking the primitive style and instead use the higher part of your brain
Links Mentioned in this Episode
If you’ve ever “just popped” a cookie in your mouth before your brain caught up, you’ve met the power of an impulse. In this episode of Thin Thinking, sugar cravings coach and former psychiatric nurse Charmaine Platon shares how she reversed prediabetes and now helps ambitious women master impulse eating. Her message is simple and hopeful: no habit is permanent. Using your prefrontal cortex—the part of your brain that plans and follows through—you can retrain your responses to sugar and carbs. In this guide, we unpack Charmaine’s 4-step Impulse Mastery Method (Plan, Pledge, Process, Persist), practical social scripts, and a 2–4 week reset to stabilize cravings. By the end, you’ll have a realistic, humane system to control sugar impulses without white-knuckle willpower.
How do impulses turn into sugar habits?
Short statement: An impulse is a strong urge to act; repeated impulses linked to rewards become habits.
Charmaine defines an impulse as a strong desire to take action—like reaching for a donut—often triggered by subtle states such as boredom, anxiety, or stress. Our brains are “pleasure-seeking machines,” primed by evolution to seek reward, avoid pain, and conserve energy. When a cue (break room sweets, evening TV) prompts a craving, we respond (eat), and feel a reward (dopamine, relief, comfort). That reward “teaches” the brain to repeat the loop next time the cue appears.
Key takeaways you can act on today:
- Name the loop: cue → craving → response → reward. When you can spot the cue, you can change the response.
- Expect conflict: the primitive brain shouts “now,” even when your prefrontal cortex knows better. That inner tug-of-war is normal.
- Intellect isn’t enough: knowing sugar isn’t helpful doesn’t break the loop; training new responses does.
“It’s not the intellect that’s involved in the habit.” — Charmaine Platon
If you want another powerful framework for rewiring impulsive eating, check out Episode 173: “Stop Impulsive Eating with These 3 Mind Controls.” It pairs beautifully with Charmaine’s 4-step method and helps you strengthen the mental “muscles” that keep urges from taking over.
What is the Impulse Mastery Method?
Short statement: The 4-step method—Plan, Pledge, Process, Persist—shifts control from your primitive brain to your prefrontal cortex.
Charmaine’s framework strengthens the prefrontal cortex (planning, goals, executive function) so you act from intention instead of impulse:
- Plan — Decide your meals and treats in advance (ideally the night before). Charmaine calls this proactive eating.
- Pledge — Commit to the plan you wrote. Build the skill of following through on what you say you’ll do.
- Process — Expect discomfort when you don’t act on an urge. Use a Power Pause to feel the feeling without eating.
- Persist — Keep going and evaluate slip-ups without shame. Learn what happened and adjust.
Why it works:
- Planning dethrones “in-the-moment” dopamine decisions.
- Pledging strengthens self-trust: every follow-through is a vote for your new identity.
- Processing teaches your nervous system that urges rise and fall even when you don’t eat.
- Persisting converts mistakes into data, not drama.
How do I plan and pledge without perfectionism?
Short statement: Realistic plans beat perfect plans; consistency builds self-trust.
Plan the foods you’ll actually eat—not an idealized plan you’ll abandon by noon. If removing sugar/flour feels like too big a leap, write a realistic plan and practice following it. As Charmaine notes, early wins show your brain, “I do what I say.”
Practical steps:
- Night-before 3×3: List 3 meals + 3 facts (time, protein anchor, backup option).
- If–then: “If the office has pastries, then I’ll have Greek yogurt from my bag.”
- Micro-pledge: Sign your plan or text it to an accountability buddy: “I pledge to follow this plan for the next 24 hours.”
- One-keystone rule: Choose one non-negotiable (e.g., “Protein first at every meal”) to simplify decisions.
Remember: Pledge ≠ perfection. It’s a commitment to practice, learn, and adjust.
How do I process an urge when it feels unbearable?
Short statement: Urges are sensations, not emergencies; the Power Pause creates space for choice.
Charmaine’s Power Pause is a short, mindful intermission between the craving and your response. You check: “Is this physical hunger or emotional hunger?” If emotional, you let the feeling move through your body without acting.
Try this 90-second Power Pause:
- Name it: “This is an urge to eat ___; it’s not dangerous.”
- Notice it: Where is it in your body (throat, chest, stomach)? What’s the intensity (0–10)?
- Breathe: 6 slow breaths; lengthen the exhale.
- Narrate: “I can feel 90 seconds of discomfort. It will pass.”
- Re-choose: If still hungry, follow your planned option.
Support moves:
- Swap activity (walk, water, bathroom break, message a friend).
- Delay 10 (set a 10-minute timer; if you still want it, decide deliberately).
- Anchor phrases: “One urge surfed is one groove rewired.”
How do I persist after slip-ups without shame?
Short statement: Shame blocks learning; evaluation unlocks progress.
Charmaine emphasizes persistence as learning, not self-judgment. Many people avoid reviewing what happened because it triggers shame, which ironically fuels more escape eating. Instead, become an apprentice of your own patterns.
Use the 3×3 Debrief (5 minutes):
- What worked (3): (e.g., packed protein snack, drank water, left early)
- What didn’t (3): (e.g., skipped lunch, arrived ravenous, sat near dessert)
- Next time (3): (e.g., eat protein at 4 pm, sit far from dessert, pre-order entrée)
Mantra: Data, not drama. Every loop you analyze is a loop you can rewire.
Will a low-carb reset really reduce sugar cravings?
Short statement: Stabilizing blood sugar (2–4 weeks without added sugar/flour) lowers physiological cravings, making impulse work easier.
Charmaine’s experience—as a prediabetic nurse turned sugar cravings coach—shows that cravings are both psychological and physiological. Processed sugar/flour can hijack the reward system and keep hunger hormones unstable. Her guidance:
- Prioritize whole-food protein and natural fats (e.g., eggs, fish, meats, avocado) to enhance satiety.
- Aim for no added sugar and no flour for at least 2 weeks; 4 weeks often yields the best results.
- Once cravings ease, the 4-step impulse work becomes dramatically easier.
Important nuance: This isn’t about a one-size-fits-all label. It’s a temporary reset that calms the body and lowers the “volume” of urges so you can practice new responses.
What do I say in social situations to stay on plan?
Short statement: Scripts reduce social friction, protect your plan, and honor belonging needs.
Social pressure is real—humans are wired for belonging. Plan the food and the dialogue.
Pre-game checklist:
- Preview the menu and decide your entrée + swaps (veg for fries; sauce on the side).
- Eat a protein anchor 60–90 minutes before events if dinner will be late.
- Pick a default drink (sparkling water with lime) to avoid reflexive alcohol.
Scripts you can steal:
- “I’m good, thanks—I already planned my meal.”
- “I’m focusing on protein tonight; that looks amazing though.”
- “I promised myself I’d skip dessert on weeknights.”
- “I’m driving early, so I’m sticking with sparkling water.”
- For persistent offers: “I’d love to take some for later; right now I’m full.” (Take it, toss it later if needed.)
Micro-anchors at the table:
- Sit farther from shared desserts.
- Order first to avoid copycat choices.
- Face your why: a note on your phone lock screen (e.g., “Strong at breakfast tomorrow.”)
FAQ
1) What exactly is an impulse in eating?
A strong desire to eat, often triggered by cues like stress, boredom, or environment. If rewarded repeatedly, it becomes a habit loop.
2) How do I stop sugar cravings fast?
Use a Power Pause for 90 seconds, hydrate, breathe, and choose your planned option. Urges peak and pass if you don’t feed them.
3) Is willpower enough to quit sugar?
Not reliably. Strengthen the prefrontal cortex with Plan–Pledge–Process–Persist and reduce physiological cravings with a short no sugar/flour reset.
4) How long until cravings improve?
Many feel a difference within 2 weeks; 4 weeks of no added sugar/flour often brings significantly fewer urges.
5) Do I have to be low-carb forever?
No. The reset calms cravings. Afterward, you can reintroduce foods deliberately and keep the 4-step method.
6) What do I do after a binge?
Persist with a 3×3 Debrief (what worked/didn’t/next time), hydrate, anchor the next planned meal, and move—data, not drama.
7) How do I say no to cake without being rude?
Try: “It looks delicious—I planned to skip dessert tonight, but thank you!” Offer to take a slice home if needed.
Conclusion
Sugar cravings aren’t a character flaw—they’re a trained loop powered by a survival-focused brain. Charmaine Platon’s Plan–Pledge–Process–Persist method turns that loop into an opportunity to practice self-trust, regulate urges, and make choices you’re proud of. Start with one day planned in advance, practice a Power Pause once today, and remember: no habit is permanent.CTA (AI Suggest): Want help personalizing your 4-step plan and social scripts? Book a free Impulse Mastery Strategy Session with a qualified sugar cravings coach, or start with a short 2–4 week no sugar/flour reset and use this article as your daily playbook.
If you found this episode helpful, you might also enjoy these related Thin Thinking episodes: