Sabra Wynne didn’t always care about sugar content. Like many of us, she leaned on sweet granola bars and fruit-flavored yogurts during long workdays, assuming they were “healthy enough.” But everything changed after she went through a period of extreme fatigue. A nutritionist pointed her toward a surprising culprit: added sugar, hiding in places she never thought to check.
That realization led Sabra down a path of experimenting with snacks that could fuel her body without the sugar spikes and crashes. She wasn’t just chasing “healthy.” She wanted real satiety—something to keep her full between meals without compromising her blood sugar or energy levels.
Sabra began with whole foods. A handful of almonds paired with sliced cucumber turned out to be more satisfying than her usual protein bar. Then came homemade chia puddings using unsweetened almond milk and berries, and small servings of hummus with bell peppers. These snacks didn’t just satisfy—they nourished.
What made this shift sustainable was her mindset. “I didn’t want to make food into a math equation. I just wanted to feel good,” Sabra explains. So instead of obsessing over grams and calories, she focused on taste, texture, and how each snack made her feel afterward.
Over time, Sabra noticed a remarkable change. Fewer cravings, better focus, and more stable moods. She also found that removing added sugars didn’t mean giving up flavor or satisfaction—it just meant getting creative and being honest with labels.
Now, she encourages others to adopt the same mindset: snack smarter, not harder. A small container of roasted chickpeas. A boiled egg with sea salt. Greek yogurt without sweeteners. The options are real, accessible, and surprisingly filling.