
Today is National Dark Chocolate Day, and yes—this includes people living with type 2 diabetes.
This isn’t a green light to eat half a bar while declaring it “antioxidants.”
But it is a reminder that living well with diabetes isn’t about elimination—it’s about intention.
This is a measured moment, not a controlled experiment.
Why Dark Chocolate Is Different
Dark chocolate—70% cacao or higher—behaves very differently from its sweeter cousins.
Here’s why it earns occasional inclusion:
- Less sugar, more cacao
- Healthy fats and fiber that slow digestion
- Flavanols, which may support heart health
- Intense flavor, meaning satisfaction comes sooner
Dark chocolate doesn’t shout. It whispers. And that matters.
Portion Is the Strategy
A reasonable portion looks like:
- 1–2 small squares
- Roughly 10–20 grams
- Enjoyed slowly, on purpose, and ideally after a meal or alongside protein
This isn’t about testing limits.
It’s about knowing where they are.
The Bigger Win: Permission Without Chaos
When foods are labeled “off-limits,” they tend to loom larger than they deserve.
Allowing small, intentional pleasures:
- Reduces rebound overeating
- Lowers food anxiety
- Builds consistency over perfection
This is how sustainability actually works.
The Measured Takeaway
Dark chocolate doesn’t spike blood sugar just because it exists.
What matters is quality, quantity, timing, and mindset.
You don’t need to justify it.
You just need to measure it.
And if that’s not a measured moment, then clearly this chocolate understood the assignment. 🍫⚖️