From emphasize to comprehensive, it would result satisfaction. Just like every dessert that you’re going to partake, you have emphasized completely your satisfaction after the meal. You've just finished a big, hearty meal, but instead of feeling full and satisfied, you crave something extra. It's not meat or vegetables you yearn for, however — it's sweets (Marc, 2013). That's not to say that you can never enjoy dessert! You could eat a bit less of the main meal so that you have room for a bite or two of dessert without overfilling your stomach. There's a big difference between being "hungry" and being "not full." When sweets and snacks sound good but vegetables or another healthy choice doesn't, that's usually a sign that we're not actually hungry. We're responding to other triggers, such as boredom, habit, or simply the presence of a tempting food. (Monica, 2015).
For my first objection to my first point is that, if a person is having a depressed eating habits then that would be enclose to health imbalance. If a dessert can emphasize your feelings and emotions upon eating it, it can also cause diabetes and it can increase one’s sugar. For example, a student being depressed by his/her requirement at school will eat a lot of sweets which is not approprate. For my second objection to my second point, the desserts can definitely complete our needs of our meal which is apparently not acceptable. People tend to think that eating meal without dessert is completely incomplete. Moreover, it is not necessary that we should eat dessert every after