I had a really good and relevant question from Ben Miller. He asked whether intermittent fasting was safe? See the article. This is a really good question because it has a great deal of depth to it. Here's a more complete answer.
Intermittent fasting is safe if you are well nourished and above your minimum amount of fat (around 5% for men and 10% for women).
I would be more selective
with fasting by swapping the high sugar, pure starch and pure oil
items from your diet a little at a time. This is because these
components of food offer the least nutrition. Replace with fibrous
carbs (leafy green vegetables), beans, seafood, fruit, meat and whole
grains. (Have some organ meat like half an ounce of organic liver, an
egg and cod liver oil everyday - to make up for vitamins D, B12 and
omega 3 fatty acids.). These new foods will provide you with the
minerals, vitamins, essential fatty acids and proteins you need on a
fast but not the calories. (In addition you will want to ensure you
are getting some vitamin K2 with some natto or grass fed derived hard
cheese or butter).
If
you do not have all the nutrients that you need you can not function
properly.
Intermittent
fasting is broadly calorie restriction because you can't eat as much
in a shorter period (an eating window as fasting people call it) but you do need to overcome the sensation of
hunger until you make it a habit. So initially it is very difficult
to do. (Intermittent fasting can also be called meal skipping if you don't like the fancy name).
If
you can do the above substitutions (replacing low quality foods for high quality ones) you will put more nutrients into
your body. By being more discerning with foods that offer many
micronutrients and small amounts of essential amino acids and
essential fatty acids - non of which the body can make - you reduce
calories without reducing micronutrients.
I
would suggest you build up the hours on a fast to test whether it
suits you or not. So if you have your last meal 2 hours before bed,
try to have that meal 3 hours before. Then 4 hours. If you can manage
that then try 5 hours (at the 5 hour mark the last meal merges with another meal time so you eat less because you have lost 1 meal time). It has to be manageable otherwise don't do it.
(The 2 reasons why I picked before sleep is firstly it is easy to
remember and secondly; because your growth hormone reaches a peak
within the first 2-3 hours of sleep. If you are still producing a lot
of insulin due to eating before bed it blunts the growth hormone
release.)
Intermittent
fasting is quite a natural practice for humans in the past when food
was less reliable than it is today. We have fat stores so that we can
go without eating for long periods of time. Consider this, as an
extreme example, if a person has about 30% fat by body weight and
they weigh 160lbs. That person has 48lbs of fat which is roughly
168000 Calories. That is a lot of fuel and if you burned 3000C a day
that is 56 days of fuel! (Now, that is in theory but when we get to
essential body fat which is about 5% in men and 10% in women - it
becomes very difficult to lose anymore fat. Any more loss in fat
would adversely affect your health - you need a little fat to cushion
your organs, your heart needs a little fat around it for emergency
energy supply, there is fat in your eye sockets to cushion impact, your lean body tissue breaks down (your body prioritises fat as much more important when you get to very low levels) etc. So the 56 days, for the above example is not entirely accurate
because you tend to settle at minimum body fat which can be dangerous.
You will also have depleted many of your micronutrient supplies long
before 56 days if you ate nothing. However if you got all the
essentials but not sufficient calories then you could last much
longer and continue to lose fat.
Lets
put calories aside for a moment, a micro nutrient like vitamin C is
extremely valuable and a prolonged deficiency can kill you faster
than a lack of calories can. You probably have heard about scurvy
before where the body falls apart because without vitamin C, collagen
formation is unstable. (Roughly speaking collagen is like a glue that
holds the body tissues together.)
So
when you fast you don't want to remove micronutrients (all the
vitamins, minerals) and you don't want to get rid of essential amino
acids and essential fatty acids.
The
only things you want to get rid of are excess calories. Namely the
refined foods - the components like bottle vegetable oils, flours,
starches and sugar. Replace these with whole foods. You will then
actually get more of these micro nutrients.
The
recommendations for intermittent fasting is usually 2-3 days maximum
in a week. With the 5:2 diet where you eat normally 5 days a week and
space the 2 fasting days apart, it is a compromise that many people
can do. You are allowed to have a soup (made with plenty of
vegetables and some protein) or a very large salad with a little
protein to keep you topped up with water soluble vitamins, minerals,
amino acids and omega 3 and 6. (I would recommend you also add a
little omega 3, Vitamins D, K2 and B12 because these are more
difficult to come by. Cod liver oil, salmon, tuna and UV treated
mushrooms contain vitamin D (the first 3 contain long chain omega 3
fatty acids). Natto, grass fed derived hard cheese and butter contain
K2. Eggs and seafood are rich sources of B12.) You don't need to eat
a lot of the below high quality proteins because they are very
nutritious.
That
should give your body all the materials it needs to function without
many of the calories - those calories will come from your fat stores.
(But you need to do a tiny amount of exercise 15 minutes of
resistance training and about 15-30 minutes of hard cardio - to get
your hormones protecting your muscles and stripping away the fat).
A
more extreme version is consecutive fasting for 2-3 days in a week,
with a 4 hour eating window, which makes your growth hormone and
testosterone reach higher peaks to protect your body from breaking
down too quickly. This makes the fast time very long because in 2 to
3 days you are fasting for about 20 hours. So you can lower insulin
and keep blood sugar low which promotes growth hormone and
testosterone release. On a shorter fast, with a larger eating window
your blood sugar and insulin remain higher for longer which inhibits
growth hormone and testosterone release for more hours in the day.
Drop some comments if there are any specifics that you would like more information on. I am sorry it is quite a long response. I was not happy how many people don't want to look at the nutrition and just assume skipping a meal/s or cutting foods in a random manner is acceptable.
When I see mirror, became hopeless and want to lose weight at any cast, because this weight I feel uncomfortable in the smart persons and in my office. I decided to work hard on the exercise to loss my weight and with this I increased my search on the Internet and found Intermittent fasting for the healthy weight loss through your blog. Thank you for this nice article
ReplyDeleteTry many things to see what is effective for you. Just make sure you are getting enough nutrients to function well. This will go some ways to balancing hormones. Replace some of the oil and sugar/starches in your diet with green leafy vegetables and good quality protein. Do short 10 minute bursts of hard exercise every few hours (when you can) and this will keep you very warm (high metabolism). The intermittent fasting can be built in a few hours at a time to get the benefits of your growth hormones. Keep weight training to keep testosterone high and maintain muscle health. Get sufficient rest. You will see results very rapidly. See what works best for you and keep doing it. Above all never give up.
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