October Alternate Day Fasting Update

Sugar Addiction

As I detailed in a separate post, I had believed that my 7-day water fast had helped me beat my sugar addiction. I am ‘somewhat’ sorry to say that my affinity for sugar has returned. I say ‘somewhat’ because, in all honesty, it felt strange to not desire what I considered my one vice in life – chocolate.  I don’t drink alcohol. I don’t smoke. I don’t even consume caffeine. But eating chocolate and sweets was something that I truly enjoyed. After 46-years on this earth, when looking at a delicious piece of chocolate cake no longer triggered any salivatory reaction whatsoever, it was surprisingly somewhat perturbing.

So it appears that my 7-day water fast helped beat back my sugar cravings for slightly more than a month. After that, I found that my body was starting to crave sugar again. I am, once again, able to consume vast amounts of sugar in one sitting, but as my weight is stable and I only eat every other day, my average daily consumption of sugar is probably not anything to be terribly concerned about. I’m guessing that over time that the sugar craving gut bacteria have gradually repopulated within my intestines and are once again driving my eating habits.

However, as I intend to perform extended fasts every 3-months, I expect that my bodies cravings for sugar will wax and wane with each cycle. This coming January I will be doing either a one or maybe even two-week fast again, which I presume will once again kill my sugar cravings. Given this routine, I will in effect only be sugar dependent for half the year as each fasting cycle entails one-week of pre-fasting and one-week of post-fasting, both of which are modified diets, predominantly plant based. I think I can happily live with this modulating routine and intend to fully enjoy my sugar cravings while I have them.

For anyone thinking of trying an extended fast to help change their eating habits, I should say that I still highly recommend it. After my 7-day water fast, I made absolutely no attempt to stay off of sugar. In fact, I planned my entire fasting schedule around being able to eat at two upcoming birthday parties. Staying off of sugar wasn’t my goal. My goal is to live as normal a lifestyle as possible, and where I live, that naturally entails eating things with sugar in them. My goal in life isn’t to live as long as possible. It’s to enjoy life while living a healthy and prescription-free existence as long as possible. For me, completely giving up sugar isn’t even remotely an option because I derive much too much pleasure from all things delicious.

Having said that, if your goal is to get completely off of sugar, then starting with an extended fast would definitely be one way to kick-start that effort, and if followed up with the required proper eating habits, I believe, an easy way to achieve that goal.

Weight

My weight didn’t really change much at all in October. After eleven months of alternate day fasting, I think it’s safe to presume at this point that this is basically my natural weight. Barring any changes to my diet or drastic changes to my fitness program, I believe that my body will continue to drift towards this balance point (62-63kg) whenever it is pushed either higher or lower from binge eating during vacations or extended multi-day fasts.

adf-weight-chart-oct2016

Fitness Level

My fitness stats improved slightly. Month-to-month, my pushups are finally back up to 100 from 80, and my chin-ups moved up from 15 to 16, which is still below my all time high of 18. Quite honestly, I haven’t been very consistent with my training. I have been doing the bare minimum to keep my muscle strength.

Health Benefits

Alternate day fasting has helped fix numerous health issues for me, but at this point in my journey, I don’t feel that it will actually improve my health any further. Everything that it could fix has by now been fixed. Now the only reason to continue with this lifestyle is to help maintain my weight. That being the case, I am open to trying other varieties of fasting to see how my body weight responds.

The end of November will mark 1-year of alternate day fasting for me. In December, I am scheduled to take an annual physical. I am keen to compare my numbers from this year with last year to see if there is any change in my blood work. After that is done, I am toying with switching to something else, perhaps a 4:3 fasting schedule with one day purely vegetarian, and seeing if I can still maintain my present weight. There is no one right way to fast, so I encourage everyone to try different methods and find what works best for you.

 

September Alternate Day Fasting Update

Weight

In September, I actually only alternate day fasted for the last two weeks of the month because the first week I did a 7-day water fast, which was followed by a week of re-feeding. Nevertheless, the two weeks were very important as the last thing I wanted to do Continue reading

7-day Water Fast Wrapup

It’s been three weeks since I completed my 7-day water fast. As I expected, my weight increased by 3kg the first week after the fast as I started re-feeding, but I was still down 2kg from when I started the fast. And since then, as I started alternate day fasting again, I have already lost a further two kilograms which brings me back down to 61kg for a total loss of 4kg since the fast started. Continue reading

How a 7-day Water Fast Helped Me Beat My Sugar Addiction (Hopefully)

As long as I can remember, like many people, I have had a sweet tooth. No one ever thinks terribly negatively of a sweet tooth. It’s just something you have. You learn to live with it. It’s not life-threatening. You don’t rush to the hospital to get your sweet tooth removed. Instead, you feed it. Chocolate. Cake. Brownies. Ice cream. Fruit. Pastries. Cookies. Waffles. Pancakes. Muffins. The list is long. The calories infinite. Continue reading

My 7-day Water Fast

Well, after 9-months of alternate day fasting, I finally got around to trying a 7-day water fast. The idea of attempting one had always been intriguing, but at the same time daunting, and beyond me – a mere mortal. But now with all my alternate day fasting experience under my belt, I felt fairly confident that I would be able to manage a 7-day water fast, although I still wasn’t sure how my body would actually react. Continue reading

Why I Want to Attempt a 7-day Water Fast

Having alternate day fasted for the past 9-months, the benefits of fasting are now irrefutable to me, quite literally, life-changing. Having seen a whole slew of health issues resolve themselves month-by-month, I have begun recommending alternate day fasting to everyone I meet. However, after speaking to many people, I have concluded that realistically there are very few people who will have the will power and resolve to attempt alternate day fasting, even though I do believe that it is in the realm of most people’s abilities. On the other hand, from my research on the Internet, it does appear that a lot more people are willing to attempt a one-off 7-day water fast. As I firmly believe that ANY fasting would be greatly preferable to NO fasting, I figured that it would be worthwhile to give a 7-day fast a try, so that I can “walk my talk” and have some personal experience with it when recommending fasting to people.

Alternate day fasting is incredible, but a longer continuous sustained fast is quite likely beneficial in ways that alternate day fasting cannot meet. From a healing perspective, a 7-day water fast may be the equivalent of 2-months of alternate day fasting. Furthermore, giving the digestive system a continuous rest will quite likely provide the opportunity to resolve issues that alternate day fasting cannot achieve. Who knows? Maybe I still have underlying issues that I’m not aware of that may be healed by a 7-day water fast.

As a form of health maintenance, the idea of quarterly 7-day or even 14-day cleansing fasts is appealing to me. Surely, no harm would come from it, and a routine maintenance cleansing of the digestive track seems to me a good way to ensure good health throughout one’s life. Our foods these days are full of artificial ingredients, toxins, pollutants, and chemical pesticides, not to mention the viruses and parasites that exist naturally around us. Any process that helps rid the body of these can only be viewed as beneficial. If maintaining this routine on an annual basis helps keep me out of hospitals and helps save me all the associated expenses of being sick, then I am more than willing to adopt this simple lifestyle change.

It’s a challenge. Going without food for 7-days straight, in a sense, seems incredible. In today’s world of 24/7 eating, almost unfathomable, magical or superhuman. I want to see for myself that I can do it, too, and demonstrate that the human body is naturally designed to be much more resilient than we give it credit for these days.