Randomized cross-over trial of short-term water-only fasting: Metabolic and cardiovascular consequences.
Good consequences, as we already know.
What Are The Health Benefits
Health Benefits Of Intermittent Fasting
Monday, January 21, 2013
Friday, January 18, 2013
Intermittent Fasting, Awareness, and personal tools
Just a little insight from someone who has been IF'ing for about 14 months straight. Fasting is not a magic bullet to weight loss. It is a tool, and all tools have a learning curve. In order to us IF properly we must master it first. How do we do this: Awareness.
The first thing you realize when fasting is how hungry you become when you're not fasting. You will have urges to eat double your calories in Snicker bars. Careful you don't follow the urge. In truth, your stomach is going to fill up faster, and you will feel more satisfied at a smaller meal. That is unless the meal is liquid or sugar, or even worse liquid sugar (careful again, alcohol is not that different than liquid sugar).
You want to make sure that the first thing you eat after fasting is nutritionally complete. Think meat and potatoes, or a bowl of hearty soup plus some veggies. Make sure you eat a good amount 700-900 calories. Now, here is where awareness comes in. Wait a few minutes before dessert. Enter your calories in Livestrong, read a book, play guitar, watch a documentary etc... Now have your desert, or glass of wine. Watch your portion. Try to keep your calorie intake half of your daily average. Mine is 2400, so I try to keep it under 1200 coming off a fast. This usually equals dinner and 2 glasses of wine (6oz).
Tools are a very important role in learning about who you are and what you are doing at all times. Though I agree Lance Armstrong is kind of a douche, his site Livestrong has an app called MYPLATE. Use it to track your calories and macros (protein, fat, carbs and yes sugar). Every time you take a bite of something or a drink that isn't tea, water or black coffee, track it. Do not cut corners, don't fool yourself about portions. When in doubt overestimate, because statistically we underestimate how much we think we eat. You will quickly learn where the problem lies. There is an icon you can click that will show you your daily calorie intake in a pie chart. After tracking mine for 30 days I saw that Red Wine was taking up a quarter of my daily calories. Holy shit, am I an alcoholic (functionally maybe). 3 glasses of the Red a day (hey I'm a big guy), adds up to 450 Calories. On the weekend if you tag a couple Beers on to that were talking 800 calories. Nutritionally poor calories, and to boot, calories that wreak havoc with sleep cycles.
Awareness is taking full responsibility for our actions at all time. Do not lie to yourself, it leads down a dark path. Light the torch of awareness and you will forever know thyself.
Also use the tools. For weight loss we have Intermittent Fasting. Control your calories, and carb/sugar intake using Livestrong. Step on the scale a few times a week, and input your weight in the Livestrong app you now possess. It will make a nice graph to watch your progression. Mostly like who you are and enjoy awareness. It will free you up to get on with more important things in life!
The first thing you realize when fasting is how hungry you become when you're not fasting. You will have urges to eat double your calories in Snicker bars. Careful you don't follow the urge. In truth, your stomach is going to fill up faster, and you will feel more satisfied at a smaller meal. That is unless the meal is liquid or sugar, or even worse liquid sugar (careful again, alcohol is not that different than liquid sugar).
You want to make sure that the first thing you eat after fasting is nutritionally complete. Think meat and potatoes, or a bowl of hearty soup plus some veggies. Make sure you eat a good amount 700-900 calories. Now, here is where awareness comes in. Wait a few minutes before dessert. Enter your calories in Livestrong, read a book, play guitar, watch a documentary etc... Now have your desert, or glass of wine. Watch your portion. Try to keep your calorie intake half of your daily average. Mine is 2400, so I try to keep it under 1200 coming off a fast. This usually equals dinner and 2 glasses of wine (6oz).
Tools are a very important role in learning about who you are and what you are doing at all times. Though I agree Lance Armstrong is kind of a douche, his site Livestrong has an app called MYPLATE. Use it to track your calories and macros (protein, fat, carbs and yes sugar). Every time you take a bite of something or a drink that isn't tea, water or black coffee, track it. Do not cut corners, don't fool yourself about portions. When in doubt overestimate, because statistically we underestimate how much we think we eat. You will quickly learn where the problem lies. There is an icon you can click that will show you your daily calorie intake in a pie chart. After tracking mine for 30 days I saw that Red Wine was taking up a quarter of my daily calories. Holy shit, am I an alcoholic (functionally maybe). 3 glasses of the Red a day (hey I'm a big guy), adds up to 450 Calories. On the weekend if you tag a couple Beers on to that were talking 800 calories. Nutritionally poor calories, and to boot, calories that wreak havoc with sleep cycles.
Awareness is taking full responsibility for our actions at all time. Do not lie to yourself, it leads down a dark path. Light the torch of awareness and you will forever know thyself.
Also use the tools. For weight loss we have Intermittent Fasting. Control your calories, and carb/sugar intake using Livestrong. Step on the scale a few times a week, and input your weight in the Livestrong app you now possess. It will make a nice graph to watch your progression. Mostly like who you are and enjoy awareness. It will free you up to get on with more important things in life!
Thursday, January 10, 2013
Coffee Good! Diet Soda Bad...
Coffee tied to lower risk of depression. Diet soda drinkers are tubby. No shit!
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/01/130108162135.htm
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/01/130108162135.htm
Wednesday, January 2, 2013
Happy 2013
Wow, I cannot believe I have been Intermittent Fasting for over a year now. Cannot think of a time when I have stuck to an eating habit for over a year. Yes, I was a vegetarian for 8 years, but that was easy and different in comparison.
I have decided I need to make some tweaks. For one, I'm not a big fan of low carb/paleo per se, however I definitely would like to consume as little wheat and sugar as possible. This has been a goal of mine for a while, but it never really sticks. I think instead of practicing zero tolerance for these foods, I can consciously avoid them, but keep a cheat day every week to eat pies and ice cream and pizza!
Next up, eating breakfast sometimes. On days following a 24 hr fast I see no problem in eating a nice breakfast. I think it helps me psychologically recover from some of the ill effects of fasting. Usually I practice a Leangains 16/8 window post 24hr fast. I had some trouble in the fall this year with sugar binging. I think chronically being in a fasted state the brain's lack of glucose starts to wreak havoc with willpower. I think upping eating frequency (but not necessarily calories) helps on the day after.
Alcohol, specifically red wine is my main vice. I have to work this year to reduce consumption. Not only are there a ton of useless calories in wine, BUT it also interferes with sleep, which throws metabolism out of whack, so... 2 glasses a day?
Lastly, a little bit of calorie restriction may be necessary. Not 40% reduction, but maybe 10-15%. Will have to work on that.
I have decided I need to make some tweaks. For one, I'm not a big fan of low carb/paleo per se, however I definitely would like to consume as little wheat and sugar as possible. This has been a goal of mine for a while, but it never really sticks. I think instead of practicing zero tolerance for these foods, I can consciously avoid them, but keep a cheat day every week to eat pies and ice cream and pizza!
Next up, eating breakfast sometimes. On days following a 24 hr fast I see no problem in eating a nice breakfast. I think it helps me psychologically recover from some of the ill effects of fasting. Usually I practice a Leangains 16/8 window post 24hr fast. I had some trouble in the fall this year with sugar binging. I think chronically being in a fasted state the brain's lack of glucose starts to wreak havoc with willpower. I think upping eating frequency (but not necessarily calories) helps on the day after.
Alcohol, specifically red wine is my main vice. I have to work this year to reduce consumption. Not only are there a ton of useless calories in wine, BUT it also interferes with sleep, which throws metabolism out of whack, so... 2 glasses a day?
Lastly, a little bit of calorie restriction may be necessary. Not 40% reduction, but maybe 10-15%. Will have to work on that.
Wednesday, December 26, 2012
LOL!, intermittent fasting has hit the mainstream
Mens Health is on to us. Oh well, it was too good to not keep a secret right?
Martin Berkhan, you should have pulled your head out of your ass and wrote this book. I would have bought it.
8 Hour Diet
Martin Berkhan, you should have pulled your head out of your ass and wrote this book. I would have bought it.
8 Hour Diet
Monday, December 24, 2012
This is probably the most interesting IF research to date
Intermittent Fasting Research
I love this article, although it is rather old (published in 2003). It compares calorie, restriction, ad libitum, Intermittent Fasting and Paired Feeding (instead of ad libitum, paired feeding was given similar calorie amount to IF Rats).
Great read!
I love this article, although it is rather old (published in 2003). It compares calorie, restriction, ad libitum, Intermittent Fasting and Paired Feeding (instead of ad libitum, paired feeding was given similar calorie amount to IF Rats).
Great read!
Friday, September 28, 2012
The trials and tribulations of intermittent fasting
IF'ing is generally easy, sometimes too easy, so naturally you can get bored. Coming from a financial perspective boring is good. You want your long term investments to be safe, reliable, even predictable. I imagine a bad investment is like crash dieting. You throw all your money at a new exciting stock the same way a crash dieter throws themselves on the latest diet. You go up, you go down, but you never really gain health (or wealth). If you are wise you seek out the best mixture of stocks and mutual funds, real estate and tax deferred savings programs.
In health seek out the gold standards. Exercise regularly. Be careful of extremes, marathons and crossfit are awesome, but they will wear you down. Practice Intermittent Fasting. The easiest way to give your body a break, and a chance to get on with some autophagy. Stay away from long term fasting. If you are doing it daily maybe 16-18 hrs. Incorporate healthy foods like green tea and kale. Reduce your sugar and refined foods intake. Practice Tai Chi or Yoga or Meditation. Brush and floss.
I know, it sounds so mundane. My guess is the long term benefits will give you an abundance of health, just like safe, boring investments give you an abundance of wealth.
In health seek out the gold standards. Exercise regularly. Be careful of extremes, marathons and crossfit are awesome, but they will wear you down. Practice Intermittent Fasting. The easiest way to give your body a break, and a chance to get on with some autophagy. Stay away from long term fasting. If you are doing it daily maybe 16-18 hrs. Incorporate healthy foods like green tea and kale. Reduce your sugar and refined foods intake. Practice Tai Chi or Yoga or Meditation. Brush and floss.
I know, it sounds so mundane. My guess is the long term benefits will give you an abundance of health, just like safe, boring investments give you an abundance of wealth.
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