I posted about a recent planned 5 day fast in a Reddit fasting sub, cut short to 4 days, which I'll also share here as an update. The part about making a variation of Gatorade to make the electrolytes more pleasant (sodium and potassium salts) was interesting to me.
It's not a new theme, trying out tisane blends during fasting, but this worked better than earlier attempts. I used lime from the garden, about a quarter of a normal size lime worth, since they were tiny, and stevia for sweetness, along with a bit of jasmine green tea. Then I mixed some of the nasty salt water I've been drinking with that, and it was fine, actually delicious. I drank most of that salt water the normal way though, just working through it.
they're an unusual variation of a lime, maybe even a small type of orange |
The first and second days were easier than ever, with less experience of hunger than before. Really that was true of the 3rd through 5th fasts, just in a different sense. Energy level and productivity at work didn't seem disrupted at all (I started on a Thursday, so the crux would be over the weekend). On-site office work ran late on Friday, and I didn't get out until 7, and it was fine.
There isn't much for approach or hacks to pass on. I drank electrolytes without monitoring amounts over the first two days, which is not ideal, just mixing some Less Salt and salt into water a few times a day, and taking magnesium capsules. It's better to figure out how much sodium, potassium, and magnesium intake works for you and mix up a daily drink mix, it's just easier to carry a bit of salt to work than the liquid. I had a calf cramp in the night after the second day; I was probably a little low on potassium, so I went back to a measured approach the next morning.
For me the middle range of electrolytes seems to work out, based on the sodium and potassium recommendations in that Reddit fasting sub reference, just over 2 grams each, with sodium slightly higher. For magnesium taking a supplement pill in the morning and evening seems to work well, adding up to more than they recommend there, but not a crazy amount.
I only drank that one tisane the whole time, that one I thought of as a variation of Gatorade, but perhaps it wasn't that close. Some people would avoid anything but water and the salts, to really lean into the detox theme, but to me drinking some tisane / herb tea is fine, surely not all that impactful or toxic. It's a helpful way to be able to experience "eating" something, to settle your stomach, and it helps with reminding you to stay hydrated, versus drinking liters of plain water a day.
For tea I drank shou pu'er in the morning on the first three days, a bit of green tea and tisanes at work the second day, and aged white tea, shou mei, on the last day. Not lots of any of those teas either; one Western brewing round's worth of shou I split over two days of brewing.
I can do light exercise while fasting, and walked about 3km / 1 1/2 miles as part of a commute on the second day. In general I limit jogging to 2 miles, nowhere near a routine run, but I was so busy with other things that I didn't run.
I cooked during the fast; that was odd. On two different days too, making up food to bring to a set of cousins who are in poor health. I made chicken and dumpling soup, home-made meatballs and spaghetti, and lots of steamed vegetables.
I ended up going to a grocery store two days in a row, and a bakery on one of them; it's as well to not be around food that much, if it works out not to. I cooked so much that my mother-in-law and I can eat that for a few days too. Of course it increased my hunger level some, and I think my stomach producing more digestive fluids came with another odd side effect the next day, as something to expel. Fasting can be strange like that though, the odd extra body function here or there.
It went great. The main story line, to me, was being able to stay ridiculously busy and productive while not eating for four days, and feeling mostly normal while doing it.
Why even fast? I've covered all that in a half dozen earlier update posts. It's not to lose weight; I didn't weigh myself, and we don't have a scale at our house. There are lots of likely health benefits, especially related to reducing diabetes risk, eliminating fat content in internal organs, and between them, and offsetting cancer and other risks, through the process of autophagy, your body recycling and using inactive cells for an energy source. I'm not absolutely convinced it works as promoted, because accounts of all that seem to stop short of research findings about that process, but it probably is quite healthy for you.
It also works as a diet reset. My diet is pretty good, so there's only so much change to be made, but I think that's probably the main potential benefit for most people. You can easily recognize when eating habits only relate to triggers, or habitual patterns, and it stands out when genuine hunger cues drive the process instead.
You are hungry the whole time during a multi-day fast, to an extent, but it's a different form of hunger, more just feeling empty, and I'm talking more about relationship with foods and eating than just that one part. Fasting helps you reset approach to diet, and eating habits, in ways that are hard to describe. Or you can go right back to eating junk all the time, but it gives you that short window of opportunity to make a limited amount of changes.
I think fasting helps with my mental clarity, but that part can be vague, and people might seem to experience whatever they expect to. When people describe how pleasant fasting can be, experiencing unusual clarity and euphoria, I can't really relate to all that, but I think I am slightly clearer mentally as a result, afterwards and even during the fast.
back to my normal diet! jk; this place is new in Bangkok. |
the latest theme is travel; I'll get back to that |
Is the Cheesecake factory part of a chain? They are everywhere in Sydney
ReplyDeleteThey are. I don't really keep up with where they are located now but one has been in Honolulu for a long time and there are some in the US mainland.
Delete