Monday, October 24, 2016

Why I Fast


Today I am starting my fourth 5-day water fast of 2016.

Once a quarter for the year.

The main reason I do it is for health, but there are many others.

Health Benefits

It helps regenerate the immune system, promotes longevity by reducing degenerative conditions, allows the body to thoroughly “clean” its cells, and it is a cancer fighter.

Cancer fighter?

Yup.

I hate to say it, but we all have cancer cells in us, slowly growing from year to year, waiting for the right conditions to potentially ruin our lives.

The good news is, just like everything else, cancer needs a fuel source to survive in our bodies.

Fasting restricts a major fuel source for cancer, sugar. Without that fuel source, those cancerous cells, and all of the tiny tumors in our body, shrivel up and die.

Sounds like a great preventative measure to me!

Hungry for a few days to help prevent cancer later in life?

Sold!

Cancer is a mother f***er.

In case you are wondering, I understand that I still may get it, but at least I will know I did everything to prevent it. There is peace of mind in leaving it all out on the field.

I don’t understand the mentality of people that say, “well, I’m gonna die from something!” and then proceed to treat their body like dog poop. Makes no sense to me. Life is difficult, aging is going to be hard for everyone. Why wouldn’t you give yourself the best opportunity to thrive? Be very wary of people that don’t care enough to try. You only get one life. This is not a dress rehearsal. Act accordingly.

Other Benefits

1. Time

So much glorious time!

I don’t work out during fasting weeks. I do a lot of stretching, foam rolling, and dog walking (my dog loves fasting weeks). I don’t get the boost of energy I hear some people getting after the first three days. I feel weak, I feel light-headed when I stand up, so I don’t want to push it. If I did anything, it would be light weights, minor calisthenics, but not much more.

Working out time:

4 runs.

60ish minutes per.
20 minutes of total drive time per.
20 minutes of dressing, undressing, showers, etc. per.
 = 6.75 hours

5 lifting sessions

80ish minutes per.
20 minutes of dressing, undressing, showers, etc. per.
15 minutes of smoothie making/eating per.
= ~ 9 hours

Food Prep + eating time:

~ 20 minutes of prep/eating for breakfast + lunch.
(I still need to make dinner for my wife and daughter, so that doesn’t count).
+ the time it takes to get back in to whatever project I was working on after I have been up making food and eating. I will say at least 15 minutes per meal, not including snacks, = 45 min per day.
= ~ 7 hours

Total Time Saved: ~22.75 hours in 5 days!!

That is 2 full work days saved in just 5 days.

Think about the productivity!

I can get so much done, it’s unbelievable.

Granted, there is a little brain fog later on in the week, but I have an enormous amount of time to work!

I can get so much done!!!

2. Mental strength

How many of us let our stomachs lead us throughout the day? I’m hungry, my blood sugar is low, I need nourishment, blah blah blah. Once you realize you don’t need to listen to your stomach you can take even more control of your day. You can skip lunch and power through because you have tested yourself already. You are a trooper. You don’t really need it, you have just conditioned yourself to think you need it.

It also shows you that you eat when you aren’t hungry at all (which is where most of us pick up the extra pounds). This helps you distinguish between real hunger and eating when you are supposed to (12 for lunch, 6 for dinner, etc) or eating because you are bored.

3. Religious strength

Fasting is a major component in all of the major religions. In fact, I thought fasting was only for religious reasons when I was younger. It sounded crazy to me. As I got older and learned all of the health benefits, it made me appreciate the religious factors even more. Rejuvenating the body? Building the immune system? Reducing cancer risks? And slowing the degenerative aging process? It’s incredible. Scriptures were written thousands of years ago, before modern science, before labs, before anything we would call credible by today’s standards, and here is this gem at the heart of many scriptures, fasting. I think it’s amazing, but that may just be me (which I am okay with).

Living Blog (10/24/16–10/28/16)

I will be editing this blog throughout the week, updating how I am feeling, what is difficult, what is easy, etc.

Please follow along this journey of mine, and ask any questions you like.

Have a great week.

Facebook

40 Hour Check-In

Didn’t start getting hungry until about 10:30am on day 1. I do intermittent fasting periodically, so it is no big deal up to this point. In fact, I don’t expect it to be much of a deal at all. I have done this before, many times for 24 hours, so I am used to it.

One thing that I always forget about fasting is being cold. Because your body is not working hard on digesting food, or recovering from workouts, it is colder than I am used to. What is funny is, my wife is always the cold one and I am always looking at her like she is crazy because I am hot and she is sitting there with a blanket. Last night, our roles were reversed.

The first issue I had was dinner. I do all the cooking so I am looking at this beautiful stovetop of freshly made raviolis and homemade tomato sauce, it smells amazing, I know it tastes amazing because of the looks on my wife and daughter’s faces. Ugh. I am hungry.

Still sleeping well. I expect it to get worse the longer I am fasting. This should be my hardest day. Between 48–72 hours, when your body is most likely transitioning in to ketosis is the hardest. 
Headaches, body aches, still hungry, feeling a little weak, etc. By the time I hit the 72 hours mark (noon on Wednesday 10/26) I should be good. Then I will have 48 hours of solid ketosis to go in and reset my system, shrink cancer cells, and detox my body.

There is one little hack I started doing this fast that I have not done the others. Granted, it is putting something in to my system other than water, but it is nothing too significant. On the first and second morning I drink a glass of water (duh) with baking soda and lime juice. In my mind, part of detoxing is getting all of the “crap” (pun intended) out of my system so it can heal. Well if I am not eating, then what is going to move all the waste out of my system, especially by day 2? The baking soda and lime help pull water in to the upper intestines where food may still be waiting to pass, activates that region, then helps flush it out (in to the toilet in case that was not clear). It is a little cheat, but I think it will help in the long run. Just wanted to be clear about everything I am doing so you may have a reference for your potential fast.

67 Hour Check-In

Sleep last night was rough.

I feel weak and mentally out of it.

Drinking a ton of water during the day seems to help, but you can’t do that at night. I had to curtail my water intake a few hours before I went to bed to make sure I didn’t pee all over myself or have to get up 20 times during the night.

Not good sleep.

I can feel my heart beat all night, which is not very comforting. I took my HRV (heart rate variability) yesterday morning. It was low (6) and my resting heart rate was about 10 beats faster than normal. 

When I got up this morning both were back to normal, which was comforting.

Honesty, I almost got up and ended the fast last night multiple times. If I feel the same way tonight that I did last night I will call it quits. It doesn’t feel right, and I don’t want to take any chances.
I have done this before and felt better, I am not sure what the difference would be this time.
If I do bow out, I think it is important for you all to understand how vitally important it is to come off of a fast slowly. I mean really slow. This is something that I have not done well the last three times. Once I start eating, everything tastes so fricken good, I eat WAY more than I should. Keep in mind, I get full very easily because my system has been shut down for almost a week, so I am not eating a ton of food, but definitely more than I should.

This time I will be coming off of it with a cup of bone broth, some juice, and then easily digestible fruits and carbs. A little white rice, or some pasta. Things that are higher in carbs but easy on the digestive system.

Remember, you entire digestive system has been turned off, meaning it can’t process anything initially. You need to warm the engine back up. Whatever you shove in your face at the end of this will just sit in your gut. Be cognizant of that.

Another check in at 90ish hours.

Update

I failed.

I had to pull the chord at about 73 hours.

I was having palpitations and tried to offset it with some calcium, Vit D3, and magnesium, but it didn’t feel much better.

Not sure what happened. I have done this before and this may have been my worst experience.
In spite of my frustration, I do feel very good. I just wish I had gotten to remain in ketosis for the 48 hours I was planning on. There are many benefits to a 72 hours fast, but I was really looking for the full 120.

I may mix it up a little next time, start the supplements earlier, maybe add some exogenous ketones in the beginning the ease the transition.

I also may need to come to the reality that my palpitations and arrhythmia will limit my fasting the same way it limits my running. I have done the full scope of tests with a cardiologist, knowing that I will need an ablation, but without being able to catch the arrhythmia on a monitor, and not having anything visibly wrong with my heart in other tests, I just have to deal with it.

If you are a practitioner of fasting and have any suggestions I would love to hear them. Please don’t hesitate in contacting me. The more feedback and insight the better.

Hope you all have a wonderful weekend. Be healthy!

No comments:

Post a Comment