Intermittent Fasting
solomonjon245
Posts: 9 Member
Hello all. I have been struggling with my weight loss journey and am contemplating fasting for two days a week. Has anyone had any success with restarting their weight loss with IF?
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Replies
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Fasting for two days without food? Or are you talk about the 5:2 eating style?1
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The 5:2 style is what I was thinking of trying. I've heard that it will reset my metabolism. I have gone back up a little past 200 and I don't want the scale to continue in the wrong direction.2
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solomonjon245 wrote: »The 5:2 style is what I was thinking of trying. I've heard that it will reset my metabolism. I have gone back up a little past 200 and I don't want the scale to continue in the wrong direction.
I did it to lose my excess weight and no it won't "reset your metabolism" as that's not a thing.
Do remember the reason I lost weight was because I ate the right amount of calories over the course of a week (calorie deficit) and not because of a specific eating pattern. That eating pattern just helped me adhere to my calorie goal easier.
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I have cut out sugar and am defiantly giving it my best to stay within my calories. So hoping to try it out for a bit at least to see if I get better results then my previous attempts.0
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solomonjon245 wrote: »I have cut out sugar and am defiantly giving it my best to stay within my calories. So hoping to try it out for a bit at least to see if I get better results then my previous attempts.
The only weight loss benefit to IF is that it helps some people comply with their calorie goal. Nothing else. No magic weight loss benefit. It doesn't reset your metabolism or anything else. It is an eating schedule for calorie compliance. Period.
Weight/ fat is lost be a calorie deficit. There is no gaming your physiology. Do what helps you to stay on goal in a sustainable way.11 -
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Oh my gosh!! People give terrible advice. Intermittent fasting is so good for you. I recommend reading The Obesity Code by Jason Fung or Delay Don't Deny by Gin Stevens. It can change your life.7
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Anyone know how long your sugar spikes upward when you first start to fast? I have been fasting for the first time this week. Alternate day fasting. Sugar levels are pretty high. Thanks, Dave~2
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carpydave47 wrote: »Anyone know how long your sugar spikes upward when you first start to fast? I have been fasting for the first time this week. Alternate day fasting. Sugar levels are pretty high. Thanks, Dave~
Mine still do 6 years later. I cannot IF because of it.5 -
16:8 is an option or the warrior diet one massive meal a day idea are all also options as IF regulations but its just a protocol to help you lose weight and control calorie intake. According to Google the blood sugar spikes are normalish.1
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I fast almost every single day and when I go weeks without fasting I generally gain weight, consider fasted cardio too but be very hydrated before and during the cardio and I think jump rope is the most affective Cardio alongside high pace running1
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I tried the 8 hour diet and actually gained because I was so hungry. Another nurse at works swears by IF, but she is so horrid to the rest of us, we can't wait until she leaves for a month so we can relax in the med room. Good nurse, but we get very tired of having nurtion plans *kitten* at us. My best method is just trying to keep carbs to a normal amount, not keto, but lower than I used to eat.4
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@katiefiddle Fasting all day while trying to work a physically demanding, hard labor job will make you meaner than a skunk and the breath. OMAD, 5:2, 48-72 hour fasting trends are going by the way of the dodo. Just give me one more radical diet and I promise not to throw it all away. Think Oil Boom and Bust here.
OMAD. Waiting until evening for a big supper lollapalooza meal right before you go to bed. You can do your own research.
https://www.health.harvard.edu/heart-health/not-so-fast-pros-and-cons-of-the-newest-diet-trend
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3680567/
https://www.ese-hormones.org/news/rss-feed-world-news/intermittent-fasting-may-increase-diabetes-risk/
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/3218643 -
Hi I do the 16:8 and it works for me. I have also lost weight with three meals a day and two snacks. I really depends on good calories in and moving more. I just found for me eating only eight hours keeps me from munching after dinner and choosing the wrong things first thing in the morning. I use a little note book to keep track, plan my day and forget it. I also have treats that I include with my eating no cheating.4
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I fast almost every single day and when I go weeks without fasting I generally gain weight, consider fasted cardio too but be very hydrated before and during the cardio and I think jump rope is the most affective Cardio alongside high pace running
When you go weeks without fasting, are you eating more food than on fasting days?4 -
Nothing wrong with 5:2. It might not be the easiest protocol to maintain over time, but could be a way to get things going. As to IF more generally, I have found it a very effective way to stay engaged with my diet & eat the right amount of calories. I started with 16:8 but now do 18:6, which I find considerably easier - a six hour eating window. As many have said, IF won't do anything for your weight loss that just eating the same calories won't also do; however, IF can be a way of organizing the eating day that makes it easier to comply with a calorie target. For me, it definitely has been, insofar as binging and grazing have pretty much been deleted from my life after decades of basically ruining it. I just completed a full year of doing IF. So it can be a good way to go, and quite powerful for some people, but again, you can get the same end results with a simple calorie target.5
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I do 16:8 but mostly to help with my Crohn's and EPI. It helps with the symptoms a lot. But the weight loss comes from counting!3
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solomonjon245 wrote: »Hello all. I have been struggling with my weight loss journey and am contemplating fasting for two days a week. Has anyone had any success with restarting their weight loss with IF?
I've done OK with fasting 16 hours a day, 8pm to midday. Basically it makes it easier to maintain a calorie deficit.1 -
My husband and me doing 19:5 every day, but 42 hrs every week hang on fasting . This last from dinner on Sunday at 6pm thru Tuesday day lunch at 1pm. No problem with appetite or going crazy on the first feeding day. We eat on Tuesday exactly same calories what on Wednesday or Friday. Actually, no feeling week or drained on fasting days too. We have been doing it for long time, several years. Our bodies, got used to any fasting periods 24, 36, 42, 72 even 90 hrs. This is called metabolic flexibility, when body can switch from glucose energy sources to fat. We loose sometime up to 8 lb of weight in 90hrs fast, but it slowly comes back, when we start eating. In order to lose weight for long time you still have to decrease amount of calories in the feeding days. No magic happens, calories still matter0
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I am doing IF (16:8/TMAD includes a meal salad) and calorie counting.0
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I have been IF 16:8 for 21 days now. I feel amazing! My energy levels are up. My weight is down. My inflammation is down. Many non-scale victories! I have been pleased by the changes I see and feel. I am a nurse so evidence based is my thing. I have done a ton of research before I started. This is just one of many evidence based studies.
Ihttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/intermittent-fasting-surprising-update-20180629141561 -
I have been IF 16:8 for 21 days now. I feel amazing! My energy levels are up. My weight is down. My inflammation is down. Many non-scale victories! I have been pleased by the changes I see and feel. I am a nurse so evidence based is my thing. I have done a ton of research before I started. This is just one of many evidence based studies.
Ihttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/intermittent-fasting-surprising-update-2018062914156
That is a link to a blog post. What specific study are you referring to, the small one done at the University of Alabama?4 -
I have been IF 16:8 for 21 days now. I feel amazing! My energy levels are up. My weight is down. My inflammation is down. Many non-scale victories! I have been pleased by the changes I see and feel. I am a nurse so evidence based is my thing. I have done a ton of research before I started. This is just one of many evidence based studies.
Ihttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/intermittent-fasting-surprising-update-2018062914156
This one lost me when she pointed to Jason Fung's books.5 -
I have been IF 16:8 for 21 days now. I feel amazing! My energy levels are up. My weight is down. My inflammation is down. Many non-scale victories! I have been pleased by the changes I see and feel. I am a nurse so evidence based is my thing. I have done a ton of research before I started. This is just one of many evidence based studies.
Ihttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/intermittent-fasting-surprising-update-2018062914156
This one lost me when she pointed to Jason Fung's books.
Unfortunately, I made it all the way to the end when we're told "Let your body burn fat between meals. Don’t snack," as if eating some almonds before dinner is somehow going to circumvent a calorie deficit. And then says again "Avoid snacking or eating at nighttime, all the time." An embarrassment for everyone involved.
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I have been IF 16:8 for 21 days now. I feel amazing! My energy levels are up. My weight is down. My inflammation is down. Many non-scale victories! I have been pleased by the changes I see and feel. I am a nurse so evidence based is my thing. I have done a ton of research before I started. This is just one of many evidence based studies.
Ihttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/intermittent-fasting-surprising-update-2018062914156
That's not an evidence based study. It's a blog post. I would think as a healthcare professional, you would know the difference. This is evidence:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4516560/
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I’ve tried IF and I will say it helped out a little bit but as soon as I stopped I had gained all the weight back. So I think it’s more of what you’re eating and how much exercise you’re getting0
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I have been IF 16:8 for 21 days now. I feel amazing! My energy levels are up. My weight is down. My inflammation is down. Many non-scale victories! I have been pleased by the changes I see and feel. I am a nurse so evidence based is my thing. I have done a ton of research before I started. This is just one of many evidence based studies.
Ihttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/intermittent-fasting-surprising-update-2018062914156
That's not an evidence based study. It's a blog post. I would think as a healthcare professional, you would know the difference. This is evidence:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4516560/
It was the wrong link, my bad. No need to get snarky. Most of my info was from medical journals, which I subscribe to and apparently you can't read unless you do.0 -
I have been IF 16:8 for 21 days now. I feel amazing! My energy levels are up. My weight is down. My inflammation is down. Many non-scale victories! I have been pleased by the changes I see and feel. I am a nurse so evidence based is my thing. I have done a ton of research before I started. This is just one of many evidence based studies.
Ihttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/intermittent-fasting-surprising-update-2018062914156
This one lost me when she pointed to Jason Fung's books.
I did not refer to Jason Fung's books. I have never even read his books.0 -
I have been IF 16:8 for 21 days now. I feel amazing! My energy levels are up. My weight is down. My inflammation is down. Many non-scale victories! I have been pleased by the changes I see and feel. I am a nurse so evidence based is my thing. I have done a ton of research before I started. This is just one of many evidence based studies.
Ihttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/intermittent-fasting-surprising-update-2018062914156
This one lost me when she pointed to Jason Fung's books.
I did not refer to Jason Fung's books. I have never even read his books.
The link you initially posted, that was citing Fung in support of IF and other dubious statements (like that snacking is bad for you).3 -
I have been IF 16:8 for 21 days now. I feel amazing! My energy levels are up. My weight is down. My inflammation is down. Many non-scale victories! I have been pleased by the changes I see and feel. I am a nurse so evidence based is my thing. I have done a ton of research before I started. This is just one of many evidence based studies.
Ihttps://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/intermittent-fasting-surprising-update-2018062914156
That's not an evidence based study. It's a blog post. I would think as a healthcare professional, you would know the difference. This is evidence:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4516560/
It was the wrong link, my bad. No need to get snarky. Most of my info was from medical journals, which I subscribe to and apparently you can't read unless you do.
If you didn't mean to link to a blog post, what did you mean to link to?0
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