Drifter
Honorary Master
I read fasting all wrong.
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Research on rats in possibly stressful / unnatural environments.Intermittent fasting is not good for metabolism.
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/321864.php
Are you willing to take the risk?Research on rats in possibly stressful / unnatural environments.
To take the risk of what? Eating in a way that feels natural? There's nothing magical about 3 meals a day.Are you willing to take the risk?
Actually eating every two hours is the magical number. Maintains balanced blood sugar levels.To take the risk of what? Eating in a way that feels natural? There's nothing magical about 3 meals a day.
If that works for you, cool, but for many people eating less regularly feels better and is better for them. We didn't always have the luxury of eating every two hours; sometimes when you're foraging you go hungry for stretches at a time.Actually eating every two hours is the magical number. Maintains balanced blood sugar levels.
Actually eating every two hours is the magical number. Maintains balanced blood sugar levels.
My blood sugar levels stay balanced regardless of when/if I eat...
Mankind has not had access to food 24/7 until recent times. Feasting & fasting has been the dominant eating paradigm for a lot longer than our modern lifestyles.
I'm with Saor that the study was probably done in an unnatural environment. Rat studies done under artificial light have no bearing on optimal human biology... infact if you want to induce insulin resistance in man a precise mechanism to use would be to uncouple from circadian biology and eat carbs under modern 'blue-light spiked' artificial lighting!
There's an adaptation period, also the types of food you eat makes a massive difference. In general for intermittent fasting you'd want to drastically decrease your carb intake and increase the amount of fat you consume.Maybe it's different for some of us afflicted with insulin resistance. Skipping a meal can mean a drop in sugar level where it feels everyone around is talking garbled and you start to lose consciousness. It's happened to me several times. Fasting induces a surge of insulin.
There's an adaptation period, also the types of food you eat makes a massive difference. In general for intermittent fasting you'd want to drastically decrease your carb intake and increase the amount of fat you consume.
There's an adaptation period, also the types of food you eat makes a massive difference. In general for intermittent fasting you'd want to drastically decrease your carb intake and increase the amount of fat you consume.
Part of the problem is we've been so indoctrinated with the idea of 3 meals a day and always eating that we never really pause to question the narrative. Eating less feels better for many people once you're used to it, and I think it's good to occasionally stressing the body and not get stuck in a habit of just eating because you think you have to.Makes no difference whether high protein low carb or not in my case. Eating regularly helps, as well as cutting out refined carbs and sugars. Bread is a big culprit.
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Part of the problem is we've been so indoctrinated with the idea of 3 meals a day and always eating that we never really pause to question the narrative. Eating less feels better for many people once you're used to it, and I think it's good to occasionally stressing the body and not get stuck in a habit of just eating because you think you have to.
But yes - obviously there are people for whom this wouldn't be a good idea.
I find that if I eat nonsense carbs like cereal for breakfast (even though I tend to avoid it due to IF) I get the shakes from hunger a few hours later.
I'm guessing it's the blood sugar dropping?