Quote:
Originally Posted by acescracked
Very early this morning I saw a very interesting topic on health on PBS. It seems that there are several studies that suggest that fasting increases quality of life and longevity. Personally I fast when I get a cold and it seems to shorten the duration and severity. But I am going to consider fasting as a part of everyday activities. If you get a chance it is repeating next week on some cable channels but not KETC from what I could tell. Of course you can always purchase it online thru the PBS website.
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See:
Wikipedia: Intermittent fasting
I've been doing this for roughly 4 years now: basically I fast for 24 hours 3-5 days per week. "Fasting" in this context is basically a full dinner, followed by nothing caloric until dinnertime next day; so, e.g., if I fast Monday that means that I don't eat anything from Sunday dinner through Monday dinner. I started fasting Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays and kept that up for about 3 years; lately I've altered that to fasting Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday, with (generally) no caloric restrictions on the weekends. I do have some flexibility with the schedule; if I've been really bad over the weekend (e.g., a trip to St. Louis with Imo's and White Castle binges in the mix
) I might fast the entire work week following to "make up" for the weekend binges, and I might shift a fast day to the weekend if some social event "requires" that I might need to eat during a weekday (e.g., a retirement or holiday party at work).
I can't testify as to longevity increase (and I'm one who believes that living longer is highly overrated, anyway; my plan is to die before I am forced to stop working, since voluntary retirement is not an option, and I'd just as soon not spend a forced retirement living in a cardboard box under a highway overpass), but since starting on intermittent fasting I've noticed a distinct improvement in my blood glucose control (I'm diabetic) and I've not gained weight like I have in the past. So far, it's working for me.
Cheers,
bcg