IF – eating within 8 hour window

This topic contains 9 replies, has 8 voices, and was last updated by  Gail B 9 years, 10 months ago.

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  • Just read some research saying that you can get better results from IF: eating between 11am-7pm, therefore letting your body rest for 16 hours. Didn’t seem like you needed to reduce calories, so I wonder if you can get even better results doing both IF and reducing calories.

    http://fitness.mercola.com/sites/fitness/archive/2013/06/28/intermittent-fasting-health-benefits.aspx

    Has anyone tried this and what has the results been like?

    I wanted to combine 4:3 with 16:8,but found that I just didn’t feel happy not having a hearty breakfast on a feed day and not being happy is not how I want to feel with this change to my lifestyle.

    After having done 5:2 for 4 months, and lost the weight I wanted, I am really struggling to hang on. Have been doing 16:8 pretty well every day with 5:2. I think the fast day sets me up to overeating on non fast days. Not sure if it’s too much fasting doing both, but I’m not one for breakfast anyways. Don’t want to give up after all the hard work. But I find myself slipping more and more each week.

    Have gained 5 lbs. and the thought of fasting twice a week is daunting and a struggle. Have done some research on 16:8, and a lot of people are doing this from once a week, to several times a week, to every day.

    Any thoughts on the difference/ health benefits of 16:8 versus 5:2? And instead of just giving up completely, I think I want to do a week or two of just 16:8, then adding 6:1…..

    Don’t mean to be a downer for anyone, but am very frustrated at the moment. Sure loved 5:2 and the success of it it the first 9 weeks or so. Not sure what happened.

    I’ve been doing 16hr + fasts every day (with very occasional exceptions) for about the past 6 months now. I started out on 5:2 with 2 small meals at about 12-1pm and 5-6pm and eating normally (or without breakfast but otherwise normally) on the other 5 days but over the first 6 months or so I figured out that it made it easier for me on fastdays (500 calorie) if I fasted on the other days too and it also reduced the likelihood of me overeating on non-fastdays. I also figured that once I was used to fasting for really long periods I might as well save my 500 calories for 1 meal.

    I don’t know that it’s helping with the weight loss side, as I’m crawlin along at about 2lb per month at the moment but it’s definitely a long term sustainable lifestyle for me. Fits in with work and my personal life and although I do still sometimes get ravenous & over indulge once I’ve ‘broken the seal’ on a non-fastday, it is much harder to overeat by THAT much when you’re eating all in one go, or 2 goes, within a smaller eating window.

    @tidychick
    “Sure loved 5:2 and the success of it it the first 9 weeks or so. Not sure what happened.”

    Consider staying with what brought you to your success and rekindle your 5:2 love. It appears that the romance may gave bored you.

    I started with 5:2 and I will stay with 5:2. I did eliminate noon eating on my feed days since I found a better alternative for that time. This will help my 5:2 lifestyle.

    Whatever helps your 5:2 lifestyle may be the right direction for you.

    The trick is surely to find a pattern that becomes a lifestyle that you are so comfortable with that you never feel the need to change again. “Hi, I’m Ro and I don’t eat on Mondays and Wednesdays.” or “I don’t eat before 11am or after 7pm.”

    Once you have the lifestyle pattern nailed you tackle the consumption; the issue of precisely what it is you are putting in your mouth. “no thanks, I’ll pass on the donut” and only putting REAL food in your supermarket trolley.

    Nailed: when I eat, and what I eat. Simple. It’s all in the mind you see.

    Hi, folks. As I’ve said before, I’ve been following my own take on IF. I’ve had a big appetite all my adult life, still have. It was unfair to my wife that I ate much more than she did, yet she reached about 19 stone/226 lb, (about 4 stone more than my max). She is down about 50% from her max weight, since a gastric bypass last year.

    I restrict intake other than water to a ‘time window’ of about 6 or 7 hours most days, so body cells are sometimes able to go into repair mode, as MM describes in the Fast Diet book. I omit breakfast five or six days a week, omit lunch maybe one or two days a week (easy if I’m out and busy). I occasionally do longer fasts, water only. I don’t do calorie counted small meals – I feel that small meals make me hungry – I’d rather have no meal than a small meal. My meals are more or less the same food, cooked from scratch, as the family eats, unrestricted in amount. I have at most a glass of wine a month.

    My weight is steady in recent months, but 8kg down from this season last year. At best it was 10kg down, fluctuates quite a bit from day to day. Ideally, I’d like to lose more. I recently bought a newish bike, around my 63rd birthday. I ride for two or three or four hours a week. That will be difficult in winter. I’m sure I’ve improved health parameters like intra-abdominal fat, even though my weight is steady. Jeans are loose. There is probably be a bit more muscle. If I cycle for 10+ miles, or walk a few miles whilst fasting, it doesn’t bother me at all. I’m someone who can repeatedly return to the fridge for another couple of apples, with a little chunk of cheese. Yet if I’m busy, especially if I’m out, going all day on a drink of water is easy. When the family is away I might fast for 48 hours or so. I’ve done 96 hours max, just once, to see what was possible for me. Getting to sleep on the first night of a longer fast tends to be hard, and the evening meal is the hard one to omit on brief fasts of 16-24 hours. Alas, when I eat I eat – it is not bingeing as a reaction to fasting, just my usual hefty intake. I know that feeling an urge to eat isn’t necessarily the same as hunger. I eat more if stressed. I’m an insomniac, and SAD (seasonal affective disorder) sufferer.

    I think data in Michael’s Fast Diet book is encouraging on 16:8 hours or indeed 18:6 hours fasting to non-fasting. The book sees fasts of up to 24 hours as safe for most adults. I think M&M’s 5:2 regime in their book seeks to temper the benefit of periods of fasting up to 24 hours, with what they think may be practically sustainable within people’s daily routines. I’m not sure what I’ll do to try to improve my own situation. A cut in my baseline appetite level would be welcome!

    Hey Tomorrow. I had a good think about your use of the word ‘appetite’ and looked around at other postings on cravings and hunger and the like. Before I started 5:2 I used to have a real food lust, a real fear of hunger. I was taught young to clean my plate, think about the poor kids in Africa, never waste anything. I have always derived more than just satiation from eating – it filled up other holes in the psyche too.

    It took a few 24 hour days of hard core fasting but it seriously changed my whole thinking about food, eating and hunger. Now I’m content to pass on the sugary stuff, eat half a portion, leave good food on my plate. I actually LIKE being a little bit hungry. The answer is definitely between the ears and not in our belly.

    Habits die hard. 40+ years ago, when I’d arrive to visit my sister my brother in law would say ‘R is here, hide the bread!” Insomniac, up late, then up again before 4am today. Before Fast Diet I’d have made toast – two slices, two more, then two more. I hate waste, so often eat what my wife and daughter leave on their plates. Dog is a useful alternative way to avoid that food being wasted, and he loves toast. He’s not obese. Six months ago we were just back from visiting Turkey, where we’d been plied with great home cooking. I’d felt obliged to eat far more than I wanted, just out of politeness. I gained 10lb/4.5kg in about 10 days.

    8+ months back, I’d been enthralled by the Fast Diet book – wanted to try a long fast. I ended that fast at 96 hours as I’d read about difficulty and complexity of re-introducing food into a gut where the usual bacteria had died (through lack of nutrients) in fasts of >96 hours. I’d read MM’s experience after his 96 hours, being told to re-introduce food gently, ignoring the advice with a breakfast fry-up but finding he very soon felt full. At the end of my 96 hours, I’d cooked a roast chicken dinner for my wife and daughter: I ate a modest portion (less than my usual), then a second, then a third. Within the next two hours, I’d followed up with a couple of bowls of home made soup. No ill effects. So much for re-educating my appetite.

    I am more aware now of pseudo hunger – an urge to eat especially first thing in the morning, though my stomach doesn’t feel empty from the night before. 20 years ago, I’d lose weight if stressed, now I gain weight if stressed. I echo your views, RoBa, on moderate hunger not being unpleasant. Fasting has shown me that if I get hungry and ignore it, the hunger goes away for quite a while. Hunger doesn’t build and build. Knowing my past habits, I am astonished that not only can I fast, but I don’t find it very difficult, except for getting to sleep at night feeling empty.

    My BMI was borderline obese a year ago: I remain overweight. I find that drinking lots of fizzy water helps ward off hunger. I avoid tea and coffee because of my insomnia. Sadly, I am still happy to eat far more at a sitting than most people. Fortunately, on most days I’ve cut out the cheese and apple and maybe oatcakes between meals, and the six slices of toast early in the morning. I still eat like that odd days, partly out of a fear that I need to kid my system into thinking that it remains in a state of plenty, so it doesn’t switch metabolism into famine mode.

    Winter on the way. Clocks change in UK this weekend, short days don’t encourage exercise. I get more depressed and sleep a lot (my SAD actually returns in mid August most years). At Christmas, I can easily avoid the sweet junk and the alcohol, but have a weakness for Christmas cake twinned with mature cheese, a traditional combination in this region.

    I’m a convert to intermittent fasting, 16:8 and/or 5:2 or whatever version. It’s my first ever diet. Still lots of work to do,

    I have started this year doing 4days of 18.6 (the days I work in a busy care home) I have never been one to eat in the morning and I find it quite easy to go through my 18 hours on 4/5 mugs of very weak tea (ss milk no sugar) my eating window is from 4pm til 10pm (I work 1 pm to 7pm) at around 4 ( never earlier) in my break at work I will have 5 water biscuits and 2 triangles of laughing cow light cheese and a few baby plum tomatoes then when I get home (after a 40 minute walk) I will have a Nutriblast and something like a dish of baked beans with a granary roll and butter.Also on my fast days I will do 30 minutes exercise on my cross trainer and vibration plate.I will be 62 in 3,weeks and am female..early days but will keep you posted (if I can locate this thread again!!)

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