Hey all..
First of all, i know IF isnt a silver bullet or something magical to make you lose weight. I know calorie deficit still needs to be followed while on IF or you can gain weight.
With that being said, i chose to do IF because my anti depressants make me hungrier than most and IF can help keep me at a deficit to lose weight.
I have been on it for the past month and lost a total of 6lbs. Obviously not the big loses that some others do in the first month but i am about 30lbs from my goal weight so slow and steady is fine by me.
MY question is, if you are on antidepressants and on this, did you find success while on IF?
Skipping after dinner snacks is easier to do in the summer when I am not watching sports as much and having adult beverages & usually snacks thereafter.
I also try to walk 30 minutes at least 5 times a week but work has been rough of late and just not mentally up for it. I will be able to get back into a good rhythm this weekend.
As far as fasting, I fast a full day once a week. Nothing too scientific but I just choose a day a week, and all I do is drink water. I really feel great the next day. Believe it or not, I am not very hungry waking up the day after.
Right now I am 48 years old and I also am a runner, I try to run one hour daily.
I have plateaued but I am now range between 195-205 Lbs and have been there for awhile.
It didn't work for me.
Every day at noon, when my fast ended I was like Phil Connors in the diner in Punxatawny.
I was ravenous. I would time it too with a countdown and I wouldn't eat until exactly noon and then I'd eat like it was a competitive sport.
I do need to lose weight though.
Sorry, not on anti-depressants
Interestingly I continued to eat exactly the same types of food for lunch and dinner and still lost around 20 lbs (and I wasn't heavy to begin with). Went from ~172 to 152 lbs and honestly feel like I have a ton more energy and healthier overall.
Unexpected but positive experience overall that I've tried to continue.
I started eating from 12-8. Now I'm at 2-8 but this was a gradual change.
My one and only tip is if you have a cheat day, enjoy the hell out of it with no regrets. Just get back on the horse the next day. So many people quit because they dont see quick progress or they have a bad day.
trying to get my A1C down, IF may help that some
havent done any anti depressants occasionally have contemplated if I am being to moody ( its always blown over) but gaining weight would be more depressing for me
No side effects other than weight loss
The workout I utilized was 531 instead of the one he recommends.
I also stopped worrying about weight so much and focused on the waist measurement around the navel. That is a better measure to how you are doing imv.
Slow and steady wins the race.
If you prefer a 24 hour fast which some like better you can looking into "eat stop eat" which I have also used and recommend. The author is not very particular about what you eat as long as its healthy.
Good luck!
My point is it's how willing are you to take the steps and do the work. IF works for some because there's less time to eat.
Good luck and be healthy and happy. Don't beat yourself up if you slip.
My point is it's how willing are you to take the steps and do the work. IF works for some because there's less time to eat.
Good luck and be healthy and happy. Don't beat yourself up if you slip.
Lol, that’s just moving around calories. IF when done properly is supposed to teach your body not to crave unnecessary calories + all the energy benefits. Eating like an asshole over 12 hours is no different than doing the same over 8 hours.
My point is it's how willing are you to take the steps and do the work. IF works for some because there's less time to eat.
It's 100% eating too much processed food and added sugars for your friend. It's very hard to consume 4k+ calories in an 8 hour window eating whole foods. Even diets like keto, paleo and WW are completely flooded with processed options that are no better than the alternatives they're mimicking.
I was never overweight so I did not do it for weight loss.
However, I did do it for several pretty well documented reasons.
One, especially if you are lifting weights in a fasted state, there are significant increases in HGH and testosterone levels. I'm 55 so obviously those things are both concerns for me. Between lifting in a fasted state and doing 5x5, my most recent testosterone levels was over 700. Obviously, I cannot definitively state that it is because of IF, but it's likely.
Two, brain health. Lots of studies have shown IF improves brain health.
Three, slows down the again process. Again, some pretty well documented impacts on aging.
Four, energy levels. I noticed a big increase in my energy levels once I started IF. Around my mid 40s, I could feel that slowing down dynamic happening. Now, i really don't feel that much different. I lift hard three days a week, do HITT training 3 times, play basketball quite often with 20 somethings.
Anyway, can I attribute all of this to IF? No. Some of it is genetic. Some of it is that I lead a healthy lifestyle. But I absolutely know that IF contributes to these things
She was not really overweight. She was just trying to go from regular weight to bikini weight.
So maybe it works for people who need to drop a lot but not those who are just a few pounds heavier than they want to be.
I usually walk about 4 miles a day & run about 30 miles a week. Throw in the one meal a day...I'm like the 43 year old version of Cordale Flott, Haha. My one vice is beer, but no beer belly because I counteract that by really getting my steps in daily.
Six years ago I went through chemo and afterwards had real bad neuropathy. Basically I couldn't feel my feet. Doctor told me it might get a little bit better but I would have it for the rest of my life. For two years before I started IF it stayed the same. About 3 months into IF my feet started to get better. Two years in they are back to about 90%. IF has more benefits then weight lose. Check out the doctor linked below.
Link - ( New Window )
10000 steps a day,
weight training 3 x week
peleton (or bike) 3 x week
drinking only water, sparkling water and tea
eliminating added sugar
halving portions
limiting snacking
good sleep
not eating right before bed or first thing in the morning
That's what works.
DCG, I’m curious about this - 3-5 days just water?
Do you workout during?
Do you keep the weight off after (the 6-10).
By the way, what God told mankind that they were skipping meals if they only ate once a day?
I suspect the name of the God was Big Food, (including Tyson, Kraft, Heinz, General Mills). IMHO, no scientist ever got paid a dime to do a study to see if people were better off eating once a day, rather that eating a series of meals all fuckin' day long.
The one thing I realized is your body will adjust to whatever you do to it. After 2-3 weeks I stopped getting hungry during any time other than lunch.
First few days are always hard, but it gets much easier.
I usually wake up and walk 2-3 miles and do some work. Then I eat a medium lunch around noon, work, then workout at 4ish. Another quick 1 milk walk, then dinner before 730.
The only draw back for me is that after a few weeks I hardly have an appetite for a lot of food and have to remind myself to drink water more. Energy levels can fluctuate in the beginning, but seem to increase after getting a routine.
Ultimately it's all CICO. But it's really easy to sustain as a lifestyle post weight loss. I eat whatever I feel like, for the most part, and don't gain weight. I just don't like eating THAT much trash.
I have to really try hard to gain weight.
Carnivore, IF, and OMAD worked for me. I've lost 110 pounds in two years.
At first I had to plan to fast. Over time it just came naturally. I eat as much as I want sometime between 12:00 and 2:00, and I'm good-to-go until the next day.
On occasion I might have a snack between 6:00 and 8:00, a hard-boiled egg or two, or some homemade beef jerky, but not very often.
the only change is i am hitting the weights so maybe i am retaining more water? unsure. i will give it another month to see what happens.
if you have any thoughts on this, would welcome it.
Could be a variety factors - weight is very fickle. Could be lack of sleep, stress, water retention or an actual plateau. 2 weeks isn't a long period of time. Weight loss isn't perfectly linear either, it's common to plateau for a bit then experience a "flush" where you suddenly drop a bunch of pounds.
I would introduce another form of tracking as well. Weekly waistline measurements are a good one (same day/time every week). Especially if you're reintroducing resistance training where you may experience some muscle gain, you'll notice weeks where your weight plateaus but you've lost some around the waist.
First, I don't even think about calories. Don't know, don't care. For me, it's all about carbohydrates, cutting them out as much as possible.
I eat when I'm hungry and I eat until I'm full - meat (mostly beef or lamb, occasionally fatty pork, chicken thighs and wings from time to time); eggs, four to six a day; salt on everything. Butter (or ghee), beef tallow, duck fat. I do enjoy fish on occasion and follow the SMASH rule: Salmon (wild caught), Mackerel, Anchovies, Sardines, and Herring. Mostly canned, packed in water, never oil.
No sugar, in any form, and there are many. No seed oils, which are in damn near everything. No fruits, vegetables, or grains. Needless to say, nothing processed, Very little dairy, plenty of water.
At -1.5 pounds per week I'm allowed about 1,850 net calories per day (calories in - calories expended by exercise). Using the app motivates you to eat healthier since things like apples have less calories than cookies, and to exercise more since it lets you eat more.
When you are in a deficit and working out some are prone to to increased cortisol levels especially with excessive cardio. You will see some recommend doing heavy compound weights over cardio when using programs like IF. Depending on age, sometimes a extra day off is a good thing.
Klaatu; that is outstanding what you did. Well done.
SFG; You're a lucky guy with all those crafts you seem to like!
If you reduce your calories, that's less energy and more of existing fat will need to go into energy production. Calories are just a unit of energy. Stored energy is fat and glycogen in liver and muscles.
Muscle building will require fat and protein. Like a track star, you can build up weight and then CUT down calories but maintain intensity.
The cycle is better than just progressively starving as the metabolism will slow to adjust to lack of calories.
Plus your brain NEEDS carbs so don't,5 just cut that out.
I am intrigued by flush diets that get rid of toxins and heavy metals plus all the shit from vaccines and so on. Have not ventured there
Fat cells shrink but never go away - ( New Window )
Fat cells shrink but never go away - ( New Window )
Anyway...LoS, thanks for the kind words. I would like to amend what I said about processed foods, though. I make an exception for bacon (sugar free), and ever since Bill in UT turned me on to Wild Fork Foods, in addition to organ meats - liver, heart, kidneys, sweetbreads - I really like their Argentinian Blood Sausage (also sugar free).