Can Intermittent Fasting (Skipping Meals) Make You Healthier?

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Wellness Mama » Blog » Health » Can Intermittent Fasting (Skipping Meals) Make You Healthier?

Maybe you’ve heard the often-repeated advice to eat small, frequent meals. Apparently skipping meals (even breakfast) is a surefire way to wreck your blood sugar and your metabolism. Moreover, even with our sedentary modern lifestyle, if we don’t eat every 2-4 hours and graze constantly we won’t have the energy to make it through the day. We must always carry 100-calorie packs in case hunger strikes, lest brain fog ensue.

Umm… no.

I know many health experts who disagree with this approach, and my own experience (not to mention scientific research) tells me that this just isn’t so. There are great health benefits to fasting for periods of time, if done in an informed way.

Health Myth: Eat Small, Frequent Meals

Here’s a few more “myths” you can ignore:

  • Eating small meals throughout the day keeps the fire of our metabolism burning and should we miss a meal, our body will jump into starvation mode and scavenge our muscle and brain tissue to survive.
  • Skipping meals leads to a slowed metabolism and certain weight gain.
  • Breakfast, being the most important meal of the day, should never be skipped, or one is at risk of tremendous overeating throughout the day, brain fog and impaired mental state.
  • To keep our bodies running optimally, we must eat small meals throughout the day of carefully portioned amounts of 600 calories or less, preferably from “healthy whole grains” and lean proteins.
  • This will also keep us from that ever-dreaded feeling of hunger which we all know causes us to shift into animal existence and eat everything in sight, especially chocolate cake.

Sounds logical enough, right? I believed it all for a long time.

The problem is: research and experience don’t back it up. In fact, discovering what the research really says about the topic of intermittent fasting (a.k.a skipping meals) was some of the most freeing information for me personally on my own health journey.

Health Truth: Give Eating a Rest

Conventional wisdom says that our bodies need a constant supply of food to keep running steadily and have stable blood sugar. While it is true that a constant supply of carbohydrates (which the body breaks down into glucose/sugar) will keep the blood sugar constant, it will be constantly elevated.

In all fairness, some people do succeed at losing weight with the grazing system, but it is a difficult model to follow as it necessitates constant access to food and many people eventually find that they hit a plateau. This plateau makes a lot of sense metabolically, as the body gets used to a constant supply of food and down-regulates the metabolism since it can count on a steady supply of the same amount of calories.

It’s not exactly easy to hear in a world where snacks and packaged foods abound, but some studies have shown very positive benefits from caloric restriction diets (see sources below). Researchers at US National Institute on Aging report that animal and human studies about caloric restriction show that when calories were reduced by 30-40%, the subjects tended to live a lot longer (30% longer actually!).

When You Eat, Eat Fat

That alone might make a case for caloric restriction and small meals, except for one thing that every low-fat dieter knows: the subjects (animal and human) were miserable and showed signs of depression and irritability.

Ever felt that way on a diet?

Unfortunately, the study that showed benefits from overall caloric restriction also included a low-fat diet, often recommended for weight loss. Fat does contain more calories per gram, so it was the logical source to cut down on.

In primate studies, cutting down fat and dietary cholesterol caused problems including making the primates more violent. The body actually vitally needs fats for hundreds of processes throughout the body, so when caloric restriction became fat restriction, health problems followed.

What if there was a way to accomplish the life-extending benefits of caloric restriction without bypassing real meals or saying goodbye to steak forever? Thankfully, there is!

The Benefits of Intermittent Fasting

Intermittent fasting basically refers to occasionally reducing or eliminating food intake for a period of time. There are many ways to approach this (which we will cover in this post). In studies, this was often done with alternate-day fasting, though there are many ways to incorporate fasting.

When I first heard of it, intermittent fasting seemed to go against all the health advice I’d ever heard. Emerging research is showing that fasting is not a threat to overall health, but it actually has many health benefits.

Here are some of the biggest benefits of skipping meals:

Cancer and Heart Disease Prevention

Studies have shown that the benefits of caloric restriction can be obtained in ways besides just reducing overall calories (especially by cutting fat) and that some other methods might be more effective.

One study found that when lab animals were allowed to eat freely on every other day, they actually consumed the same total number of calories as a group that was allowed to eat freely every day. The difference was that the group that fasted every other day showed longer life, increased resistance to disease, and improved insulin sensitivity.

Human studies back this up too, showing that when human subjects fasted on alternate days they not only showed the same benefits as caloric restriction groups, but also showed an increased ability to lose weight and improvements in coronary heart disease risk factors.

Studies (like this one) have even demonstrated a reduced proliferation of cancer cells in subjects who practiced intermittent fasting, and another study showed that alternate-day fasting led to better reception of chemotherapy in cancer patients and a higher cure rate.

Mental Health

It turns out that fasting occasionally can be good for mental health and repair also. As the study from the National Institute on Aging found:

Dietary restriction (DR; either caloric restriction or intermittent fasting, with maintained vitamin and mineral intake) can extend lifespan and can increase disease resistance. Recent studies have shown that DR can have profound effects on brain function and vulnerability to injury and disease. DR can protect neurons against degeneration in animal models of Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s and Huntington’s diseases and stroke. Moreover, DR can stimulate the production of new neurons from stem cells (neurogenesis) and can enhance synaptic plasticity, which may increase the ability of the brain to resist aging and restore function following injury.

Not just extended lifespan but better resistance to Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and Huntington’s as well as stroke! The study also found that intermittent fasting had a positive anti-aging effect on the brain.

Life-altering diseases aside, won’t restricting calories through fasting lead to the mental fog and sluggishness that we’ve been warned about (and perhaps even experienced) from not eating regularly?

I suggest that, when done correctly, logic points to intermittent fasting actually being better for mental clarity and energy levels. Yes, if the body (and brain) are used to running on a constant supply of fast carbs, cutting these out may lead to brain fog and sluggishness. However, if the body is getting the proper nutrients and an adequate supply of beneficial fats and proteins, it is more likely to adapt without negative symptoms.

On to more benefits!

Fitness and Health

Besides the benefits in reducing the risk of cancer, heart disease, and neurological problems, fasting actually helps facilitate weight loss and muscle growth. This actually seems logical if we think about it.

If a person has consumed food (especially carbohydrates) right before working out, the glucose from this food is still floating around in the bloodstream or is in the liver and muscles as glycogen. This is a fast fuel for the body, and it will choose to burn through this before resorting to burning fat cells, which take slightly more effort to break down.

When a person eats immediately after working out, these glycogen receptors and stores are refilled and some of the positive effects of the workout are cut off. This is how it works: The right kinds of high-intensity and resistance workouts can increase the body’s own natural production of growth hormone and slow aging. When food, especially food containing fructose, is consumed after workouts, it binds to the same receptors as growth hormone and prevents uptake of all the growth hormone the body has made.

Fasting for at least an hour before and after working out can ensure the most uptake of growth hormone, and contrary to popular belief, does not cause muscle wasting or inability to work out effectively.

How to Incorporate Intermittent Fasting

When it comes to fasting, there is no single method that is best for everyone, but personally I take my cues from Dr. Pompa’s research, among others (also check out Valter Longo and the Fasting Mimicking Diet).

There are some important factors to keep in mind that make fasting more effective and beneficial.

  1. Fasting is easiest and most effective if the body is used to utilizing fats and proteins and is not dependent on fast-acting carbohydrates for energy. If the body is used to that constant supply of fast energy, total fasting will not be a pleasant experience.
  2. If, however, you have eliminated grains and sugars and your body is a fat-burning machine, fasting can actually be refreshing and energizing. It gives your body a break from digestion and lets it focus on cell regeneration and waste removal.

This is logical: think about times you have been sick and naturally didn’t eat because you weren’t hungry. This gave your body a break from digestion so it could use its resources to fight your illness.

The great news is that you don’t even have to go without food for a whole day to reap the benefits of intermittent fasting! There are several easy ways to incorporate small fasts with minimal effort:

16-Hour Fast/8-Hour Eating Window

Also called time-restricted eating (because you eat only at certain times), this is one of the easiest forms of fasting to start with, and you can still get the benefits listed above. You also get to eat each day, and in my experience feel only mildly hungry if at all. The basic idea is that you eat all your meals during the day in an 8-hour window (10 am to 6 pm for instance) and don’t eat late at night or during the night if you wake up.

This gives you a 16-hour fast during a 24-hour period with only minor adjustment to your normal eating schedule. This also seems to be the best option for women, as extended fasting can actually be counterproductive.

I go into my approach to time-restricted eating in this post, and this is a great place to start for most moms/women.

24-Hour Fast Still Eating Each Day

I heard this one from Dr. Eades, one of the top bariatric doctors in the country. The basic idea is that from 6 PM one day to 6 PM the next day, you fast, and alternate fasting days and eating days. The benefit here is that you can eat dinner after 6 PM one night and then eat breakfast and lunch the next morning, so you are never going a day without eating. This type of alternate-day fasting is what is referred to in many of the studies above with the highest cancer and heart disease benefits.

Full Alternate-Day Fasting

Some people think that for the first couple weeks, it is good to do a full alternate day fasting to help the body rid itself of toxins. If you want to attempt this, simply use the 24-hour fast method above and repeat for two weeks.

You can also just try the novel approach of eating only when you actually get hungry, not just when you crave food. Let your body feel hunger every once in a while. If you aren’t hungry in the morning, don’t eat. If you aren’t hungry at dinner time, don’t eat. It seems like such a novel concept, though really, shouldn’t it be common sense?

Tips for Fasting

It can be difficult to adjust if you aren’t used to fasting. Here are some tips that can help you stay the course:

  • Drink lots of water. Lots!
  • While I don’t generally recommend any beverages other than water on a fast, Pique Tea has some fasting-specific blends that can help you get through withdrawal symptoms and support the fasting process.
  • If anxiety or emotions come up (which happens), try tapping.

Learn more specifically from Cynthia Thurlow on What Makes Fasting Unique for Women in this podcast episode.

Bottom Line on Fasting

Our bodies came with great built-in feedback mechanisms, and to think that we must eat constantly to keep from being hungry (our body’s way of telling us to eat) isn’t even logical.

As I said, finding all this information was incredibly freeing for me personally. I no longer felt guilty when I skipped meals, especially breakfast, just because I wasn’t hungry. No longer did I feel forced to eat on a certain schedule. I also wasn’t worried I was cannibalizing muscle tissue by skipping a meal. I personally also slept much better and lost weight once I started incorporating fasting into my routine.

If you decide to try fasting, make sure to use common sense and ensure that when you do eat, you are getting enough nutrients and protein. Small children and pregnant women should eat an optimal diet and should let hunger guide their eating.

If you’re just getting started, I’d also recommend checking out the Zero fasting app, which can make getting started a lot easier and help you to stick with a fast longer via the built-in timer.

This article was medically reviewed by Dr. Mariza Snyder, a functional practitioner. As always, this is not personal medical advice and we recommend that you talk with your doctor.

Have I freed you from the bonds of snacking? Are you open to trying fasting? Perhaps you are fasting today, like I am? Let me know below!

Fasting- can skipping meals make you healthier
Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

132 responses to “Can Intermittent Fasting (Skipping Meals) Make You Healthier?”

  1. Kris Avatar

    Hello Katie! I enjoy your website and have followed a number of your suggestions for the health of my family and for myself. I am trying intermittent fasting – either eating in a 6 hour window from 9am to 3pm then fasting from all calories until the next day, or doing a true no-cal fast for 2 days a week. Prior to this, I was able to drop about 20 pounds over the course of a year using lo-carb eating. The intermittent fasting – while making me feel better while doing this – has not been effective for a single darn pound in 2 months! I still do lo-carb for the most part but am pretty disheartened by my lack of weight loss. I am 55 years old, menopausal, hypothyroid, 5 feet tall and about 175lbs. Naysayers in my family/friend group warn that I am in too drastic of calorie restriction and have destroyed my metabolism. Argh! Any ideas? Is there any particular way of doing IF that is more effective for women in my situation? Thanks for any help you can offer!

  2. Grace Avatar

    Thanks for the info! When fasting does that mean no intake of liquids as well? Or if you still drink – what do you suggest?

    Many thanks
    G

  3. Lisa Avatar

    What are your thoughts on the 5-2 intermittent fasting? If I recall correctly, you eat normally 5 days of the week, and 2 days you fast for 24 hours, consuming only 500 calories during the fasting period? I think you can eat only between certain hours during the fast. Also would people that are insulin resistant and those that get hypoglycemic be able to fast?
    Thank you for all of your health tips and information ?

  4. Leanna Avatar

    So, are you saying that for women it is safer to do the 16 hour fast? Eat in an 8 hour time frame and fast the other 16? Is this alternating days or everyday?

  5. Grannychew Avatar
    Grannychew

    I try to do a 32 hour fast, with no-cal beverages and water, once a week. I stop eating after dinner in Saturday and don’t eat until breakfast or lunch, usually, on Monday. I choose the weekend because the lack of weekday structure leads me to over snack. I sometimes get a little headache and a little rumbly in my tumbly, but I look for other distractions and it passes.

  6. Melissa Avatar

    How do you fast while your family is eating together? Do you still sit down with them? How to you answer their questions on why?

  7. Jenn Mann Avatar

    Hi. My mother has Huntingtons. You spelled it wrong and if you have the gene for Huntingtons, you will get Huntingtons. No matter what you do, it will manifest. Bruce Lipton in his book, ‘The Biology of Belief,” stated that there are two diseases we can do nothing about and Huntington’s was one of them.

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      Writing more about this soon but I do occasional 5 day water fasts, and over the course of a week do a couple of 16 hour IFs, a couple days where I spike calories and carbs and a couple regular days.

  8. Laura Avatar

    Yes!! I started IF Dec 26. It’s been life changing. I do 19:5 and 20:4 mostly. I’ve lost 2 jeans sizes in my first month, the clarity of mind and the energy is crazy! I clean fast. Clean fasting as in nothing but water, black coffee and tea with no natural flavors and unsweet toothpaste is the key a lot of IF people miss and find out later that it is in the clean fast that we get the most benefit. Check into Gin Stephens of the book Delay, Don’t Deny and fb group of the same name! She has a podcast too with Melanie Avalon called Intermittent Fasting.

  9. Diane Avatar

    Thanks for this article! I too have been researching IF And wanting to give it a try, but I’m worried about brain fog. I have been eating modtly low-carb paleo, with lots of fat and protein, for about three years, but I still find that if I skip breakfast, I have serious concentration problems at work. I am thinking I need to do keto for a few weeks before trying fasting? What do you suggest?

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      I personally started with a 5-day water fast that got me into ketosis easily and made skipping breakfast super easy. I’d check with a doc before doing a long fast, especially if you have any health conditions though.

  10. Lisa Montellano Avatar
    Lisa Montellano

    I’m so happy to see this post! I’ve never believed all the “starvation mode” garbage put out there because I’ve never been able to lose weight without combining intermittent fasts with a healthy diet & workouts. I’ve done 3 day fasts before without really even noticing that I was hungry. Honestly, the whole 5 small meals per day sounded awful to me because I’ve never been a snacker and hated the idea of eating all day long. I’m truly a Wellness Mama junkie now, I look forward to your articles and podcasts and trying out all the recipes and things you suggest!! Thanks for all you do, Katie!

  11. Lindsay Avatar

    Is there a follow up post to this that goes over what we should/shouldn’t be eating and how much of it/how often? I was thinking of doing a keto diet, mixing in some vegan/vegetarian meals because I prefer to not eat a lot of meat. I keep hearing that grains are no good when I thought they were. I can’t keep track of all these diets, etc and I’m getting pretty confused as to what the right thing to do actually is. I know to cut out sugar, which should be easy for me, but it’s things like rice, pasta, chips etc that are hard.

  12. Trixie Avatar

    I’m going through perimenopause. I have read that intermittent fasting can mess up your hormone levels. Thoughts?

  13. Heather Avatar

    The Mormon Church asks its members to fast for 24 hours once a month. The proceeds from the money that would have been spent on the food the person/ family would have spent is called a Fast Offering. Fast Offerings are how the Church feeds the poor locally and globally.

  14. Jessica Chipps Avatar
    Jessica Chipps

    I love the feeling of fasting. It does take a lot of focus in the beginning. I also think everyone is different. I find if I fast during the day, I am so mouth hungry, not real hunger by evening that I can’t eat enough to be satisfied. Then eating late at night like that makes me want to eat early the next morning!. I do best when I eat between 10 and 3, eating all I want and what I want. I eat very healthy, so that’s ok.
    My friend fasts all day and gorges at night on mostly unhealthy things, he is also 100 lbs over weight. This is not working for him.
    So breaking your fast with clean healthy food has to be a key. And every body is different with satiety and appetite levels at different times.

  15. Jen Avatar

    My doctor recommended starting with a 12 hour fast and increasing it to 15-16 hours in order to even out my hormones and sleep better and lose weight. When doing this, I do sleep better, but haven’t lost any weight (it’s been over a year since I started). It has helped with hunger, since I used to wake up ravenously hungry and now I do not. I also notice that the longer I can go without food before and after a workout (alternating days HIIT and strength training), the better I feel (not only while working out, but for the rest of the day). Also, my husband has noticed for many years that if he eats breakfast, he is then much more hungry the rest of the day, so he usually does not eat until lunch.

  16. Jen Avatar

    Hi Katie. Your site is amazing. Any further thoughts on Intermittant fasting with thyroid disease-specifically hypo? I read so much conflicting information. Would really like to hear your thoughts/experiences as someone who’s dealt with thyroid also. Thank you!

  17. Jamie Avatar

    Would you ever recommend this for a nursing mother as long as they were getting enough fats and protein? I’m wanting to do the 16 hr fast but not sure if there is any reason not to while nursing.

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