‘Intermittent Fasting Helped Me Lose 48 Pounds — Here’s What I Ate (and When)’
‘Intermittent
Fasting Helped Me Lose 48 Pounds — Here’s What I Ate (and When)’
One man details how time-restricted eating, which is a type of
fasting, helped retrain his body’s hunger cues and even improve his workouts.
About a year and a half
ago, I set out to lose nearly two decades of weight I had put on thanks to desk
jobs, poor eating, and an out-of-control soda addiction. At 5 feet 10 inches
tall and 208 pounds (lb), I was looking to get to a goal weight of 168 lb,
which is closer to what I weighed in college.
Knocking some of the
obvious targets out of my diet — Coca-Cola, pizza, bagels, and
pasta — made a quick dent in my weight, and got me to 188 lb. It was a 20 lb
weight loss in just a few weeks.
When my weight began to
stubbornly plateau at 188 lb, even after I joined a boxing gym, I asked for
help. And that’s how I stumbled upon intermittent fasting, a style of eating that
places more of a focus on when you eat instead of what you eat. Combined with exercise, this diet plan helped me reach 154
lb.
How Do Fasting Diets Work to Help Rev
Weight Loss?
The idea behind
intermittent fasting is that it increases your metabolic rate, which helps you
burn more calories. And by restricting the time periods during the day when you
eat, you take in fewer calories each day.
Going into diet change, I
knew there was only early evidence that fasting can lead to temporary weight
loss, and that more research is needed — especially on the potential long-term
health effects of this diet. As it stands, experts warn that fasting may
not be safe, or smart, for everyone. Fasting is not recommended for some
groups, such as pregnant or lactating women, some people with diabetes, people dealing with eating disorders or issues such as low blood sugar, according to the Mayo Clinic. That’s why experts stress that
it’s important to consult your healthcare team before trying any type of fast.
Despite the lack of
comprehensive research on intermittent fasting, this eating style has helped me
lose weight, regain my energy, and become more mindful about my eating choices.
Why I Chose to Try Time-Restricted Eating Instead of Other Types
of Intermittent Fasting
“The definition of
intermittent fasting is pretty basic. It’s really just a period of eating,
followed by a period of not eating,” says Krista Varady, PhD, an associate professor in
the department of kinesiology and nutrition at the University of Illinois in
Chicago. For over a decade, Dr. Varady has researched the effects of
intermittent fasting. “Intermittent fasting is kind of an umbrella term, but
there are three major types of intermittent fasting. There’s
alternate-day fasting, which means that you would eat fewer than 500 calories
every other day and eat however many calories you want on the remaining days of
the week. There’s also what’s called the 5:2 approach to intermittent fasting,
which means you would eat fewer than 500 calories for two days per week and
however many you want on the other days. And then there’s what’s called
time-restricted eating, which means you can eat within a certain window of time
each day,” like between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m., says Varady.
Given that I was becoming more active through exercise, I
wasn’t sure that taking in only 500 calories a day would be the best idea for
maintaining my energy levels. With that in mind, I decided to try
time-restricted eating instead.
What I Ate and How I Exercised While Doing
Intermittent Fasting
Limiting my eating to an
eight-hour period of the day seemed reasonable. If I exercised in the morning,
my first meal would be an early but large lunch at around 11:30 a.m. By 3 p.m.,
if I was hungry, I could have a snack. At 7 p.m., I would eat a reasonable-size
dinner. No snacking after that.
My first thought was that
there was no way I would be able to skip breakfast and still work out. My mind
was telling me that I would be hungry. The first few days that I tried it, as I
would warm up for my workout, I would have visions of chicken with broccoli from a nearby Chinese restaurant
in my head. But once I got into my workout, a funny thing would happen. I would
completely forget about being hungry. My body would stabilize and water would
be enough to keep me moving.
But by the time I got home
from the gym, I was starving. Early on, I decided that was going to be my
biggest meal of the day. Sometimes it was a lean shoulder steak with a sweet potato. Other times, I would eat an
entire chicken along with two cups of broccoli, and the sweetest bottle of
Gatorade I ever had. Or occasionally, I would make a taco bowl out of seasoned
ground turkey, cheddar cheese, and tomatoes, or a stir-fry with beef
and a variety of peppers. It turned out that my calorie intake and lunch would
be anywhere from 800 to 1,000 calories, though this part was not an exact
science.
Despite having such a
large meal, I didn’t feel that post-lunch swoon that I usually felt when eating
lots of carbohydrates for breakfast and lunch.
(In popular terms, I was effectively following a combined keto diet and intermittent fasting plan.) My
mental clarity was sharper than normal. I was able to zoom in on work right
after lunch.
“There is a reason why
refined carbohydrates can make you feel tired,” Pam Peeke, MD, told me. In addition to being
an assistant professor of medicine at the University of Maryland in College
Park and an adjunct scientist at the National Institutes of Health, Dr. Peeke
is a senior Olympic triathlete. As someone who also researches and helps create
nutritional guidelines for the public, Peeke exemplifies what it’s like to have
a fit lifestyle in her work and personal life. So there was no better expert to
help me manage my energy levels.
If I did get hungry in the
late afternoon, I would have a handful of salted roasted almonds or a few cubes of cheese. Past research has shown that eating
almonds can help a person feel more satiated and keep their daily calorie
intake lower. They helped me stay on track to keep my carbohydrates down and my fat and protein up.
It was also a nice boost of energy for the home stretch of work.
When work was done, and my
family was home, I’d make one of the meals I didn’t have for lunch. Rotating
the meals kept everything easy. My shopping was almost on autopilot. For
dessert, I would make a banana shake with almond milk, a few ice
cubes, and a scoop of whey protein. That would take my daily calorie
intake to 2,500. On days when I worked out hard, that was my calorie target. If
I was burning 3,000 calories on the days I exercised, a 500-calorie deficit per
day would keep me on track to lose about 1 lb per week.
The beauty of intermittent
fasting was that it allowed me to hit that target without truly feeling like I
deprived myself. Once my body adapted to not expecting breakfast, I was hitting
that 2,500-calorie mark like a metronome, without feeling like I was starving
myself. I got to eat two large filling meals that I enjoyed. After dinner, I
didn’t feel hungry enough to snack.
How Does Intermittent Fasting Work for
Weight Loss?
Intermittent fasting was
working perfectly for me, and it was easy to follow. I began to think more
deeply about why it was working. Was my body changing because I was fasting for
those 16 hours each day, or was it simply a trick I was playing on my mind to
eat fewer calories? And if it was a trick, would my mind eventually figure it
out?
“In general, I think
intermittent fasting helps people get more in touch with their needs,” Varady
says. “We’ve become accustomed to eating or drinking something every couple of
hours. We’d never even noticed when we’re actually hungry or full. So when you
go for longer stretches of time without eating, all of a sudden, your body
becomes more attuned to it.”
In my case, intermittent
fasting made me more aware of my tendency to emotionally eat. Getting up early
to get my young son to school, it wasn’t as if I wanted to have that bagel and
soda. I felt I needed that sugar rush to wake me up and get me going. Exercise
replaced that without my needing to ride a sugar roller coaster every day.
In the evenings, bored and
looking for something to do, I would crack open a soda or a bag of pretzels in
front of the TV. But what was happening in the morning to my body began to
happen in the evening as well. Once I stopped making late-night eating a daily
ritual, my body adapted and I no longer felt hungry at those times. More
important, once I started to see weight loss results (and I started to see them
pretty quickly), there was no way I was going to let those late-night snacks
erase my gains.
What Are the Proposed Health Benefits of Fasting Diets?
As mentioned, the research
on intermittent fasting is limited, but mice studies and small studies in
humans suggest the approach may in fact be effective.
For example, in one of
Varady’s studies, published in June 2018 in Nutrition and Healthy
Aging, 23 human participants completed 12 weeks of eight-hour
time-restricted eating, and researchers compared their weight loss results to a
control group from a separate trial.
Varady and her team
observed that the time-restricted group lowered their body weight by 3 percent
more on average compared with the control group, and they significantly lowered
their systolic blood pressure. (Systolic blood pressure is
the pressure in your blood vessels when your heart beats, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.)
But the sample size was small, and the dropout rate among the fasting group was
high, at 26 percent, for even a short-term trial, though no one in this group
“reported dropping out due to issues with the diet,” researchers wrote.
But what about
alternate-day fasting? While Varady hasn’t conducted studies directly comparing
alternate-day fasting to time-restricted eating, another one of her studies, published in July 2017 in JAMA Internal Medicine,
showed that alternate-day fasting was difficult to stick with and didn’t result
in better weight loss or heart benefits than a calorie-restricted diet. For the
study, she and her team randomized 100 participants to follow one of the two
diets or a control group, where their diets remained the same, for one year.
Despite these limited
findings, Varady still believes the health benefits of intermittent fasting are
promising and could go beyond weight loss. Although more research is needed, a past, very small study she conducted found
that alternate-day fasting did help obese women and men lose weight and lower
their risk for heart disease markers.
“We’ve seen a lot of
positive changes in diabetes risk factors, such as decreasing insulin and insulin resistance,” she added. “We’ve also measured heart disease risk variables. So we see
the bad (LDL) cholesterol go down,
triglycerides go down, the HDL or good cholesterol goes up a little
bit, [high] blood pressure goes down. Across
the board, in terms of metabolic disease risk factors, most of us improve with
alternate-day fasting.”
Varady says there isn’t
enough research to see similar metabolic results with time-restricted eating.
I certainly had a much
easier time adhering to time-restricted eating. Over a year into my fitness journey, intermittent fasting
became a permanent part of my lifestyle. It was an easy way for someone like me
to manage my calories while still feeling satisfied.
But something was
definitely starting to change in my workouts. As I was getting in better shape
and beginning to increase the duration and intensity of my workouts, fasted
cardio became a bit more of a challenge. Within 20 minutes of beginning my
workout, I began to feel more tired than usual. Was my age catching up to me?
Was I hitting the limits of my physical performance? I decided to consult Peeke
in search of answers.
Why When You Eat Matters, According to
Scientific Research
In a study published in Obesity
Journal, researchers randomized 93 overweight and obese women into two groups who ate the
same foods. One group ate half their 1,400 daily calories for breakfast. The
other group ate half their calories for dinner. While both groups lost weight,
compared with the nighttime calorie group, the morning calorie group lost more
weight, reduced their waist circumference by more, and lowered their fasting
glucose and insulin levels by more.
“Timing is everything when
it comes to eating,” Peeke says. “We now realize that we spent so much time
studying how much we eat, we never paid enough attention to when we eat.”
Why 3 p.m. Is a Key Time to Start Eating
Less Food
Peeke also recommended
that I stick to having lunch be my biggest meal of the day. “There’s a study
that a majority of Americans eat over the course of 15 to 16 hours out of the
day, with the majority of their calories coming after 3 p.m. It’s a recipe for
disaster,” she says, referencing a study published in November 2015 in Cell Metabolism.
Peeke suggested that
rather than having my banana protein shake as an evening dessert and not eating
anything before exercising, I instead drink it first thing in the morning. This
way, the carbs from the banana would give me an instant source of energy to
fuel my workout and my body would be processing the carbohydrates at an optimal
time of the day.
The switch immediately
paid dividends. I had way more energy throughout my workout. Because my body
was working at a higher intensity, I was burning more calories than I would be
even if I’d been doing fasted cardio. Peeke recommended that I try to stay
under a 12-hour window of restricted eating, but I was able to manage my
dinnertime to keep my eating in a 10-hour window. Although my weight drifted up
by 2 lb, it was because I was adding muscle mass instead of fat. The additional
muscle in my arms and shoulders were noticeable. And as my body fat percentage
got lower, I started to see some veins popping out of my biceps, forearms, and
calves.
Takeaway From My Intermittent Fasting
Experience
Although there’s still
much to be studied in the intermittent fasting realm, and it’s not for
everyone, I’m elated that I found this plan. I’m now at what I consider my
natural weight — 160 lb, even lower than my original goal — and I still
intermittent-fast every day. The mindfulness it has brought to my eating has
helped me create a schedule that is fulfilling, sustainable, and easy to
follow.
As Varady’s research has suggested, the longer I have
done intermittent fasting, the more my body has adapted to the times I eat and
the less hungry I feel. Contrary to some people’s beliefs, fasting hasn’t taken
the joy out of eating every day.
Maybe we don’t give our
bodies enough credit. With your body, you are operating an advanced adaptation
machine. But you’ll never really know how well it can adapt unless you
challenge it every day.
Comments
Post a Comment