https://x.com/MakisMD/status/1675170885458882560
This is such good information...some people do this yearly to reset their immune systems...the replies are always interesting to read...Dr. Makis has been such a champion for truth...I truly appreciate his calling...
Caloric restriction in general triggers cellular autophagy, fasting is just a way to do it without counting calories back from before anyone discovered thermodynamics and knew what a calorie even is. There's nothing magical about fasting itself other than making yourself miserably hungry.
This isn’t true. Simple calorie restriction does not induce autophagy. It is a duration of time without ingesting anything that triggers digestive processes in your body that starts it. It requires 16-18hrs of fasting before your body begins to enter autophagy.
And there is a lot that is “magical” about fasting. The amazing healing properties of our God given bodies are turned on during fasting.
And miserably hungry is only a state of mind. Your mind is a spoiled rotten child and when you first deny it food it will scream and cry like a baby. Master your body, tell your flesh no, you really aren’t starving after 18hrs of fasting. You just don’t have any will power to control your flesh because you/we have lived a life of indulging our fleshly desires at every whim.
A fat person has more cells than a skinny one. Cutting weight cuts the number of cells. Otherwise a fat person would have gargantuan fat cells if cell count never changed.
Absolutely evolutionarly evolved to dispise hunger. A compound called Grelin is what is responsible I think. The fasting body puts alot of its resources on keeping your brain at full power, otherwise finding food might be impossible. But the body obviously doesnt want you to be HAPPY that your STARVING.
Actually, losing bodyfat reduces what is inside those fat cells (fat, glycerol, and water), but does not get rid of the fat cells themselves. Doesn't really matter, because you will still get lean. But that is how it works.
Ghrelin is a hormone that kicks in when your body thinks it is TIME to eat, not that you SHOULD eat. If you are used to eating multiple times throughout the day, ghrelin will kick in around those times, and you will feel hungry. But that hunger will pass in an hour or so. After several days of fasting, you don't get hungry anymore. Obiously, it cannot be purely a hunger signal if it goes away completely.
Probably true, generally, but a fat bastard DOES need to "starve" for a period of time, to correct the overindulgence they have been abusing their body with for years and years to get into that situation in the first place.
The longest fast on record was something like 382 days. He was Scotsman in the 1970's/1980's, and he started fasting at 426 pounds. He kept going for more than a year, and ended his fast at around 180 pounds.
He had no health complications whatsoever, and kept the fat off for the rest of his life.
u/#wrong
However, the number of fat cells stays constant in adulthood in lean and obese individuals, even after marked weight loss, indicating that the number of adipocytes is set during childhood and adolescence.
https://www.nature.com/articles/nature06902
The above study used a combination of two unique procedures:
The scientists were able to determine the age of fat cells in the body by measuring the incorporation of radioactivity from the atmosphere into the DNA of the fat cells.
They compared the mass of the fat cells in relation to the full amount of adipose tissue in a extremely large number of human subjects whose body weights varied widely.
The scientists found that people who have obesity produce approximately twice as many new fat cells annually as lean people. They also found that fat cell death happens at twice the rate among people who have obesity, compared to lean people. Even if the people with obesity they studied lost a significant amount of weight, their total number of fat cells in the body remained constant, but the size of individual fat cells fell substantially.
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/106343#1
Several years ago, I can't remember when exactly, I stopped eating breakfast, and had nothing until lunchtime. I can't say if it's related, but the last time I've been sick will be four years in July, and I'm thinking that's about the same time (four years ago) that I stopped eating breakfast.
A little over a year ago I also ditched dinner, and now do all my eating mid-day, within a three hour window, and at 57 years old I'm in the best shape of my life, and look and feel much younger.