ZOE Science & Nutrition - What does science say about intermittent fasting?
Episode Date: October 13, 2022It seems like every day, someone new mentions intermittent fasting. But what is it, exactly? There are myriad options — from the 5:2 diet, with two days of extreme calorie restriction each week, ...to the warrior diet, which involves eating only raw fruit during the day and a mammoth feast at night. Whatever the approach, intermittent fasting involves restricting the window of time when you eat. Supporters evangelise the benefits, promising weight loss, disease prevention, and even life extension. Currently, the scientific evidence is unclear, but it's an exciting area that may be full of potential. Today, Jonathan speaks with Gin Stephens, who has had a powerful experience of intermittent fasting transforming her health and weight. He also talks to Tim Spector, who will share what science can tell us about intermittent fasting today — and, interestingly, how much it can’t, yet. Plus, an exciting announcement about how this is set to change. Gin Stephens is a New York Times bestselling author and podcast host. Tim Spector is a co-founder of ZOE and one of the world's top 100 most cited scientists. Download our FREE guide — Top 10 Tips to Live Healthier: https://zoe.com/freeguide Timecodes: 00:00 - Intro 00:15 - Topic introduction 02:44 - Quickfire questions 04:38 - ZOE’s intermittent fasting study 08:42 - What is intermittent fasting and how it impacted Gin’s life 11:50 - Demystifying intermittent fasting 14:19 - The science of intermittent fasting 23:29 - Starting intermittent fasting 25:29 - What am I allowed to have during intermittent fasting? 30:07 - The first 28 days of “clean” intermittent fasting 32:51 - Intermittent fasting and the microbiome 37:00 - Correlation with circadian rhythms 38:56 - How important is consistency when time-restricted eating? 41:14 - On intermittent fasting & women’s health 43:24 - Summary 44:35 - Goodbyes 44:56 - Outro Episode transcripts are available here. Join us for the World’s Biggest Intermittent Fasting study at joinzoe.com/fasting Follow Gin: https://www.instagram.com/ginstephens Get Gin’s books here. Follow ZOE on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zoe/ This podcast was produced by Fascinate Productions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to ZOE Science and Nutrition,
where world-leading scientists explain how their research can improve your health.
Intermittent fasting. It seems like every day someone new is talking about it.
But what is it exactly? There seem to be so many options. From the 5-2
diet suggesting two days each week of extreme calorie restriction, to the
warrior diet which involves eating only raw fruit during the day before a mammoth
feast at night. Whatever the approach, it involves restricting the window of time
when you're allowed to eat.
Supporters of intermittent fasting are evangelical about the benefits, promising weight loss,
disease prevention, even life extension.
Currently, the scientific evidence is unclear, but it's an exciting area that may be full
of potential.
Today's guests certainly think so.
Gin Stevens has her own powerful experience of how intermittent fasting transformed her health and her weight.
She has written two books on the subject, Fast Feast Repeat and Cleanish,
and supports a global community of fasters. She's here to tell us her story.
We're also joined by Tim Spector, one of the world's top 100 most cited scientists, and
my scientific co-founder at Zoe. Tim will share what the science can tell us about intermittent
fasting today, and interestingly, how much it can't tell us yet.
He has an exciting announcement about how this is set to change.
Gin Stevens and Tim Spector, thank you for joining me today.
And Gin, thank you for joining us despite being in the middle of a hurricane.
Yes, we are in a category one,
Hurricane Ian. Thank goodness it's not going to hit us like it hit Florida because I'm on
the South Carolina coast, but it's still very windy and lots of rain. But you're okay? I'm fine.
I'm on the third floor, so whatever happens, I should be okay. All right. This is a first for
the Zoe podcast. And Tim and I sit in London and are thinking, well, maybe it rains a little bit today, but we're definitely not used to hurricanes. So we're
very impressed that you joined us. Thank you. And I'm not used to them either. We just have
moved to the coast in May. So this is our first time. But it helps me understand why people have
hurricane parties, because it's definitely nerve wracking, even as a category one.
You're making us a bit nervous just hearing about it and seeing you here. So let's start before the hurricane cuts off the electricity with our quick fire round of
questions from our listeners. And Jin, I have three questions for you to start with. So the
first is, in your experience, can intermittent fasting have a big impact on people's health and
weight? Yes, it is literally the most powerful thing I've ever done for my
weight and my health. All right. Will I feel weak and hungry if I start intermittent fasting?
Well, the answer is yes and then no. We'll talk a little bit more about that, I am sure.
And then thirdly, in your experience, does intermittent fasting lead to weight loss for
everybody? Well, weight loss is multifactorial.
I love that word because our bodies are complicated.
So intermittent fasting is a great health strategy, but you might need to do some tweaking.
For example, your gut health, what you're eating, other things, hormones, all of those
play a role.
Intermittent fasting has a lot of powerful things that it does in the body, but it doesn't
fix every single problem you might be having.
But you can tweak it till it's easy and find your magical weight loss solution.
Well, I don't want to use the word magical, but you can find your weight loss solution.
And I told Jin she was allowed one sentence.
I didn't realize she was really good at long sentences.
So I'll tighten this up from next episode.
Tim, are the health benefits of intermittent fasting proven?
Yes, although we don't know what goes on long term.
So definitely short term.
Are there risks from intermittent fasting?
There are some risks, but minimal if you're fairly healthy and it doesn't last very long.
And finally, we had a lot of questions about whether intermittent fasting affects men and women differently, particularly due to female
hormones and menopause. We simply don't know. We don't really have enough data at the moment to
answer that question. That's why we need bigger studies. And I think that's actually a perfect
way to introduce some very exciting news, right, Tim? So Zoe is actually about to launch the
world's biggest ever intermittent fasting study. And part of that is because we don't know most
of the answers, right, to these scientific questions. Tim, can you tell us what's going
to happen? Yeah, up to now, most of these studies have been done with about 50 people
followed for a few months in very tight conditions. And no one's really looked at thousands or hundreds of thousands
of people in a real life scenarios in their real environments, day jobs, looking after kids,
going to work, et cetera. So what we're doing with Zoe is getting this massive community,
these citizen scientists who are already signed up for the Zoe Health study and others might want
to join to participate in this mass intervention where for several weeks we ask people to shift
the time they're eating, not to necessarily calorie restrict, but just eat their meals at
different times so they are within a smaller time window. And we're looking at 10 hours is
around where we're aiming at. And we want this to be done as well as people can do it. And then just
look at the real life results and see how many people feel better, how many people feel energized,
how does it change their lives? And do some people find it really difficult and work out
why that might be? So it's a real life study on a
scale a thousand times bigger than has been done before that is going to tell us enormous amounts
about how this might work as public policy for all kinds of people, whether they're young, old,
males, females, menopausal, on HRT, all these kinds of questions we could answer. And it's
super exciting and I can't wait to get started. could answer. And it's super exciting. And I can't
wait to get started. And Tim, it does sound super exciting. I'm excited as well. How big a study are
you hoping to get here? I'd love to get at least 50,000 people doing this. And our estimates are
that there are plenty of people out there really keen to do this kind of study. And we're going to
start in the UK and then
opened up to the US and then hopefully the rest of the world if it all takes off, because it'd
be lovely to see how this works in different scenarios, in different food cultures, in
different places where people eat meals at different times, etc. So I think it's going to
be one of the most exciting projects I've ever done in my career. Amazing. And if you want to
participate, then we're going to give you the website link right now, which is joinzoe.com
slash fasting. That's F-A-S-T-I-N-G. And you can go there and you can get the instructions for how
to sign up. Or if you're in one of the countries we're not yet supporting, how to put your name
down and hopefully do that as we expand it.
And just to say, it doesn't cost anything. So there's no sign up fee. You don't have to buy
any special meal kits or anything, no special recipes. All you got to do is really just say,
I want to find out if this makes me feel better or worse and help science. And that's all you've
got to do. Just keenness is all we're after. Absolutely. And I'm particularly interested because I think I should make this admission
at the beginning, Gin. I'm a terrible snacker late into the evening. So generally my diet is
pretty good, transformed over the last five years. But I have to say that dark chocolate on the sofa
at about 10 p.m. is probably one of my key vices. So I've always been too scared of being hungry to commit to
intermittent fasting. So I think this conversation might be enough to give me the motivation to sign
up and take part in this study and figure out how it works. Well, definitely don't be scared.
There's a saying, I don't know who created it, but diets are easy in contemplation and hard in
execution, whereas intermittent fasting is the opposite. It's hard in contemplation and hard in execution, whereas intermittent fasting is
the opposite. It's hard in contemplation, but easy in execution. So I think you'll find it
isn't anything to be afraid of. Wonderful. And look, Jen, why don't we just start actually today
with your own personal experience? I thought that was a really interesting way to approach this
whole topic. So what is intermittent fasting and how has intermittent fasting impacted
your life? Well, intermittent fasting is not a diet. And I want to get that right out there
because your diet is what you eat. Everyone has a diet that they're eating, whether it's the
standard American diet or the Mediterranean diet, or whether you've gone through the Zoe protocol,
and now you're eating according to
the scores that you get on Zoe.
But everyone eats the way that they eat.
Intermittent fasting is about when you eat.
So however you're eating right this minute, whatever that is, you can add intermittent
fasting to it.
The most common form of intermittent fasting that most people end up as a long-term approach
is one we call time-restricted eating.
And that's actually what your study is going to be.
It's a time-restricted eating study with about a 10-hour eating window.
In the intermittent fasting world, you know, there are a lot of different ways you can choose to structure your eating window.
You know, an eight-hour eating window became really popular, I don't know, maybe 10 years ago.
There was a book that came out called
The Eight Hour Diet. There are other eating window links you might enjoy. I tend to be someone with
around a four or five hour daily eating window. Now, someone might be listening and thinking,
oh my gosh, that sounds so terrible. But it's actually over time, you know, I like to call it,
you tweak it till it's easy. And I found a rhythm that feels really good for me.
I don't eat until late afternoon every day.
And I have great energy, great mental clarity all throughout the day.
Then I open my eating window.
Usually I have a really hearty snack.
And then later I have just an amazing dinner.
I eat the foods that make me feel great, that are delicious,
that are satisfying. I might have a little something sweet to close my window. So you see
there's nothing wrong with having a little dark chocolate on the couch. Then you close your eating
window. And then I go to bed and I am able to sleep really well. And then wake up the next day
and do it again. And it's just such a great way to live because I'm not
counting macros. I'm not counting calories. I don't feel restricted. And over time,
I've naturally gravitated towards eating the foods that work best for my body. It's very
different than how I started. I was eating the standard American diet and eventually my body
let me know it's not how it felt best. So intermittent fasting has been the most powerful thing that I
ever have done in my entire life. I struggled with my weight and even was obese up to 2014.
I weighed 210 pounds, which is a lot of weight on a five foot five woman. And my waist circumference
was huge. And thanks to intermittent fasting, I was able to lose over 80 pounds. And I've been
keeping it off since 2015, which is truly the most remarkable part. And so aside from the weight loss, you know,
my health has also been transformed. I'm 53 and I literally feel better at 53 than I did at 33.
You know, thanks to the health benefits and the longevity benefits of intermittent fasting,
I believe I'm going to age well, and I'm really looking forward to all
that's coming my way. Fantastic. It's a brilliant story,
Gin. And I think a bunch of people listening will be saying, well, I'm still a bit confused about
what intermittent fasting is. So you talked there about sort of this time-restricted eating,
which I think is increasing what people talk about. But could you maybe just explain maybe
some of the other things that people think about when they think about intermittent fasting and to what extent
those are still, I guess, popularly done or whether this is really time-restricted eating
and intermittent fasting are now sort of the same thing for most people?
Well, intermittent fasting is a big umbrella word now. And it's just the way that the
terminology has become to be used. Now, some people are like, no, intermittent fasting is only if you're doing longer periods
of fasting intermittently, right?
But really, intermittent fasting is any time that you are purposefully having periods of
time where you're fasting and then periods of time where you're eating.
It might look like alternate daily fasting where you have a day of fasting, a day of
eating, and you alternate that. Or in the UK, 5-2 was really popular for a while. And those were two
days of fasting each week. Actually, they were really more calorie restricted days,
two days of that, and then five days of quote, regular eating. But time restricted eating tends
to be the way that most people live intermittent fasting as a lifestyle because it's just such a
great rhythm to get in from day to day and you feel good while you're doing it.
And your body knows what to expect. You're flipping that metabolic switch to fat burning
and getting into ketosis during your daily fast. And then you eat and your body's able to switch
those fuel sources because it's learned how to do that after you've adapted. But just think about it as you're
either fasting, or you're feasting, your eating window is open, or it's closed. And so you know,
when your eating window is closed, when you're fasting, you don't have any decisions to make.
That's one of the best parts about it. You don't have to have all that willpower, because you're
like, well, my window is closed right now. So you don't have to, you know, walk into the break room
at work and think, should I have that donut now? Should I have it? No,
your window is closed. You're like, oh, a donut. I might save that for my eating window later.
But you don't have to have that struggle of, you know, should I eat that or should I not?
Because your window is closed. So when you're fasting, you want to stick to black coffee, plain tea, plain water, plain sparkling water.
And those are perfectly satisfying during the fast.
And then you open your window and you have what feels good to you during that time.
Did that help?
Yeah, you're an amazing proponent for this.
Oh, yeah.
Tim, what does the science say about intermittent fasting?
Well, again, as Jen says, it's lots of different things.
And I think they often get mixed up.
So some part of intermittent fasting is a way of overall getting less energy in, actually
ingesting less calories because you're sort of tricking your body into not wanting it.
So the ultimate result, if you're trying to eat like gin does in four hours a day, most people can't actually eat that many calories in four hours a day that someone who's eating over
18 hours could do. So that's one part of the equation. It's like a way without calorie
counting to actually reduce calories. And to some extent, fools your body slightly more than just
saying, I'm going to have low-calorie foods.
And so that seems to be one way that it works. Then, of course, while you're in this fasting
period, your body is using these other fuels. It is using ketones if carbs aren't floating around.
So it's processing things in a different way. And then, of course, you've got also the role of the gut microbes that if you're in a proper
fast where we're not talking about the 5-2 diets, which I think largely failed because
you are getting 500 calories a day and often messing up the fast period.
So you were getting small amounts of calories and that was more focusing on the calorie,
whereas this new way of eating is extending that non-eating window over as some of these alternate day fasts, you are going 24 hours without eating in some cases. Well, the work
all started in mice back in around 2003 when people started to look and see, well, the idea that calorie restricting rodents increased their longevity.
And then some groups started to say, well, why is that?
And as well as calorie restriction, could you change the field of not only reducing the calories, but also
by tweaking when you gave the meals often had similar metabolic effects. So for that first 10
years, virtually everything was in mice. And it's only really the last five to eight years, I think,
that we've got a decent amount of human data. And Tim, just on the mice, just to make sure we got
that, are you saying that if you change when you feed mice, they suddenly live much longer? That sounds pretty crazy.
It does sound a bit wacky, but that's what they found. By manipulating the eating windows of mice,
you could improve their metabolic state and get them to live shorter or longer,
depending on what you were doing. What's interesting is some of those early
animal studies with the rats were just
designed to be calorie restriction studies. They would feed the rats or the mice their
whole allotment of calories, however, in a short period of time. They would feed them the whole
like, here's what you get. And they found that the rodents ate the entire allotment in four to
six hours. So as a researcher, it's hard to nail down the variables.
They were attempting to just compare calorie restriction to the rats and the mice that were
eating around the clock their normal way. But it ended up being that they were time restricted
because of the way they just ate all of them, all those calories at one time. So even those
early calorie restriction studies were actually
accidentally intermittent fasting as well. So this is like when I empty the fridge by
lunchtime and I'm too lazy to do anything else, so I'm not getting any more food until nighttime.
That's like my time restriction by the fact that I've just run out of food. Or indeed,
when I'm up here in my study and I've run out of the nuts and then it's like, well,
I can't be bothered to get any more, so I I stop so you're saying it's sort of a byproduct
of limited amount of food yeah and the way also fast metabolism of mice they're not the same as
humans they will eat fast and metabolize it very quickly so that was the other problem is it was
one thing to show that this mechanism exists in rodents and could, you know, these metabolic benefits and could extend life.
It was quite another thing to say, how much does that affect humans?
I think that's why we're waiting for these studies.
And the early studies then went on and did calorie restriction in humans, showing that
was beneficial in terms of metabolic effects.
And could you explain a bit, are these short-term studies, long-term studies? Just help us attempt
to understand a little bit what you're saying beneficial, because everyone's going to jump
off and start calorie restricting if it's beneficial. Well, they were generally over
months rather than years. And so most, the variety of them, none of them are big studies. They're all
fairly small because these are really hard studies to do to get people to
stick to the program because humans like to eat and they don't like being treated like
lab rats, really.
So this was a really tough thing for these people, how to incentivize someone to carry
on this study just so someone else could write a paper about it and get famous.
So it was a challenge. So most of them would be three months, six months, this kind of time,
really hard to get people to do much more than six months of this in a trial, understanding
conditions. But in that, they showed that all the parameters, your blood sugar levels, your insulin
levels, your blood fat levels, everything that was showing things were healthy were
improving.
And that was a key point there that, yes, it showed that short term these do work.
Now, it turned out to be really quite hard to get people to stay on these diets.
And that was really the problem because your body was screaming at you, you know, I want
to eat now.
I want to regain that weight.
And that's where this whole idea started to come in about, well, if we start changing the times of eating and start having, you know, one day of feeding and one day of fasting, does this have the
same benefits and it is more likely to be sustainable? And I think there have now been
about 12 studies which have compared the two, where they randomized
adults to either steady calorie restriction over time, or they did it with some intermittent
fasting regime.
And those studies, they're all quite small.
They do vary a little bit.
But if you take the summary of them, they show that both of these methods do work in terms of improving the metabolic health of the individual and
losing weight.
And that's now pretty clear, although because the studies are all small, we lack a lot of
the details about men versus women, different ages.
Some only took obese people.
Some only took obese people. Some only took younger people.
We haven't got a full picture of who it works best in and who it doesn't work in. But overall,
the science is pretty clear that at least short term on these diets, you can lose weight and
improve your metabolic status. And the losing weight was the one that wasn't quite as good
in these studies when you compare it with the calorie restriction, but the metabolic health was.
So I think that's the important message. And is it fair to say, Tim, this is definitely
in that category of new and emerging scientific evidence. So you're sounding pretty positive about
it, but this is not yet at the point where this is as fully proven as maybe some of the other
things that you might talk about. It's all fairly new. So we've only recently moved from animal studies into humans. The size of the
studies so far is actually really small. 50 people, it seems, is a big study. And of course,
this means that we can't generalize it to everybody. We don't know how everybody's
going to do well. And as we've always talking on these podcasts, everybody is different
to some extent, and everyone's circumstances are different. But I think what it's showing is it has
enormous potential for everyone, even just by tweaking their meal times just by 30 minutes,
if they did that over 10 or 20 years, could have dramatic effects. So I think it's really important we take
it seriously. There don't seem to be much in the way of downsides and huge amounts of upsides. So
yes, we're still accumulating evidence, but it's something that I think everyone can self-experiment
with themselves. Well, Tim, you know, giving up that dark chocolate at 10 o'clock is a big
sacrifice from my side. So you've got to understand there is potentially a lot of emotional downsides. So I'm
excited by the experiment, but I'm not yet sure that this is one I'm willing to commit to.
Well, then if you give up your cornflakes in the morning, you can have all your chocolate
in the evening. That's what I was going to say. You just shift your eating window,
the direction where you like, here's where I really want to be able to eat. I really want to
have that. Maybe you could have it at 9pm instead of 10, but you just nudge it this way, nudge it
that way. Boom, you're doing it. Gin, you know what? That's a brilliant transition. So we've
talked a bit about what it is and what the science is. One of the things we really like to do on this
podcast is always talk about actionable advice. And it was one of the reasons I was really excited
to have you join because you've helped so many people to actually understand how to do this in practice.
So would you maybe guide a listener who has never done this before, is thinking of doing it?
Hopefully they are just about to sign up for our study, in fact, as part of this. And just tell us
what does it mean? So imagine you're telling me, I've never done this before. What is this thing? Help me to walk through how I can do it and be most likely to be successful.
Yep. You really have to come into it with realistic expectations. And you're not going
to start doing intermittent fasting on day one and then lose a ton of weight quickly. It's not
like that. This is something brand new that your body has to learn how to do. You're becoming metabolically adapted, becoming fat adapted, learning how to tap into fat stores for fuel. Your body is probably not very good at that if you've been eating the traditional three meals a day plus snacks. You've been living from meal to meal during the day. And instead, you've got to teach your body to flip that metabolic switch and do something different. So in my book, Fast Feast Repeat, I have a very important period of time called the 28-day
fast start.
And it's actually kind of a funny story.
When I was finishing it up and it was about to be, you know, they were thinking ahead
to publication, my literary agent said, now we need to get everything together, you know,
for the publicity.
How much weight should we tell people they're going to lose during that first 28 days?
And I said, zero pounds, and they might even gain weight.
And they're like, well, no, we can't really say that.
I'm like, but that's the truth of it.
You know, intermittent fasting is not a quick weight loss approach.
And, you know, for those first 28 days, six weeks, whatever it takes for your body to
adjust, you're just learning how to
do something new and you're adapting to the clean fast. So you just want to fast clean,
tweak it till it's easy, meaning you're working to try to find a pattern that feels good to you.
For me, I've ended up with probably a four to six hour eating window most days. I fast clean, meaning I stick to
plain coffee, black, no flavors, nothing added. And just to make sure that's clear to me,
because fasting, I think I can't have anything, but are you saying I can have coffee? What am
I allowed during this fasting period? Well, let's talk about plain water. Yes,
nothing added to it, no flavors. Plain sparkling water is also fine.
But people sometimes say, well, how come I can have black coffee and plain tea?
Because those have flavors.
Well, they do have flavors, but they have a bitter flavor profile.
And a bitter flavor profile is not associated with a cephalic phase insulin response.
So black coffee is actually stimulating autophagy. We have
not used the word autophagy yet, but autophagy is our body's powerful cellular housekeeping.
It's like recycling and upcycling where our bodies during the fast can go in and clear up old junky
proteins and really clean up things. Also, it's great for our immune systems. They can really function best
during the fasted state. And black coffee is likely to stimulate those processes. It even
helps with fat burning. And so black coffee is a great thing to add into your fast. Now, if you
find that black coffee makes you hungrier, if you don't want to have the coffee, you're not
required to have the coffee. You can just stick to water if you want. But black coffee does tend to stimulate the things we want to have going on during the fast.
And Tim, any thoughts on that? I remember we had a lot of debate when we were doing our big
Zoe Predicts studies about whether or not you can have teas and coffees during fasted periods.
Yeah. I mean, no one knows absolutely for sure because the tests haven't been done. So
we're just getting an expert consensus on this really, but most people do believe
in the fasting world that yes, black teas, green teas, coffees, water are perfectly fine.
Where people start to disagree is, can I have just a drop of a macchiato in my coffee,
just that tiniest little drop? And some people say, if it's less than equivalent of 10 or 20
calories, it's probably okay. Your body probably won't be able to sense that as a meal and therefore
break its fast. Other people, I think like gin, would probably say, avoid that. That could be
counterproductive and you actually lose all your benefits.
I don't think we quite know yet.
It may be that Jin's actually tried it herself and seen any difference.
Oh, yeah.
Well, I have a whole section in Fast Feast Repeat where I talk about the clean fast.
And there is, at the end of that, there are two chapters about the clean fast. And there is at the end of that, there are two chapters about the clean fast.
And there's a section where I have, you know, anecdotal stories from intermittent fasters. And,
you know, I've been in the intermittent fasting community since well before I ever wrote any
books at all or had podcasts, really in, you know, 2014, 2015, started with the support groups on
Facebook. And anecdotally, the difference between
Fast and Clean and, you know, putting a little bit of this, a little bit of that, the Bulletproof
coffee, a little bit of butter, you know, all the things that people might be, you know, putting in
there, the difference is night and day. And you have to really experience it for yourself. So
anybody who's putting in a little sweetener or a little drop of cream or whatever,
and you're like, it's fine. It works for me. I'm still losing weight. I feel okay.
I would challenge you to try it with the clean fast. Give yourself 30 days. I call it the clean
fast challenge. Go to plain black coffee, plain tea, plain water, nothing flavored, nothing
sweetened, nothing to lighten up your coffee. I've never had anybody try it for 30 days and then go back to the
other way. So, you know, it really, you just take that challenge and try it for yourself and see.
Most people report that they can't believe the difference that it makes.
So this is another example where what you're saying is, you know, anecdotally seeing this
in practice, this is a model that works. You know, whatever the mechanism is, you know,
whatever's going on behind the scenes, you know, I can give you the theory as to what I think why it's easier without all that, you know,
based on what we do know here, the theories. But in practice, you'll just see you're not
white knuckling it. You're not hangry. All of a sudden, you're like, oh, I really can fast till
three o'clock and I feel great. Whereas before when you were having that little bit of almond
milk or a little bit of cream or the butter or the MCT oil or whatever, you know, that you saw a YouTube video that said it was okay, you leave that out and you're like, wow, the whole experience is different.
This is all back to this is just very new and not very well studied.
So, so, Jin, just to play back to like somebody listening, trying to do this.
So I need to go to a clean fast when I'm fasting.
I need to only have like this water and tea and coffee. Do I immediately go to like some constrained
period on day one and stick with it? Help me to understand what else I do in this 28 days.
That's a great question. And in Fast Feast Repeat and the 28 Day Fast Start chapter,
there are three different plans you can kind of choose from that are helping you adapt. You know, you might need to be someone who really eases in and starts slow.
You know, I'm not suggesting anyone start with what I'm doing as like day one.
You know, you've really got to build up to it.
I like to compare it to couch to 5K.
You know, if someone wants to go run a 5K, you don't get off the couch on day one and
run a 5K.
You have to build up to it.
And so fasting is the same way.
We're very much building up our fasting, quote, muscle, right?
It's not technically a muscle, but you know what I mean with that analogy.
So you're building up to it.
And that's what the 28 days is really for.
You're learning how to fast clean.
There are going to be days where you feel hangry and you have to open your window earlier
than you expected. And that's not a fail. That's just part of the process. We're learning to listen
to our bodies. You know, we never want to feel shaky, like you're having a blood sugar crash.
If you're ever shaky or nauseous, go ahead and eat, you know, forget about what the plan said
to do that day, go ahead and eat. And, you know, gradually, as your body gets adapted,
you'll find you know, what feels good to you adapted, you'll find, you know, what feels
good to you.
Some people always feel better with a midday eating window.
For example, they like to skip breakfast, eat lunch, have a little maybe early kind
of dinner, close their window, no couch snacking on chocolate for them because their window
is closed.
But they sleep better when they have that middle of the day eating window.
I'm not one of those people.
I actually sleep better when my window is closer to bedtime.
I've tried it all different ways.
I wait till afternoon, open my window, eat till I'm satisfied, close my window.
But only through experimentation have I learned that.
You're not going to learn that in the first 28 days.
It's very much a process.
And your goal is to think of intermittent fasting as a lifestyle.
You know, I interviewed a longevity expert for intermittent fasting stories, Dr. Gil Blander,
he has a company now that does some things with biomarkers, but he has studied longevity in
general. And he said to me, this was a couple years ago, but he said he believes that one of
the most powerful things we can do to increase longevity is intermittent fasting. You know, just have that
piece in there. Understand, you know, why we're doing it. I don't want anybody to start intermittent
fasting only because you might lose some weight. That's not what intermittent fasting really is
all about. You know, of course, I came to it for the weight loss. I like to say like to say, we come for the weight loss, but we stick around for the health benefits.
You just have to experience it to see what we're talking about.
Amazing. And Tim, can you tell us a bit about that value of that window length? Because you
could say, hey, just lots of people are eating for 18 hours a day today because of the way that
the world works. And what really matters is just to shrink that to 12,
which is still like 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., right?
That's pretty different from shrinking it to much shorter periods.
I think that I've heard you, Tim, talk a bit about some of those,
perhaps the microbiome having at least part of the answer to that story.
Yes.
I mean, microbes themselves have their own circadian rhythms as well,
and they're driven just like humans are by food. So when food arrives, that sort of sets
them off on their particular clocks and things. And we do know that your microbiome changes as
you're fasting compared to when you're eating. So within the 24 hours,
remember these species can change and replicate within an hour. They've had new babies and new
lives, et cetera. And so what happens when you're fasting is some microbes that don't live off food,
but they live off the debris and the lining of the gut mucosa,
suddenly come to life. So when suddenly all that snacking's ended and Jonathan's finished his
chocolate, thank God, we can move on and get all those other chocolate-eating microbes out the way.
And the cleaning staff come out and there's some microbes like Accomansia that's well known because it has a name. It says Accomansia municifilia means I love mucus. So it loves
the sugary lining of your gut. So it's going around tidying up your gut lining that you
haven't rested properly. And if you don't give it a rest, you don't have enough time for these
cleaning microbes
really to come out of the woodwork and tidy up your gut and help it regenerate. What's interesting
is that these same microbes that have this job are also seen to be crucial in preventing diabetes
and obesity. So, Accomansia is one of these microbes that is stimulated when you go on a fast and is now a very trendy novel probiotic
for helping your metabolic health and help you lose weight. So I think it's, you know, we're
just starting to understand which microbes fit into these categories, but realizing that you're
getting a whole new team come out if you give them enough time to come out of the woodwork,
tidy up your gut, do all the repair work,
and really you're in much better shape for the next time that chocolate bar comes down.
It's a brilliant analogy. So it's sort of like you've put the trash out
overnight and early in the morning.
It's the overnight cleaners in an office that come in and make everything shiny again. It's the
offense team in American football versus the defense team. It's giving them time to come out so that you've got the right team ready there to
deal with your body and what it needs to do. And if you put it out of sync by eating the way we
weren't intended to by eating over 18 hours, it just simply doesn't have enough time to do its
job. And I think what we're doing in this fasting is really extending the repair side of the body. And that's probably the general idea about why
fasting is so good and why it has this huge potential in longevity.
And so outside of the microbiome, do we have the data that supports that today, Tim, or
where are we on that?
Certainly there's really good data in all these animal models where it's easy to study these sort of things. And there's biomarkers in humans that suggest the same thing.
So I think there are these multiple mechanisms going on that are complicated that are all
pointing the same way that this is really essential for the body's repair process in the
cells and in the gut.
It's starting to get noisy outside Jin's window. Can you hear it?
So I think the hurricane is really starting to rattle.
I was like, I can't believe if they can't hear that.
We heard that for sure, Jin.
So we appreciate you hanging in there.
We've had a few episodes where people have talked about circadian rhythm,
Tim, and just sort of how
central that is and that's obviously on this sort of 24 hour cycle and very related to the fact that
you know it used to be dark probably for 12 hours a day and so i guess probably we weren't doing a
great deal of eating is that do you think that's related to this sort of you know night work as it
were that you were talking about in the microbiome yes i i think you know we's related to this sort of night work, as it were, that you were talking
about in the microbiome?
Yes, I think we've evolved to go in 12-hour cycles of light and dark, and our eating times
were meant to be when we're active, and our body needs to process it in those times.
And so by us shifting our eating windows outside that, we're not processing the food as well as we should be.
And therefore, what we're trying to do with these, certainly this time-restricted eating, is go back to that hunter-gatherer type of time periods for eating, which coincides when our body is best able to deal with it and allows the resting period.
So that's true. Now, that's quite different to these periods of fasting where actually you're causing a
bit of a disruption to the normal circadian clocks.
It doesn't have the same clues.
So if you are going for a day without food, suddenly it's shaking up the body a little
bit.
And I think it's a different concept to the time restricted eating because you your body would
expect and it's often switched on once you you know get food and you get light they're an exercise
they're the things that sort of get your body going and suddenly one of them is stopped your
body's going to be um thinking oh what's going on here and this partly some of the feelings that
people get through fasting are because this body your body is being reset in a way. And Jin might have some views on
why that shaking up the body might be helpful. And so Jin, does that mean, because we had a lot
of questions about this actually, is the consistency of the timing important? So in
other words, I'm going to start eating at midday and I'm going to finish at nine and I do that every day. Is that very important to this being sustainable
and easy or can I just do it sometimes? The consistency means that you're doing
something every day, right? It's consistency of the fact that you maintain a fasting protocol, that doesn't mean it has to be the exact same
timing every day. It's just a matter of like, we don't like, quote, take days off, you know,
we don't, you know, have cheat days. But I mean, that doesn't mean though, that you can't decide
today, I'm going out to brunch, and I'm going to eat at 10 o'clock. And, you know, what worked for
me really well was the idea of, you know, keeping my eating window to, you know, like five hours and shifting that around.
So if I wanted to shift it to earlier in the day, I could do that, just slide it to a different part of the day.
And then, you know, one day my fast was a little shorter because I opened my window earlier, but then I closed it earlier.
So the next day my fast, you know, was a little longer because I opened at the time I normally did. So we don't want it to feel regimented, and lots and
lots of rules that you must follow. But you just want to be consistent enough that your body
maintains that metabolic flexibility. You know, if you go on a two week vacation and don't fast at
all, you're going to have to come back and, back in the groove again. It has to do with the
amount of glycogen stored in your liver and getting through that. Got it. So you've got some,
you're saying it's not fixed. It's not like I have to do it the same time every day. You're
actually relatively flexible, but the duration of the window, I'm sort of keeping constant,
even if I change it from day to day. There are plenty of people I know that just, you know, will do this for two or three days a week,
and they still feel better generally when they do it, but they're not so rigidly fixed on it. And
this is one of the things we're going to find out in our massive study, because we'll find that some
people are only able to do it two or three days a week, and others will be doing it all the time.
It'd be really interesting to compare them. You're hoping, Tim, to figure out whether you can get some benefit even if you're
doing it some of the time. Exactly. Yeah. And can I ask one final question? Because we had a lot of
questions around this, which was really about female hormones. And I think we both had a lot
of questions around if you're in perimenopause or menopause, is this all going to be too stressful
for my body? And also people asking, because of
changes of hormones during my cycle before menopause, is that going to mean that it only
works some of the time? Do you have any sort of anecdotal view on this, Jim?
I have very strong feelings about this. And it's just so interesting how people always start
asking this about women. Well, yeah, but isn't it bad for women?
And you know what is bad for women is over-restriction,
being overly restrictive with our bodies.
And when I think back to the way that I used to, quote, diet,
you know, throughout my 20s and 30s, the very low-calorie diets I was doing,
that was actually a lot more restrictive for my body than the way I eat with intermittent
fasting.
So we don't want to do intermittent fasting in a way that's overly restrictive for our
bodies, whether we're men or women.
But women, we definitely do need to be careful about not over-restricting and not over-exercising.
I wouldn't do a one-hour eating window and train for an Ironman and do all those things at the
same time.
You have to find what feels good.
But our bodies really have great feedback mechanisms in place that let us know what
feels good is usually good for your body.
So don't think of intermittent fasting as overly restrictive.
It really shouldn't be.
And I'm going to tell you that I started intermittent fasting when I was perimenopausal and went through the menopausal transition.
I started intermittent fasting in 2014, went through the menopausal transition around 2019-ish.
Now I'm on the other side.
I'm menopausal.
Just started hormone replacement therapy.
Thank goodness.
That's made a big change already. But I really think intermittent fasting helped me go through the menopausal
transition with, it wasn't a terrible thing, you know, and I didn't, you know, put on a ton of
weight like most women do. I really think intermittent fasting was a great adjunct to
making the menopausal transition. Amazing. I have so many more questions,
but I can see I'm hitting time. So I'm
going to try and do a quick summary of what we covered and keep me honest if I got it wrong. So
first, I think we explained that intermittent fasting is a lot of things, but increasingly,
it's really focused on this idea of time-restricted eating on a regular sort of pattern every day,
rather than like having full days of fasting. The clinical evidence is
still relatively early in human beings. And then I think we talked, Jin, about this great idea about
like, what do you need to do in order to do this? And I think you say, you know, 28 days to sort of
adjust your body, clean fast. So I'm allowed black tea, I'm allowed black coffee, I'm allowed water,
but no milk, no sweetness, listen to your body. So if you're shaky, or you allowed black coffee, I'm allowed water, but no milk, no sweetness.
Listen to your body. So if you're shaky or you're nauseous or anything's not working, then stop.
Think of it as a lifestyle. So this isn't something that you're going to do for a short period of time. This is going to be like everything else to do with lifestyle. It's either
something you do always, or it doesn't matter, but you don't have to do it every day.
I think the final thing we said is that there's this amazing new study, which we hope will
be the world's biggest intermittent fasting study.
And Gin, I hope you'll be joining it with everybody else.
Well, I would love to.
Wonderful.
Thank you both very much.
And Gin, I hope you'll join us when we report back on the results.
Fabulous.
I can't wait to hear what you found out.
And can you believe we made it through with no power outage? I wanted to, I was going to say, definitely time to stop before that happened.
You survived. We survived. I did, so far.
Thank you to Gin and Tim for joining me on Zoe's Science and Nutrition Today.
We hope you enjoyed today's episode. If you want to participate in what we hope will be the world's largest study of intermittent fasting,
then go to joinzoe.com slash fasting.
And once we have the results from this study,
we of course hope to be able to give you personalized advice
about whether intermittent fasting is right for you.
In the meantime, if you want to understand what to eat when you aren't fasting,
then you may want to try Zoe's personalized nutrition program,
which will identify the right foods for your body.
Each member starts with an at-home test,
comparing them with participants in the world's largest nutrition science study.
We then use the results to create a program to improve your health
and help you manage your weight.
If you're interested in learning more about Zoe, you can head to joinzoe.com slash podcast and get 10% off your personalized
nutrition program. If you enjoyed today's episode, please be sure to subscribe and leave us a review.
We do love reading your feedback. And if this episode left you with any questions,
please send them in on Instagram or Facebook, and we will try to answer them in a future episode. As always, I'm your host, Jonathan Wolfe. Zoe's Science and
Nutrition is produced by Fascinate Productions with support from Sharon Fedder, Dr. Yela Huynes-Martin,
and Alex Jones here at Zoe. See you next time, and hopefully with a fully voice-recovered situation.
Bye-bye.