Quote from: Sita on March 16, 2013, 02:57:12 PM
In Christianity, Orthodox adherents will do 40 days of a vegan-type fasting during Lent season.
I don't think it can be considered fasting if you eat. Besides, that just sounds like a month of healthy eating!
Quote from: muuu on March 16, 2013, 02:59:56 PM
The goal with water fasting is mainly to lose weight... If it's healthy or not doesn't really matter. I wonder if it's any unhealthier than eating processed foods.
People demonize processed foods too much. Most of them have too much salt, etc. but that's not ALL of them, and even so, depending on the rest of your diet, it's not necessarily a catastrophe. Most of them also have many compounds that OVER TIME, in SOME people have some bad effects on health. And again, that's not all of them, and not all of them have all of the bad compounds.
Long-term water fasting is direct, punch-like damage to your organism. It doesn't even compare to me. Now, if you put side-to-side a life of eating nothing but processed foods and one month of water fasting, of course the former is worse. But that's like comparing one grape to three cherries and deducing that a cherry is three times as heavy as a grape.
Quote from: Sita on March 16, 2013, 03:00:30 PM
I think it's Ramadan.
I think Rambutan is a fruit or something!
...Right. Whoops.
Quote from: Sita on March 16, 2013, 03:00:30 PM
On an aside, I think I may try doing a juice fast for one week. Have any of you thought of that? You can still get your nutrients, but much of it is just a good dose of liquefied fruits and vegetables, with maybe shots of spirulina or wheatgrass to boot!
Uhm, doesn't sound like the best of ideas. You'd be getting all of your energy from sugar. I don't think your pancreas will appreciate. And energy from sugar doesn't last, so you'd likely have a lot of up-and-downs. Also, juice doesn't contain all of the nutrients and vitamins you need - far from that. And finally, just drinking won't really fill you up. Drinking a lot of water with a meal does fill one up more, but drinking just water (or juice - not very different in this situation) doesn't really have that effect; I don't think so, at least. If I'm hungry and drink a lot of water, I'll feel okay-ish for a few minutes, but quickly, the water will be gone further in my system and I'd be hungry again. And if I try to abuse it and drink even more water, I get nauseous, and then hungry.
If anything, leave the juice aside and have a fruit and vegetables diet. Juice is just fruit and/or vegetables minus some of their benefits, and it's liquid. Eating solid carrots, apples, broccoli and such will fill you up much more, give you a bit more nutrients, not be many more calories, and will be digested faster. And if you intended to make the juice yourself, it's less work since you don't have to use the juice extractor or (dramatic music) clean the damned thing.
You could even prolong such a diet without much of a bad consequence, if you wanted. You should just add a multivitamin to be safe and a moderate amount of, say, nuts, daily, to give you a bit of lipids and proteins.