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Fasting 101

⚖️ Hormones, Stress & Fasting

Fasting is not just a metabolic event. It is also a hormonal signal. The body is constantly asking one question: "Is this a safe reduction in food, or is this a survival situation?" The answer determines everything.

💡 Core Idea

Fasting works best when the body feels safe, nourished, and stable. Shorter, consistent fasting supports balance. Escalation often undermines it.

Cortisol: The Energy Mobiliser

Cortisol is often described as the "stress hormone," but its real role is more practical: it helps mobilise energy when needed. During fasting, cortisol may rise slightly to release stored fuel, maintain blood glucose, and support alertness.

In the right context, this feels like improved focus and energy. If fasting is layered on top of existing stress — poor sleep, work pressure, emotional strain, under-eating — cortisol can remain elevated, feeling like restlessness, anxiety, and fatigue with wired energy.

The Nervous System: The Hidden Interpreter

Fasting is not just a metabolic event — it is interpreted by the nervous system. If the body feels nourished, rested, and stable, fasting is often experienced as calm focus. If the body is already stressed, undernourished, or sleep-deprived, the same fasting window may be interpreted as pressure. The difference is not willpower. It is nervous system readiness.

The Thyroid Connection

The thyroid regulates metabolic speed. Severe or prolonged calorie restriction can signal that resources are limited — and in response, the body may slow metabolic output to conserve energy. This is a survival response, not a failure. It can show up as feeling cold often, low energy, slower recovery, and low mood.

Nutriofia perspective: Consistent nourishment during eating windows prevents the body from interpreting fasting as long-term scarcity. The fasting window should be comfortable, not desperate.

Sex Hormones & Energy Availability

Reproductive hormones are particularly sensitive to energy availability. When the body senses ongoing shortage, it may prioritise survival functions over reproductive signalling.

In Women

The hormonal system is highly responsive to stress and nutrition. Extreme restriction can contribute to cycle irregularities, low energy, sleep disturbance, and mood changes. This is not caused by fasting alone — but by the combined signal of stress + low energy intake.

Menopause & Midlife Transitions

During menopause, hormonal patterns shift naturally. Sleep disruption, hot flushes, increased stress sensitivity, and weight changes are common. In this phase, the body often responds more strongly to aggressive fasting. Gentler fasting patterns often work better during menopause than extreme restriction.

The Over-Fasting Trap

Fasting can become appealing because early results feel positive. But some people then increase intensity: longer fasts, more frequent fasting days, smaller eating windows. Over time, this can shift from supportive stress into chronic stress.

Warning signs: persistent fatigue, poor sleep, hair thinning, irritability, plateau followed by rebound.

💡 Concept Reinforcement

The goal is rhythm, not escalation. Hormonal balance thrives on cycles of stress and recovery. When recovery is built into the routine, fasting supports balance. When recovery is missing, the body interprets the signals as ongoing pressure.

📚 Glossary

Adaptation
The body's gradual adjustment to a new eating rhythm — gas subsides, hunger calms, and energy stabilises as the metabolic system recalibrates. Typically 2–3 weeks. Not a sign of failure.
Amino Acids
The molecular building blocks of protein — 9 are "essential" (must come from food). Used for muscle repair, enzyme production, hormone signalling, and immune function. Deficiency during fasting contributes to fatigue, poor recovery, and hair thinning.
Autophagy
The cellular recycling process — cells dismantle and reuse damaged proteins, worn-out mitochondria, and accumulated debris. A continuous background process; fasting may increase its activity by reducing competing signals from incoming nutrients.
Blood Sugar Stability
Maintaining steady glucose levels without large spikes and crashes — the foundation of stable energy, mood, and appetite. Achieved through whole-food carbohydrates, adequate protein and fibre, and structured meal timing.
Brain Fog
A subjective sense of reduced mental clarity, slow thinking, or poor concentration. A common driver is unstable blood sugar from refined carbohydrate cycles. Structured fasting can reduce glucose spikes, often improving mental steadiness.
Cortisol
The primary stress and energy-mobilisation hormone — rises during fasting to help release stored fuel. In small doses, it supports alertness. Chronically elevated cortisol from over-fasting or life stress disrupts sleep, immunity, and hormonal balance.
Eating Window
The daily time period during which meals are consumed in time-restricted eating — e.g., 8 hours (16:8) or 10 hours (14:10). Should be generous enough to meet full nutritional needs.
Electrolytes
Minerals — sodium, potassium, and magnesium — that regulate fluid balance, nerve signalling, muscle contraction, and heart rhythm. Shift during fasting; low intake causes headaches, dizziness, cramps, and fatigue.
Fat Adaptation
The metabolic state in which the body has become efficient at using stored fat and ketones as fuel between meals — reducing dependency on constant incoming glucose. Develops gradually over weeks of consistent eating rhythms.
Fasted State
The physiological period between meals when digestion has quietened, insulin is lower, and the body can access stored fuel more readily and redirect attention toward internal maintenance.
Fed State
The physiological period after eating when digestion is active, insulin is elevated, and the body is in building and storing mode.
Food Noise
Persistent background mental focus on food, cravings, and eating decisions. Structured fasting and stable blood sugar often reduce food noise, creating a sense of mental clarity and freedom from constant food-related thought.
Fuel Switching
The body's ability to transition between using incoming glucose (fed state) and stored energy — glycogen and fat (fasted state) — without crashing. Improves with metabolic flexibility from structured eating rhythms.
Glucose-Lowering Medication
Drugs that reduce blood sugar — insulin injections, sulfonylureas, and other agents. Dosed assuming regular meals; fasting without dose adjustment can cause dangerous hypoglycaemia. Requires medical supervision.
HbA1c
Glycated haemoglobin — a blood test reflecting average blood glucose over the past 2–3 months. Used to diagnose and monitor diabetes and prediabetes. A simple pre-fasting safety check for anyone with suspected blood sugar issues.
Hypoglycaemia
Dangerously low blood glucose — symptoms include shaking, sweating, confusion, loss of coordination, and fainting. In severe cases: seizures. A real risk for people on glucose-lowering medications who fast without medical supervision.
Insulin
The pancreatic hormone that moves glucose from the blood into cells. Also acts as the master "storage" switch — when elevated, stored fat is less accessible. Fasting allows insulin to fall naturally, restoring access to stored fuel.
Insulin Resistance
When cells become less responsive to insulin's signal, requiring higher insulin levels to achieve the same glucose uptake. The root cause of prediabetes and Type 2 Diabetes — driven by refined carbohydrates, inactivity, poor sleep, and chronic stress.
Insulin Sensitivity
How effectively cells respond to insulin's signal. High sensitivity = efficient glucose clearance; low sensitivity (insulin resistance) = more insulin needed. Improved by structured fasting, exercise, sleep, and whole-food nutrition.
Ketones
Fat-derived molecules produced by the liver during fasting when insulin is low — an alternative fuel source for the brain. Some people experience calm focus; others feel discomfort initially during adaptation.
Medical Supervision
Guidance from a qualified clinician when fasting is combined with medical conditions or medications. Non-negotiable for anyone on glucose-lowering drugs or with a history of hypoglycaemia.
Metabolic Flexibility
The body's ability to switch smoothly between glucose and fat/ketones as fuel without crashing or experiencing urgent hunger. Developed through structured eating rhythms and whole-food nutrition.
Microbiome
The ecosystem of trillions of bacteria in the large intestine — responding to both food quality and meal timing. Fasting windows allow the Migrating Motor Complex to run; fibre feeds the bacteria. Both matter.
Migrating Motor Complex (MMC)
A sweeping wave of muscular contractions moving through the stomach and small intestine between meals — clearing food residue, relocating bacteria, and preventing stagnation. Only activates when eating stops; even small snacks interrupt and reset the cycle.
Mitochondria
The energy-producing organelles inside cells — converting glucose and fatty acids into ATP. A primary target of cellular maintenance (autophagy); older, less-efficient mitochondria are recycled and replaced during fasting windows.
Nutrient Density
The concentration of essential nutrients (protein, vitamins, minerals, fibre) relative to calories. Nutrient-dense foods — legumes, leafy greens, eggs, berries — provide the raw materials for repair; ultra-processed foods provide calories without materials.
Overnight Fast
A fasting window spanning the sleeping hours — typically 12–16 hours from the last evening meal to the first morning meal. The most practical and sustainable fasting approach; already built into healthy human sleep rhythms.
Rebound Hunger
Strong, urgent hunger following aggressive restriction — driven by under-protein meals, breaking fasts with sugar, or fasting windows that exceed the body's current adaptation level. Resolved by shortening the fast and fixing first-meal structure.
Refeeding
The process of breaking a fast. The first meal after a fast strongly influences blood sugar stability, gut comfort, and the next several hours of energy. Best practice: protein + fibre + minerals first.
Repletion
Restoring nutrient reserves — protein, minerals, vitamins — before introducing fasting restriction. The Nutriofia principle: nourish first, then create space. Fasting on a depleted system amplifies symptoms.
Stabilisation Phase
A period of focusing on nutrition, sleep, and meal structure before extending fasting windows. Not a setback — intelligent calibration that makes subsequent fasting more effective and comfortable.
Sulfonylureas
A class of oral diabetes medication that stimulates insulin secretion regardless of blood glucose — particularly dangerous during fasting. Require clinician-supervised dose adjustment before any fasting protocol begins.
Thyroid
The gland that regulates metabolic speed. Sensitive to prolonged calorie restriction — severe under-eating can slow thyroid output as a survival response, causing fatigue, cold intolerance, and low mood.
Time-Restricted Eating (TRE)
A daily eating pattern where food is consumed within a consistent window (8, 10, or 12 hours). The most practical and evidence-supported form of intermittent fasting — achievable simply by shifting dinner earlier or breakfast later.