Water Fast Coaching and Articles

Dr. Tallis Barker, D.Phil., Nat.Dip., NA.Dip., Naturopathic Water Fasting Consultant & Coach

7-10 day water fasts: maximising benefits and overcoming challenges

Expert Water fasting coaching with Dr Tallis Barker? D.Phil, Nat.Dip

Once you’ve gained confidence with 3-day fasts, a 7–10 day water fast offers an entirely different level of healing. This is when your body not only burns fat through ketosis, but begins to detoxify stored toxins, release inflammation, and activate deeper repair mechanisms. It’s not always easy—but it’s often where the most profound shifts take place, physically, emotionally, and spiritually.

In this article, you’ll learn what to expect at each stage of a 7–10 day fast, how to prepare and refeed safely, and how to recognise signs of deeper healing—including what’s known as a healing crisis. If you’re planning your first longer fast, this is your guide.

It allows the body to go beyond ketosis and into deeper detox, cellular repair, and long-term healing.

Not always. Many people find the first 3 days are the hardest, and the rest becomes easier as ketosis stabilises.

Lighten your diet with fruits and vegetables to support digestion and ease the transition into fasting.

It’s a temporary return or intensification of old symptoms as your body clears deep-rooted issues.

Very gently—with juice or light fruit/vegetables. Refeeding should be slow and respectful to your digestion.

CONTENTS:

  • Introduction
    Why 7–10 days unlocks deeper healing than shorter fasts, and how to approach it with confidence.
  • What Happens During a 7–10 Day Fast
    The two typical trajectories of longer fasts: feeling energised or moving through detox symptoms.
  • Dietary Preparation Before the Fast
    How to eat in the days leading up to your fast to protect digestion and ease detox.
  • Refeeding After a 7–10 Day Fast
    What to eat (and what to avoid) when breaking your fast—plus how long recovery might take.
  • The 7–10 Day Fast in Greater Detail
    A day-by-day breakdown of how your body and mind change throughout the process:
    • Days 1–3 – Glycogen depletion and the switch to ketosis
    • Days 4–6 – Maximum ketosis, detox symptoms, and physical renewal
    • Days 7–10 – Healing crises and profound shifts in body and consciousness
  • What Is a Healing Crisis?
    Understanding why symptoms may return and how to recognise true healing versus signs to stop.
  • What About Fasts Longer Than 10 Days?
    When deeper or extended fasting is appropriate—and how to know if it’s right for you.

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Introduction:

Assuming you don’t have any urgent health issues which require an immediate extended fast (typically lasting 14-40 days), then I believe the best way to establish a long-term relationship with water fasting is to develop and nurture that relationship gradually. The most reliable way to do this is to work initially with short fasts which feel relatively manageable, without putting undue pressure on yourself.

After you feel comfortable with 3 day water fasts and, physically, your body can make the switch to ketosis without much fuss, then it’s time to consider a 7-10 day water fast. For it’s only after you begin drawing solely on the energy of fat cells that the process of detoxification can kick into a higher gear (more info here) and you can start to reap the greatest benefits of a water fast. This means that a 3 day fast simply isn’t enough to confront any deeper issues you might want to heal.

If you’ve found it difficult to get through your first few three-day water fasts, it’s only understandable that the thought of a 7-10 day fast seems even more daunting. For this reason, I offer private online consultations and coaching for water fasting.

Dr Barker regularly speaks at international conferences on water fasting. Below you’ll find his lecture for The Real Truth About Health conference, as well as a panel conversation with Dr. Alan Goldhamer – one of the most recognised names in the field.

What happens during a 7-10 day water fast?

Despite some natural doubts and fears, many of my clients find that 7-10 day fasts tend to go more smoothly than they first expect (so long as they’re basically healthy and don’t have any serious issues with detox). This is because your body does some of the hardest work in the first three days while it establishes ketosis – and during which your fuel tanks are also running on empty. From the third day on, though, ketosis continues to become increasingly efficient, and this typically leads to one of two outcomes.

On the one hand, some people begin to feel lighter and fuller with energy. In many ways, the fast can feel like a celebration of freedom from the daily need to eat food. This freedom, as well as a lighter body and clearer consciousness, can feel so good that many people actually experience a sense of reluctance in returning to food at the end of the fast. There really is a beautiful purity about just being, without the needs and addictions of food distracting you, weighing you down.

On the other hand, some people experience a distinct roller coaster ride from this point as detox symptoms ebb and flow. In essence, with your ketosis engine having powered up over the first three days, your body now wants to turn all of that energy towards detox and healing, which can actually lead to lower perceived energy levels. It’s important to remember that you’re not actually lacking in overall energy, but rather that energy wants to flow inwards instead of outwards like it does in everyday life. Don’t get disheartened: as hard as it often is, this means your body is working for you!

The webshop offers downloadable fasting plans and guides to help make your water fast a success.

As your healing metabolism firmly establishes itself by the end of the third day, the digestive system is in the midst of shutting down its normal function. As a result, most hunger pangs usually subside significantly after this point, assuming you’re able to rest and not overextend yourself with too much work. When I’m working with a client, one of the most frequent conversations is the need to try and slow down the pace of everyday life, both in order to maximise healing as well as to minimise any remaining hunger pangs. This doesn’t necessarily mean you need to give up your job and spend the whole day in bed (!), but it does mean that it’s a good idea to try and reduce your commitments during the fast. Remember: your fast should be about you and not trying to pretend it’s ‘just another day’ of your regular routine.

This is all the more important if you’re fasting in order to address a health problem. Your body has a finite amount of energy, and it’s simply not worth wasting too much of that energy on the activities of everyday life. One of the most important issues I discuss with clients is how to best manage daily activities in order to maximise the healing potential of a fast, when it isn’t possible to take time off from work. The reality is that we often don’t live in an ideal world – and the sooner this is recognised, the more effectively it becomes possible to devise alternative strategies.

Dietary preparation before a 7-10 day fast:

Given that digestion comes to a halt after a few days of fasting, it’s extremely important to consider how and what you eat in the transition period both before and after any fast longer than three days. The transition before a fast is important because you don’t want your digestive system to shut down with food still remaining inside the intestines. This is important for two reasons.

First, it can rot inside you. Not a pretty thought. And as it rots, the toxic by-products aren’t going to help your body – precisely when you’re trying to detoxify through the fast itself.

Second, during the most intense periods of detox, your liver is often forced to release semi-processed toxins into the bile, which then leads to a potential toxic build-up in the colon. You don’t want to complicate matters further by having any digestive remnants hanging around as well!

Practically, dietary preparation means gradually lightening up your diet in the days before a 7-10 day fast. This means different things to different people, depending on their specific diet. Exactly how to carry out a dietary preparation is something I discuss with each client on an individual basis. However, one common element involves increasing relative fruit and/or vegetable intake. Where this is contraindicated because of food sensitivities or gut issues such as SIBO, it is extremely important to find an alternative strategy.

There are several benefits of focussing on fruits and vegetables before a 7-10 day fast. First, they require less energy to digest. This allows your body to wind down digestion and switch into its healing metabolism more quickly and effectively. Second, they contain plenty of fibre to help elimination, thereby clearing out digestive remnants before peristalsis (motility) largely ceases during the fast. Third, they are so-called ‘alkaline-forming’ foods. This helps to balance the pH of your body during the fast, especially during the heaviest periods of fasting detox.

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Refeeding after a 7-10 day fast:

The transition out of a 7-10 day fast is at least as important as the preparation beforehand, because your digestive system is hibernating. It can’t digest. You have to wake it up slowly and with respect, eating small portions of easily digestible foods. Otherwise, you’ll be sorry!

Just as any food remaining in the gut at the beginning of a longer fast can rot, so a similar situation can occur now too. Anything other than the simplest fruits and vegetables is likely to sit in your stomach, until your digestive system is able to cope. This can and will take days. After fasting, many of my clients find that the transition time back to normal eating with a normal appetite can last up to a similar length of time as that of the fast itself (although there is also a large degree of variation from person to person, and many people bounce back more quickly).

In essence, a refeeding strategy should look the mirror image of what happens during the dietary preparation before the fast (see above). The exact pacing of refeeding, however, should be dictated by the body itself, rather than by emotional cravings for particular foods or simply a driving desire to eat. Until gaining enough experience in fasting, most people find this exceedingly difficult – and, consequently, managing issues during refeeding is one of the most important elements of my work when coaching most clients.

I remember the exuberance of celebrating the end of my own first 7 day water fast. I had no idea what I was doing! A simple salad quickly become a slice of pizza – which then turned into eating the whole pizza!!! It weighed like an anchor in my stomach for literally days afterwards… Needless to say, I learned my lesson afterwards!

To help people deal with the trials and tribulations of refeeding, I offer an exhaustive pdf on the subject in the webshop:

How to break a water fast?

If you return too quickly to a normal diet, you risk encountering both digestive problems as well as ‘refeeding syndrome’. This is a potentially fatal complication caused by the change from ketosis back to your everyday metabolism. If you have any doubts, I offer a downloadable 86-page PDF which covers refeeding for any length of fast.

The 7-10 day water fast in greater detail:

Days 1-3:

Of course, the first three days of a 7-10 day water fast generally follow the process described in the 3 day water fast. With experience, though, it will become much easier – even enjoyable – and the process to complete the switch to ketosis will accelerate.

Days 4-6:

Days 4-6 is the usual timeframe when your body reaches maximum ketosis. This is clearly supported by my clients who love data, and who choose to measure their daily blood ketone levels. With a remarkable degree of consistency, most of them reach an average maximum ketosis of 5-6 mmol/l, usually around Day 5 (+/- 1 day).

At this point, after having fully ramped up ketosis, your body will want to devote greater resources to detox and healing. You’ll know when this happens! Above and beyond the detox symptoms mentioned above, your breath will stink. Your sweat and general body odour will also stink, as your skin releases toxins which may have been locked up inside you for literally most of your life. No, it’s not a very social occupation! But directly experiencing the repulsive things coming out of your body can make you appreciate how good it is to be free of them! It will give you the willpower to continue fasting in the future, no matter how hard it may have been in the beginning. I myself became a convert to water fasting on Day 4 or 5 of my first 7-day water fast, when my tongue began to produce a foul metallic-tasting froth. It tasted literally like poison.

Beyond the possibility of nausea at any time, detox can also typically cause aches in the muscles, connective tissue and the lymphatic system. However, this is generally more bearable than during the first three days, when you’re lower on energy. You’ll probably find there are periods when physically you actually feel great, with a clear and still consciousness, and then this will pass into a period of deeper cleansing when you feel weaker and heavier. During longer fasts, things always change. From hour to hour. From day to day. There’s no apparent logic to it, so don’t try to analyse. Just trust your body and go with the flow. It knows what it’s doing: how and what to detox, where to heal, and when to take breaks in between these more intensive periods.

Days 7-10:

You might be wondering why I’ve not listed a ‘5 day water fast’ or something similar here on this website. If you’d like to try four or five days, then by all means do! Every day of fasting does you good! But it’s because of the benefits of what often happens around the end of the first week of fasting that, in my opinion, it’s worth aiming for a period of 7-10 days. It’s at this point that you may experience a so-called ‘healing crisis‘. This occurs when your body has moved beyond the simple ‘house-cleaning’ of everyday toxins, and has started to tackle deeper illnesses, injuries and traumas (both physical and emotional). This is also described in the article on extended 14-40 day fasts.

What is a healing crisis?

A healing crisis consists of symptoms of an (old) illness returning or temporarily intensifying during the fast itself. This can be a little worrying, especially if you don’t understand what’s happening to you at the time. Nevertheless, it is perfectly normal. Think of it like this: fasting calls the illness forth from where it is otherwise locked physically into the depths of your body and/or emotionally into your subconscious. In calling it forth, you may temporarily experience the symptoms of the illness more acutely, but it is precisely through shaking it loose that you are then able to permanently expel the illness and truly heal. Western medicine can hardly ever achieve this to the same degree, because toxic (allopathic) drugs and physical procedures tend only to reduce or suppress symptoms. They do not deal with root causes of illness!

Occasionally, healing crises can be extremely intense. When this happens, it’s critically important to be able to tell the difference between a healing crisis and a sign from your body urging you to stop the fast. This is where working with an experienced fasting coach like myself can really help. If it’s a healing crisis, you should ideally try and push through. If it’s not, you should stop immediately!

What about water fasts longer than 7-10 days?

Given the degree of detox and depth of healing which occurs during a 7-10 day water fast, there’s usually no need to contemplate longer fasts unless you’d like to address a serious health issue or unless you feel the need to go deeper into your being spiritually. A weekly 24- or 36-hour fast (or perhaps regular intermittent fasting instead) combined with an occasional 7-10 day fast should be all that’s necessary in order to preserve good health. Exactly how frequently you conduct a 7-10 day fast is up to you, but please don’t violate your body by fasting before it’s ready – even if your rational mind believes it’s for a good cause.

Once you’ve faced and overcome the basic physical and emotional challenges on shorter 1-3 day water fasts, you can begin to trust your body and what it wants. At this point, your body always knows best. When the time is right, you’ll feel an inner urge welling up inside yourself to do a 7-10 day fast. You’ll look forward to it. For some people this may be only once every few years, for others up to a couple of times per year. Just follow your inner calling, and let the fast come to you – rather than the other way around!

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297 responses to “7-10 day water fasts: maximising benefits and overcoming challenges”

  1. Im on my 3rd day water fast, and since yesterday i have been having those waves of extreme exhaustion followed by feeling completely normal. It lasts kind of 30 min each. Its so weird. At one moment i think im so tired that i can literally fall asleep in the middle of the street, and then next minute im fine and wide awake. What is happening? Anything to be worried about? Is it gonnq go away? I cant even leave the house because if i get one of those waves of exhaustion i dont even think i can get back home. Thanks

    1. Most likely, it’s completely normal and nothing to worry about. This is where having a coach (or fasting while on retreat) would help.

  2. Hi tallis, thanks for your quick response. You are helping many people with this blog.
    Unfortunately i took the pill for many years and also the contraceptive injection called depovera. At the time i didnt have much information and just believed on what the doctor was saying. For many years i just had all the symptoms of pcos masked. I had my last depovera injection September last year and decided im never going to take hormones again. Its not natural. Since then i have been dealing with the symptoms of pcos. I decided Im going to start my fast. I have never done more than 3 days fast so im aiming for a 7 days fast to start with. If it all goes alright, and if i feel that im fine, would you recommend start my prolonged fast (30 days as you suggested) a week or 2 after it ? Or should i wait longer ?
    Also you meantioned about regaining all the weight back .. i really wouldnt like to regain all the weight back. I have always been a petite girl but gained 6kg of pure fat in the past year since i stopped with the contraceptive. I know it doesnt seem much, but im extremely cautious about what i eat and i exercise regularly. I have no idea how could i had gained so much fat eating a low carb plant based diet. It just doesnt make any sense to me how i could put on so much fat. Im scared of putting all the weight back on and maybe even more weight after finishing the fast. Why everyone seems to get all the weight back after the fast? What could i possibly do for it to do not happen to me?
    Is it recommended still doing weights at the gym during the fast to preserve the muscle?
    Thank you

    1. If you feel called to do a prolonged fast after your current fast, I would normally advise waiting about double the length of the first fast before starting. This gives you time to relax and regain your weight. But if you have the weight in the first place and don’t want to regain it all back, you could certainly begin sooner, especially if you’ve been eating healthily up until now.

      Your body DOES learn how to metabolise your calories more efficiently after a fast, and this is why it’s easy to put on extra weight afterwards. As I’ve said elsewhere, the key is in your everyday diet: what you eat, how you eat and when you eat. Aerobic exercise is more important than weights. No need to worry about muscle loss!!!

  3. Hi Tallis,

    I came across your blog while researching fasting. I’ve been doing intermittent fasting (16/8) for quite some time and today I am trying out a 36 hour fast for the first time 🙂

    My question is regarding my mother, she has Arthritis and Fibromyalgia and I thought that fasting could be a good idea for her, especially a longer one eventually if I can convince her. Do you have any experience from this or know of others getting positive results for this?

    Many thanks in advance!
    Darko

    1. Hi Darko,

      Thanks for writing. I haven’t come across anyone who has fasted to heal fibromyalgia, but the quick answer is: I agree with you, given the way that other illnesses with similar symptoms respond positively to fasting. Fasting is particularly effective in dealing with both inflammation and hormonal imbalances – which include both rheumatoid arthritis and fibromyalgia (as much as the exact cause of fibromyalgia remains unknown).

      In addition, a healthy diet in combination with fasting is also always important – and especially so in fibromyalgia, as you probably already know.

      Rather than scaring your mother away with the prospect of a seemingly endless prolonged fast (especially if she herself isn’t used to fasting), it’s probably a better idea to nudge her in the direction of shorter but more frequent fasts, along with possible dietary change if necessary. Even though this may be less effective than a longer fast, there’s a good chance it’ll help to some degree. If she sees only a minimal improvement to the pain, though, this in itself might be enough to spur her on to longer fasts when she’s ready for them.
      Hope this helps, and good luck to you both,
      Tallis

      1. Hi Tallis and thanks for your extensive and quick reply! I really enjoy reading about your experiences on both water and dry fasting.

        I will try to nudge her into a 24 or 36 hour water fast with me next time I do it and hopefully she will feel the benefits and enjoy it 🙂

        Thanks
        Darko

        1. Great idea to do it together!
          I’m sure she’ll get strength from doing it with you.
          Every path starts with the first step…

  4. Hi Tallis, I’m a regular intermittent faster (16/8) and today I am on my first 36 hour fast. I came across you blog which is great and got interested in longer fasting in the future.

    But my question is if you have any experience or knowledge about fasting helping people with Arthritis and Fibromyalgia since my mother unfortunately has had those illnesses for many years and I hope to convince her to try fasting for shorter periods at first and eventually do a 7-10 day or maybe even longer fast if necessary.

    Many thanks in advance,
    Darko

  5. Hi, i have done a 60 hour water fast earlier this year. I have PCOS and havent had my period in over a year. I have been suffering with pcos symptoms and its making me extremely depressed. All the weight gain, lethargy, bad skin, thin hair and head bold spots while a lot of hair in every other part of my body. Also the idea of possible infertility is horrible. I would like to go on a prolonged fast to try healing all my issues.
    How long does it take for hormones to be able to heal? Would one prolonged fast be enough?
    Also, im scared about compulsive eating after it. So many people say it recks your metabolist and your ghrelin. Why most people get their weight back after a fast?
    Any recommendations on how not to lose too much muscle?
    Thank you

    1. Hi Maria,
      Fasting can certainly help to heal you from PCOS (polycystic ovary syndrome) and is certainly less invasive than surgery or hormonal treatments, which in the long term are likely only to further upset your natural hormonal balance and leave you dependent on and at the mercy of your doctor.

      Would one prolonged fast be enough? Of course, I can’t speak here for your particular case, and in any case there are never any guarantees in fasting (or anything else in life for that matter!). But you’re certainly right in thinking of a prolonged healing fast as the most effective form of fasting yourself back to health.

      How long does it take hormones to heal? Again, I can’t give you a specific number of days or even weeks. It also depends on whether you’ve been on some kind of hormonal therapy, as any drugs of this kind will have only further upset and confused your natural hormonal balance, and thus it will take longer for a fast to heal. However long it does take, you should be thinking about fasting in the region of about a month. It all depends how serious your case is and how quickly and effectively your own natural healing processes are able to kick in.

      Even if you don’t succeed with just one fast, it’s highly likely that there WILL be improvement, which – if necessary – can lead to a second healing fast after you’ve regained your weight. Whenever I’ve coached people through a fast dealing with illness related to hormonal or auto-immune issues, you almost always see an improvement – even after shorter fasts. These kinds of illnesses almost always do respond well to fasting.

      What I’m trying to say is: no matter whether a single fast totally heals or just improves your illness, it will have been worth it! Even if it doesn’t totally heal you, you’ll still be in a stronger position to start another fast in the future: one which will then have a higher chance of completely healing you.

      I’m glad you’re concerned about compulsive eating afterwards. A healthy diet afterwards and appropriate exercise always go hand in hand with successful fasting.

      Don’t worry about losing muscle – you’ll gain it back. (I speak from experience.) The body produces extra amounts of human growth hormone after fasting, and this will help you regenerate whatever muscle you’ve lost.

      All the best,
      Tallis

  6. Thanks Tallis and Adrian,

    I also have Type 1 diabetes, have had for about 20 years. i happened to stumble across Valter Longo’s research just as it was published early this year. I was in contact with him online and, of course, his stance is similar to yours Tallis: it is dangerous for a type 1 to fast and should not be attempted outside of a hospital. I did approach my Endocrinologist, diabetic nurse and dietitian about it. Endo was dismissive and the other 2 couldn’t wrap their minds around it. Obviously, this was unnerving and dissuaded me from trying a long fast. So I started off with intermittent fasting (16:8 daily), skipped lunch a few times as well, then added an occasional 24-48 hours fast, which was relatively easy.
    I recently decided that I am comfortable enough with fasting to try a 5 day water (and green tea and black coffee) fast on my own (which is the length used in Dr. Longo’s research). I am currently on day 4. I find that being on a Continuous Glucose Monitor and an Insulin Pump make this fairly manageable. I can watch trends in my BG level and adjust basal rates of insulin accordingly. Currently I am -50% basal rate and fairly consistent. As my metabolism shifts through the day I have to adjust my basal. In someways, controlling BG levels are easier while fasting as there is less room for error in insulin delivery. My main issue is that the dizziness and glossy feelings that sometimes come give me anxiety about my blood glucose levels being low. This has impacted my sleep negatively, but is improving as become more confident in how stable my sugars are. Also keeping a close eye on my ketones as I’m not clear if dietary ketosis might make me more vulnerable to diabetic ketoacidosis, even though my BG hasn’t gone above normal levels during the fast. The other issue is that I have needed to consume small amounts of calories in order to avoid hypoglycemia – 2 small sips of juice, a few raisins with nuts. Also have consumed mints and gum. Certainly less than 100 cals/day though the research did involved a Fasting Mimicking diet which had participants eating as much as 300 cals/day.
    Anyways, so glad to see I’m not the only one out there trying this (was starting to feel like it) and happy for some of the info found on this page which has normalized some of my experiences so far.

    1. Hi Carlin,
      Thanks for sharing. Good to hear that things have gone so smoothly for you so far, especially for someone with T1 diabetes. Sounds to me like you’ve developed a good approach, taking little steps at a time and always being cautious with constant monitoring. There would be no other safe method for someone with your illness. Congratulations on finishing your five-day fast, and it’s great that you’ve been able to do something as self-empowering as this!
      Tallis

  7. Hi Tallias,

    Type1 Diabetic here and am determined and convinced this is the key. A lot of different things I have tried. I read that 1 man cured himself and was a marathon runner and did a 100 mile marathon. I took that up thinking it was the solution and did a week of 25km a day. Funny thing is that doctors told me my pancreas will never work again and that it will never produce insulin and im insulin dependent for the rest of my life, however I found that to be false. I am stubborn and a practitioner of the lotus sutra so giving up isnt really something I do, nor should any of us we are all great! I went a week without taking insulin after entering ketosis on a very strict diet (under 20g of carbs a day w a rigorous workout routine) I fell into ketosis and after running for about 10min noticed my sugar level would drop 5-6 points. Because of this I kept running and working out while consuming fats and greens. My energy levels were amazing but I had no idea the stress and damage I was doing to my body in terms of muscle. I later found out my sugar level would shoot back up because after exercising your liver and kidney naturally secrete glucose back into the system. After many different attempts on diets and cleanses it occurred to me after hearing a few experiences from members on non-related topics that Ive never actually done a fast. After reading a lot of what fasts address in terms of healing I am convinced this is the way. The trick will be using insulin carefully while trying this. I am on day 3 now and am almost in ketosis (starting to feel like crap, and I know what it feels like from experience). By the way keto diet is something doctors also told me Id die if I tried to do, I stayed on a keto diet for 2 months…. guess what? Im alive. Im wondering what your suggestions are on whether I should be using insulin or not during the fast or I should just fully rely on my body to heal regardless of sugar level. Any tips would be greatly appreciated. Thank you for your hard work and encouragement with everyone, you are truly a noble individual. Nam myoho renge kyo! (Nichiren Buddhism, member of the SGI) 🙂

    Sincerely,
    Adrian

    1. Hi Adrian,
      Thanks for sharing your story. The more stories like yours which make it out into the public consciousness, the more people will slowly realise that they do have more options available to them than what the average medical doctor is likely to tell them.

      Whereas Type 2 diabetes can be cured relatively easily through fasting, Type 1 diabetes is one of the riskiest conditions in this respect. I don’t want to say anything here which might make Type 1 diabetics dive in the deep end and try out a fast without taking appropriate medical advice with regard to their own individual case. Of course, ‘appropriate medical advice’ here means finding a doctor who actually understands fasting. Unfortunately, there aren’t too many of them!

      Fasting with Type 1 diabetes does have the potential to kill you. Let’s be clear about that. But there’s also an increasing body of recent medical evidence to suggest that in certain cases, under certain circumstances, certain types of fasting DO have the potential heal the pancreas, which can then lessen or even eliminate your dependence on injected insulin. Earlier this year, the subject even hit the headlines in the BBC: http://www.bbc.com/news/health-39070183.

      For someone like yourself who has an independent mind and has already experienced periods of freedom from injected insulin through fasting, I’d suggest finding an expert in the field (possibly a medical researcher) who can work with you personally, so that you can make slow and safe progress towards healing your pancreas. I’m not an MD myself, and it wouldn’t be responsible – both medically and legally – for me to take your life in my hands, especially here on an internet blog! But please do continue to look into the possibilities of how fasting can help you. I feel confident that with your courage and determination you’ll be able to move in a very positive direction.

      Please do keep us up to date of any progress.
      Best of health to you,
      Tallis

  8. Michael Redchanskiy Avatar
    Michael Redchanskiy

    Hi Tallis,

    I was wondering if it is ok to still take vitamins and mineral liquid supplements during a 7 day water fast? The mineral supplements are just a few drops I put into water to help with digestion for detox and the vitamins are everyday vitamins to also help with detox. Thank you.

    1. Hi Michael,
      It’s absolutely fine to continue taking the vitamin and mineral supplements. They contain no real calories and especially as a liquid form should easily absorb without affecting the biology of the fast.
      The real question is why you feel the need to continue taking them at all. A water fast of this length requires no supplements, and unless you have an underlying medical reason to take them you won’t gain anything.
      In other words, is it just the fear of losing vitamins and minerals? (A lot of people worry about this at first!)
      Or is there a concrete, chronic reason to continue taking them during your fast?
      Good health to you,
      Tallis

  9. Think about it like this: any amount of sugars/carbs which reaches about 100 calories will start to work against ketosis.

    1. Do you know if half a cup of blended watermelon juice will take me out of ketosis?

      1. Abel please update me – how is it going with the fast? I am searching a lot about fasting and most articles are so old – this is one of the best I could find that is quite recent. I am also in Day 1 – I can never go beyond 60 hours – so I need all the encouragement I can get in this regard.

        1. Hello. The hunger tugs subside after 20-30 minutes. Drink only water. Water helps you feel satisfied and not hungry. Your body will feed itself using the food that is already in you. In meantime since your body is not laboriously digesting, it will attack and heal what’s not healthy.

  10. I need my immune system to heal brain lesions. Should I now Reach Kinesis in two days?

    How long would you water fast if u was me?

    1. Hi Abel,

      So your goal in fasting is to treat or possibly cure multiple sclerosis and the brain lesions which are associated with MS?

      If so, rather than planning to fast two days a week, I would consider a single, longer healing fast (link HERE).

      Fasting two days a week may well help to slow down the progression of symptoms, but it won’t be enough to significantly improve your situation or cure you of your disease.

      Typically, we’re talking about a fast lasting at least three weeks, although there’s no fixed length guaranteed to heal you. Even if such a fast doesn’t fully eliminate the MS, it should almost certainly help to improve symptoms. Even though there are no guarantees, fasting is known to fully heal MS. You should watch this video:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uzWyiYUu-Dk

      If you don’t feel emotionally ready yet to undertake such a long fast, you could try building up to it with a couple of 7 day fasts, each separated by a few months. This will hopefully give you the confidence to undertake the long, healing fast. If you do decide to go for a prolonged fast, I’d definitely recommend doing it under medical supervision – which means finding a doctor who understands fasting (most average doctors definitely DON’T!).

      1. What I’m doing now is not a two day fast but I’m headed for a month or 40 days. I ment that when I’m done with this, and I feel this will be successful, I will b an advent two day a week faster.

        Thanks. I will check links now.

  11. Hi. Here are my notes. Any suggestions?

    8/2/17 – 8/6/17 No food just water with lime.

    8/6/17 10:30pm I ate a small margarita pizza, vegetable burger patty, arugula & kale salad lime, vitamin omega 3 fish oil 10k milligram, pinch of Himalayan pink salt in water with lime.

    8/7/17 Morning I felt the cheese in the pizza was bad for me.

    Water with lime.

    5 Mandarins, grapes.

    Soup = corn, onions, carrots, celery, mushroom, yautia, peppers, chicken broth. Garlic powder.

    Soup = corn, onions, carrots, celery, mushroom, yautia, peppers, chicken broth. Garlic powder.

    Salad = tomatoes, spinach, kale, feta, guacamole, trail mix, tortilla chips, lime, salt.

    1 Apple

    8/8/17 water with lime, mandarins

    7 Mandarins.

    1. Hi Abel,
      Congratulations on your five-day fast.
      Must admit I smiled at reading about how you broke the fast with a pizza and veggie burger… No wonder you felt the cheese in your stomach the next day! Hey, that’s okay. Learning by doing is all part of the process, and I did something pretty similar after my first seven-day fast. The feeling of “food, glorious food” can make you end up eating stuff which is simply too dense and heavy for a digestive system which has switched off. In my case, I felt the pizza in my stomach for at least three or four days after having eaten it – not a good feeling. Your diet the following day, though, with lots of soup has probably helped to ease things up, right?

      So if you ask for any suggestions, here they are:
      1. Don’t eat pizza and burgers the first day after any fast longer than 1-2 days!!!
      2. Break the fast gently first with fluids like fruit and vegetable juices, moving on to solid fruit and vegetables, and ONLY from the following day introduce solid foods which aren’t too heavy (preferably fruits and vegetables mostly, with only a few grains and nuts, depending on how much your digestive system has switched off). For any fast longer than a couple of days, you need to give your digestive system time to re-start again!
      3. Next time try a fast which involves water only. There’s nothing wrong with adding a little lime into your water, but it begs the question: why? In terms of the physical aspects of the fast, adding lime doesn’t help your digestive system to switch off. In terms of the spiritual/emotional aspects, lime adds a lot of exciting flavour – wow! – exactly when you want to be slowing down and turning inward instead.

      All the best in your fasting adventures,
      Tallis

      1. Bro! I get it now! You wrote “shut off your digestive system”.
        So my immune system heals the multiple sclerosis.

        Here is the update =
        8/8/17 water with lime. 7 Mandarins.

        8/9/17
        Only water from now on

        Suggestions??

      2. After this attempt to put multiple sclerosis under my feet I plan to fast two days per week

        1. I have multiple sclerosis too and I would love to try this. Please update me!

      3. *ketosis

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