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.

OPTIMISE YOUR HEALTH WITH EXPERT WATER FAST COACHING

Join over 1,000 clients worldwide who have healed through personalized guidance.

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.

ONLINE COURSE

Complete a 3-day water fast

This video + pdf bundle provides you with all you need to know in order to safely, successfully and smoothly carry out your first 3-day water fast. If you already have a little experience, there are plenty of additional tips to help you go deeper into water fasting.

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!

Related articles:

If you enjoyed this article, please share on social media, using one of the buttons below:

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

  1. Hi Tallis,

    Thank you for the valuable information. Please allow me to bring forth my situation.

    I have dealt with addictions and severe mental and nervous system health issues for about 6+ years now. .After 4+ years of countless invasive allopathic treatment (including 35+ different medications) that left me even worse I embarked on the natural healing journey. I have been vegan for 1.5 years (80% Raw for last three months) and have done many juice cleanses and a single 20 day water fast. I have seen much improvement, but haven’t reached a satisfactory level of health that allows me to live fully.

    I will be going on a supervised 30-day water fast in about 5 weeks and was wondering what is the optimal way to prepare for such fast. I have been on a high-fruit raw food diet for about 3 weeks now and I have been experiencing many detox reactions (physical, mental and emotional) and feel exhausted. I get the sensation that my body is asking me to fast, because I’m not getting hungry and feel I’m almost forcing myself to eat at times.

    My question is the following:

    Would it be adequate to perform 2 or 3 of short fast (5-7 days) Interposed by a raw vegan diet in the coming weeks before my 30-day fast. Could this actually make the prolonged fast a “deeper” cleanse? I was hoping to maximize healing and allow for the 30-day experience to finally give me my health back. But I’m afraid of depleting myself too much before the prolonged fast. Its been way too long and too much suffering.

    If not, what would you suggest a good preparation plan for the fast might look like?

    Sincerely appreciate your time and input.

    Thank you!

    1. Hi Marcos,
      Thanks for writing – and apologies for my slow reply. My email had been hacked and I haven’t been able to access the website…
      Anyway, despite the two-week gap since you wrote, I don’t think you’ve lost out in terms of my reply, because, in short, I don’t think you need to be doing too much to help your preparation.

      The most important thing about a prolonged fast is feeling emotionally strong at the beginning, because you’ve got a long time ahead of you. It’s like running a marathon. All these endurance tests are more mental/emotional than physical. So if you’re already feeling like things are hard going now, the last thing I would suggest is further water fasting before you venture out on your long fast. The detox symptoms suggest that you’re body is already working hard. No need to push things any harder for now.

      In terms of dietary transition before the fast, a high-fruit vegan diet allows you to begin a water fast at any time. I’m a vegan myself, and I never prepare with dietary change before a long fast. I simply don’t need to, and neither will you.

      If you feel nervous about the upcoming 30-day fast, then at most I’d suggest trying out one short water fast, just to prove to yourself that it really won’t kill you: something like 1-3 days maximum. But I suspect that you’re not nervous with a history of a 20-day water fast under your belt!

      In which case, I’d suggest doing everything you can to keep your stress levels low between now and your fast. In other words, I’d prepare for the prolonged fast not through diet or preliminary water fasts, but rather through lifestyle change. Physically, you’re already doing the ideal preparation through your diet.

      Best wishes for improving your health,
      Tallis

  2. Hi Tallis,

    I’m curious about your thought on how sensitivities to food could change through fasting. I intermittent fast 16:8, have done 10ish 1-2 day fasts and two 5 day fasts over the last year. The two 5 day fasts were more recent and after the second one I am noticing gastrointensitnal reactions to dairy which I never used to have. Wondering about your thoughts on if the fast could someone change my bodies immune response to something like lactose. Certainly not intolerant but definitely sensitive.

    Thanks

    Carlin

    1. Hi Carlin,

      Thanks for sharing. Yes, food sensitivities can and do change through fasting. It’s not surprising that your reaction to dairy began only with your 5-day fasts, as these kinds of changes tend not to occur with intermittent fasting and shorter one-day fasts.

      Sensitivities can change either way. Often people become less sensitive to certain foods which in the past have caused an auto-immune response. As in your case, the opposite scenario can also be true. However, this isn’t to say that your increased sensitivity suggests you’re developing an auto-immune issue. More likely is that your body is becoming truly more sensitive to its needs, and it’s not going to let you get away with anything less than perfect! Another possibility is that you were trying to return to dairy too soon after the end of your fast, before your digestive system was ready to process it. Either way, my suggestion to you is to try to tune into and follow what your body is already telling you. Generally, these kinds of sensitivities are most strongly felt immediately after a fast, and my guess is that gradually you’ll be able to return to dairy if you so desire. I’d suggest a possible re-balance, though, of the kinds of dairy you consume (if indeed you do return to dairy in the long term). It might be a good idea to lower the amount of cheese and milk, and instead raise things like yogurt and cottage cheese.

      Hope this help,
      Tallis

  3. Hello, I just completed a 7-day fast to cure food allergies. I believe I entered into the healing phase early. I had moderately high keytones by day 3 (first time I tested).

    Several years ago, I experienced a crushed pelvis (auto accident) Where every bone in the pelvis was fractured. So I have lots of scar tissue. I have SI Joint implants (titanium rods) for stabilization.

    On day 4, the pain in my pelvis and back of my legs was excruciating. I did stretches and heat. Only walking helped and I couldn’t sleepwalk, so I was getting no rest at all. Day 5 and 6, it continued at the same intense level. Needless to say I was exhausted. Then I began to worry that my body was trying to reject the rods. And I broke the fast. After having ½ c broth, the hip and back pain disappeared.

    Can fasting make your body reject foreign objects like my rods, hip or knee replacements?

    1. Hi Pam,
      Thanks for sharing. Good question!

      I’ve heard of fillings falling out during longer fasts (over 10 days), which may well be related to the body trying to reject the “foreign body” embedded in the tooth. Given the strong immune response during a fast, I suppose this could also be the case with regard to your implants. However, it’s also possible that what you felt was a healing process not relating to the rods at all, but rather to the cleansing of scar tissue from the area. I know from my own experience that even the relatively minimal scar tissue of running injuries can cause pain as the body cleanses.

      Especially given the fact that there are concentrations of lymph nodes in the pelvis, it could also be pain from your lymphatic system working overtime. Maybe you could dig out a diagram of the lymphatic system to see if the area of your pains correspond with this. Or does the area of the pain correspond more precisely with the area of implants?

      Yes, the pain would have disappeared with the end of your fast, because the deep cleansing processes would have stopped in parallel.

      If you’d like to continue with water fasting in the future but are worried about your body rejecting the implants, you might consider doing shorter, more frequent fasts instead. But it would also be interesting to see what your experience is if you do another 5-6 day fast. If the pain is less next time, then this would suggest that you already did a good amount of cleansing on your last fast, and that your previous pain was just this: cleansing. In other words, nothing to worry about. This is all the more true if you don’t already have quite a bit of experience in water fasting, because pain in the pelvis and legs is quite a common symptom for many people even without a broken pelvis :-). If, instead, the pain starts up with a vengeance – and quite possibly earlier on in the fast – then this is more likely to suggest that your body might be attacking the implants. In which case, I’d suggest you consult your doctor/surgeon.

      Best wishes,
      Tallis

      1. That makes total sense. Thank you so much for a quick and thorough response.

        Pam

  4. I’ve decided to embark on my first 10 day fast, but I’m a little concerned about losing muscle mass. Does that happen much during the fast or is it only after ketosis ends and the body enters “starvation mode”?

    Also, if there’s any advice you could give me on how best to come off my 10-day without gaining a lot of weight back, that would be awesome! My primary focus for this fast is for spiritual and mental health, but I’m also trying to lose weight and reset my relationship with food. Any ideas?

    Thanks!

    1. Hi River,

      There’s no reason to worry about losing muscle mass. Yes, you will lose some while fasting, but the increased levels of human growth hormone afterwards mean that you’ll easily put it back. As a long-distance runner myself, I’m pretty aware of these kinds of changes taking place in my body. I find that immediately after a fast, my muscles don’t seem to be quite as strong or efficient, but in the weeks or even months – yes, months – after this (depending on the length of the fast) I have more strength than before the fast. This is all confirmed through timing my runs.

      After any fast, weight gain (or not) boils down to how you plan your everyday diet. Having just had a total break with food, this is the perfect chance to make significant shifts in your diet – especially because your body will be more sensitive to what is good for it and what is not.

      All the best,
      Tallis

  5. Hi Tallis. I am on day two of my first ever water fast. I feel ok physically but mentally not so well. I cant stop thinking about things i want to eat. I want to try to go for 7 to 10 days. I am concerned about my meal before my fast. I had about 15 honey bbq wings from buffalo wild wings and i never had a bowel movement after. I fear that the food is rotting in my gut and i wont reap the full benefits of my fast. Please give me your input.

    1. Hi Jay,

      Yikes, buffalo wings as a last meal?! Not a good idea… Especially before a fast longer than a couple of days, it’s important to make dietary changes in order to maximise the smoothness of the fast. Those buffalo wings – not just one or two but 15!!! – aren’t going to help things, and may well be the reason for a lack of bowel movements. Having said that, though, lack of bowel movements (up to a point) is completely normal while fasting.

      It definitely sounds like you’ve dived in the deep end here, in terms of setting 7-10 days as the goal for your first fast. There’s nothing wrong with that, but it does sound like consequently you’re feeling a lot of anxiety. First, eating such a large last meal before your fast shows this. Many people eat too much before a fast because they worry about not eating during the fast, but a large last meal only makes it harder for your digestion to switch off, increasing hunger pangs over the first day or so. Second, you can’t stop thinking about things you want to eat. That’s totally okay, and everyone goes through the same thing for the first couple of fasts :-). But this is going to get emotionally tiring if you have to keep it up for a whole week or more!

      The importance of trying to stay in a good place emotionally is one of the main reasons I always recommend approaching fasting gradually, starting with short one-day fasts and then increasing their length as you feel more at home with not eating. It also ensures that you’ll find fasting to be a positive experience, which maximises the chances of keeping at it in the future. – And that’s what’s important: fasting over the long term in order to keep your body cleansed and healthy.

      All the best,
      Tallis

  6. Does ketosis stop when all fat stores are used up? It seems to me it must because I believe the liver requires fat to synthesise ketone bodies but I’m not quite sure. To lose absolutely all fat I suppose you would have to enter into starvation phase. What sort of time frame would we be looking at and how would you know when you were there? I realise that must depend on body mass and fat stores of course.
    By the way I am on day 7 of a water fast (my first ever fast) and have never suffered any hunger yet? I am however feeling weak and luckily do not have to work.

    1. Hi Ernest,
      Congratulations on your fast – it sounds like it’s going really well. (It’s perfectly normal to feel physically weak.)
      Yes, ketosis stops when all the fat stores are used up, because, by definition, ketosis requires the energy from fat molecules. And yes, when ketosis stops, true starvation begins. This means consuming your own muscles and inner organs for energy. Obviously, you don’t want to overstep the mark here, because as much as fasting is healthy for you, post-fasting starvation is destructive and can cause permanent damage to your body.
      Fortunately, you’ll know when you’re reaching the end of your fat stores, because hunger returns with a vengeance. As much as hunger pangs gradually subside over the first few days (or even over the first week) of a fast, they return quickly, powerfully and unmistakably at the end of your fat reserves. Even though you’ve been fortunate not to feel hungry at all, you certainly would feel true hunger if you ran out of fat reserves.
      The average person is capable of fasting up to about two months before reaching the beginning of the starvation phase.
      So don’t worry, it’s not going to happen to you on a 7-10 day fast :-).
      Tallis

  7. I am on day 6 of my planned 14 day fast. Honestly today I feel great I felt a little detoxy yesterday with terrible headaches and pains near my gallbladder area. I left work and took a long sleep and just rested for the day drank plenty of water and today I feel like a new man!. Constantly i get urges to break my fast but i aknowlege them and keep going. To stay motivated I look for posts like this!! thanks for sharing. this is my second extended fast. i did one back in November just to experiment and i lasted for 8 days. This time I’m going for the 14 day goal! wish me luck!

    1. Hi Joseph,
      Thanks for sharing. Glad the rest did you good yesterday – it’s another example of how working through a fast can feel so much different (ie harder!) than staying home and resting. Just keep on going: sounds like you’re motivated and strong!
      No need to wish you luck, because you’re going to be just fine anyway 🙂
      All the best for your remaining 6 days,
      Tallis

  8. I’m presently on day three of my first seven day water fast. Last night, the “thought/mind cravings” were intense. After drinking several glasses of water I ended up drinking a glass of water and squeezed a single lemon wedge into the water. This calmed the cravings which were so intense that I almost broke the fast and started eating….anything!
    Is there any negative consequences from drinking one glass of water with lemon? Is the considered “breaking” the fast? Also, I did a two week intermittent fast and then started the seven day water fast. According to your article, I think my body might have entered ketosis on my second day? I had a terrible taste in my mouth and have dropped from 148 pounds to 141 pounds.
    Thanks…Mark

    1. Hi Mark,

      Hang in there! As your digestion slowly switches off, the cravings you describe are likely to start subsiding from now on – especially if they’re accompanied physically by a rumbling tummy or hunger pangs.

      Don’t worry about the slice of lemon! It doesn’t contain enough calories to affect ketosis. Especially if this is your first longer fast, you want to do anything you can in order to maximise your chances of success. If this means adding a slice of lemon to your water from time to time, then so be it. Just know that the lemon is a placebo: PHYSICALLY, it doesn’t really add or subtract anything significant to your fast. You may feel that it does, but this is only because you’re fighting with your natural addiction to eating (which we all have!). If you felt better afterwards, it’s because EMOTIONALLY you gave in to this addiction and allowed yourself to “eat” the lemon.

      Behind any physical addiction or physical detox symptom lies an emotional addiction or an emotional state which influences how we physically perceive the fast. Don’t worry about this for now! You can always tackle deeper emotional addictions on later fasts. The main thing this time is that you’re going for your first seven day water fast. That’s fantastic in itself! So just go for it, and give yourself a break with the occasional lemon slice if you feel you really need it!

      All the best,
      Tallis
      PS You may well have been in ketosis since your second day, especially thanks to your prior history with intermittent fasting. The terrible taste in your mouth, though, is more indicative of detoxing, which may or may not have been caused by ketosis. The taste of pure ketosis is more like acetone, which smells a little like nail polish remover.

  9. Hi
    Thank you for your informative blog. I’ve succeeded in 6 days water fast before and I’m thinking to do a 21 day fast to cure my endometriosis. I’ve had two miscarriages from IVF treatment, and I do not wish to experience another lost again due to endometriosis. I was wondering if 21 days fast would be sufficient to enable my body to heal from endometriosis.

    1. Jus do it. I started 21 day yesterday January 8 when I fell asleep late Sunday night.

    2. Hi Lea,

      Thanks for your question. I wish I could give you a definitive answer, but there’s never any universally fixed duration for healing (and therefore the length of the healing fast). Of course, it depends on both how severe the endometriosis is as well as the strength of your body’s healing system.

      My first guess, though, is that you’d probably need a fast longer than 21 days to maximise the chances of a full healing, especially if you’ve had the endometriosis for a while. There are various options depending on your lifestyle and current health. If you have the time to fast for longer than 21 days, then, in principle, that would be the most effective option. Another possibility would be to fast for 21 days and then assess the situation. If you haven’t fully healed, you could follow the 21 day fast with another 2-3 week fast after you’ve regained your weight. During this time – and quite honestly for the foreseeable future – your everyday diet is going to be important in retaining the benefits gained through each fast!!! The good news is that if you have to break up the healing into two or even three long-ish fasts, the body tends to pick up where it left off the previous time. It’s not as efficient as healing in a single, very long fast, but in this day and age many of us don’t have the luxury of being able to take a whole month or more out of everyday life. If you need more specific long-term guidance than this, I do offer private online consultations as well.

      In any case, it sounds like you have both the prior experience in fasting as well as the determination to carry this through, so I wish you all the best, and best of health,
      Tallis

    3. I’m on 7 days water fast and still taking blood pressure medication but not sure if it’s a good idea to take medication but my only problem that l have is constant tummy ache abd bloating. I wonder if this is normal when water fasting . The pain and bloating has been there since day 1

    4. Hi Angela,
      Sounds like there are two issues here.
      (1) I don’t want to tell you whether or not to mess with your medication, but generally speaking it’s possible to lower the dosage of BP meds over the course of a fast, in parallel with the fast itself lowering your blood pressure. If you can ween yourself off the meds entirely, that would be great, but it’s safe to do so only while keeping your BP within a normal zone.
      (2) Sorry to hear about the tummy ache and bloating. This could have several causes. If you didn’t eat well in the days prior to the beginning of your fast, it could be food still trapped in the digestive tract. If this is the case, you might think about an enema, which should solve the problem quickly and effectively. The ache could also be due in part to the inner organs rearranging themselves, now that they’re not held in place partly through a full digestive tract, although it doesn’t explain the bloating. It could also be due to healing, if there are issues which need attention in that part of your body. Sorry not to be more specific, but the term ‘tummy ache’ doesn’t give very much specific information to go on!
      Hope this helps :-),
      Tallis

  10. I forgot the ad this about all the water fasting I’ve done it made me look about 10 years younger,

  11. If you want to get extremely healthy add aloe vera gel in your water. I fast for Spiritual reasons for me its water only. You could add lemon and honey to your water toon. Google,an African Pastor lasted 30 days on a dry fast.

    1. Hi Tim,
      I did Google this. Actually, the African Pastor was found dead by a stranger after 30 days – which means he may have well died before this. Not a good idea, I’d say… Here’s the link:
      http://www.nairaland.com/3264791/pastor-alfred-ndlovu-dies-following

  12. I’ve done lots of water fasting 26 is the most + 23 + several others attempts to do a 40. It takes 15 days for the Fast to kick in. After 15 days you have to stand up slow. or you might faint. Once you get used to fasting it’s not hard. Long will she break your fast on healthy food you will not get sick. No Junk Foods. My friend broke her fast on junk Foods after 21 days, and he thought he was going to die he was sick for 2 weeks. After I broke my fast on my 23 day Fest I had so much food at me that when I use the bathroom and came out with great force with no control. If I would have been in a public place I would have had only 2 minutes to find a bathroom. Or I would have shit my pants. I never had a problem breaking my 26 day fast. Fasting made my eyes bright and shiny. And helped my mind.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.