Water Fast Coaching and Articles

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

3-day water fasts: cleansing, ketosis and metabolic change explained

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

Your first 3-day water fast is a major step into therapeutic fasting. It’s the point where your body begins shifting from sugar-burning to ketosis, awakening your natural healing metabolism. But it’s also where most first-time fasters meet their biggest challenges—both physically and emotionally.

If you’re new to this, you might have some immediate questions. Here are quick answers to the most common ones:

Your body switches from burning sugar to burning fat (ketosis), triggering healing and detox. This usually starts after 36–48 hours.

Glycogen runs out, but full fat-burning hasn’t kicked in yet. This “in-between” phase can cause fatigue, aches, or low energy.

Only minimally. The body uses amino acids briefly, but not whole muscle tissue—and once ketosis is established, this stops.

Headaches, body aches, nausea, and fatigue—especially around the lower back—are all normal. They pass as your body adjusts.

Start gently with juice, then light fruits or vegetables. Don’t overeat—your digestion needs a slow restart.

CONTENTS:

Introduction
Why the 3-day water fast is your gateway into therapeutic fasting and how it unlocks your healing metabolism.

Benefits and Challenges of a 3-Day Water Fast
How your body shifts into ketosis, why this matters for detox and energy, and what makes the first few fasts especially demanding.

What Happens During a 3-Day Water Fast – Day by Day
A detailed guide to the physical and emotional changes of each fasting day, with practical insights to support your experience.

  • Day 1: Easing In
    Glycogen depletion begins; emotional resistance may soften if you’ve fasted before.
  • Day 2: Metabolic Crossover
    Glycogen runs out, ketosis begins—but symptoms like fatigue, aches, and detox may peak here.
  • Day 3: Turning the Corner
    Ketosis stabilizes, energy may start to return, and the healing metabolism is now fully active.

Refeeding After a 3-Day Fast
How to break your fast safely with light meals, avoid common pitfalls, and support digestion as you return to eating.

OPTIMISE YOUR HEALTH WITH EXPERT WATER FAST COACHING

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

Introduction:

On the journey into water fasting, your first 3-day water fast is in many ways the most important. Three days is the period your body needs to unlock your healing metabolism and begin reaping the benefits. These three days are also the stepping stone for moving on to longer fasts (such as the 7-10 day water fast and more prolonged fasts), in which much deeper healing can occur. The more you practise the 3-day fast, the easier you’ll find water fasting of any length.

I’ll be honest with you, though. In the beginning, the 3-day water fast is also often the hardest.

Because of this, it’s important to do everything you can do to maximise your chances of a smooth experience. This can include following a well laid-out plan, such as that found in my 3-day water fast Online Course. For those who need more personal contact, I also offer online consultations and coaching.

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.

Whether you choose support or to go it alone, it’s definitely better not to try and bite off more than you can chew 🙂 with a 3-day fast until you feel comfortable with one-day (36-hour) water fasts. This is because a 3-day fast really is a quantum leap ahead in terms of what it demands from your body.

What are the benefits and challenges of a 3-day water fast?

Before you gain greater experience, most of the challenges of the three-day water fast are physical, as your body learns how to enter the state of ketosis. Ketosis is the metabolic process of burning fat mobilised from adipose (fat) tissue in the form of ketones and fatty acids. Unless you happen to be following an extremely low-carb diet, this is entirely different from how your body normally extracts the energy needed to power each cell. (And even if you do follow the lowest possible carb diet – which in most cases is certainly not advisable – the depth of fasting ketosis far exceeds that of dietary ketosis.)

In short, the vast majority of people never experience deep ketosis in everyday life, and rely instead on metabolising carbohydrates until the day they die. This is a real shame. We have two eyes, and we use them both. We have two arms and two legs, and we use each of them. We also have two metabolisms: our everyday carbohydrate-based metabolism, as well as ketosis. They each serve their own function and offer their own benefits.

There are two huge benefits of getting into ketosis while you fast.
First, because you’re burning fat and not eating/digesting, your body frees up a lot of extra energy for healing. (It’s estimated that digestion accounts for about 30% of your total daily energy needs.) However, unless your body has a lot of fat that it’s happy to burn, you probably won’t feel this energy going out into everyday strength and stamina. Instead, your body is more likely to want to turn it inward for cleansing and detox – which can easily leave you feeling weak and drained on the outside.

Second, because you’re drawing on the fuel in your fat cells, you also gain the potential to break down and cleanse the fat-soluble toxins which have been locked in there for years and years, safely sequestered away from interacting with the rest of your body. This is a different mechanism from being on a low-carb diet, because in this case essentially the same surface-level fat cells are used for energy, over and over, from meal to meal. In contrast, deeper levels of fat usually remain untouched, with the toxins of life continuing to accumulate within. This is reflected by comparing the ketone levels of someone on a low-carb diet with those of someone on a water fast. Not surprisingly, ketone levels while fasting are much, much stronger!

What happens on a 3-day water fast, day by day?

Day 1:

On a purely physical level, the first day obviously feels the same as it does on a 24 hour fast (described in greater detail here). During this period you slowly exhaust your reserves of carbohydrates, which are stored as glycogen mostly in the liver as well as in the tissue surrounding your muscles. Psychologically, though, if you already have experience in surviving one day without food, you should feel much more comfortable. Surviving three days without food is simply an extension of this, and so hopefully you’ll be freer to concentrate on the physical changes taking place inside your body. You may indeed find yourself facing your ego over these three days, but it’s more likely to take the form of facing your addictions to food rather than facing your ego’s existential fear for survival (as can happen the first time you fast for 24 hours).

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

Day 2:

By the beginning of the second day your glycogen reserves will almost certainly have run out. At this point, how you feel depends on how much experience you have in fasting. Nowadays when I fast, I feel great because my body has made the switch to ketosis in tandem with my glycogen stores running out. In other words, I don’t suffer any ‘power loss’. In fact, I usually benefit from even fuller energy towards the end of the first day because I’m powered by two sources: the remains of my usual carbohydrate-based metabolism, as well as by fasting ketosis which starts to kick in a couple of hours after I miss my first meal. It’s a great feeling, and, in time, you can look forward to it too!

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.

However, if your body isn’t adapted to ketosis, things will probably be rather different… Your glycogen fuel tanks will hit empty, and your body will have to search for an alternative power source – and quickly too! Ultimately, the burning of fat through ketosis is highly efficient, but the problem is that your body hasn’t yet learned how to easily access this metabolism, because the biochemical reactions and hormonal parameters which mediate those reactions are so different from what you’re normally used to.

Instead, following the depletion of glycogen within the first 24-36 hours of a fast, the next closest source of energy is found by breaking down the building blocks of protein. This comes from metabolising amino acids. By stripping off the nitrogen molecules common to all amino acids it is possible to synthesise glucose, which can then be burned in the usual way within the mitochondria of each cell. This process of converting amino acids to glucose takes place primarily in the liver through a process called gluconeogenesis.

Although all cells across the body contribute the amino acids necessary for gluconeogenesis, it’s true that muscle cells generally store more amino acids than other types of cells. But don’t worry: contrary to a lot of well intentioned but misinformed information out there on the internet, this doesn’t mean that you’re going to lose any significant muscle mass. Rather, we’re talking about the loss of only amino acids – not the actual autophagy of whole muscle cells. And in any case, once your body has started to perfect ketosis in the days ahead, the continued need to metabolise proteins becomes increasingly minimal.

In the meantime, you’ll probably continue to feel low on energy. Your muscles may ache, especially in your legs and glutes. Headaches are also common, both from low blood sugar and lack of energy, as well as from the beginnings of detoxification. Dull aches around the lower back are also common, as your kidneys and lymphatic system start to work overtime, flushing out the first toxins from your fat cells as well as the extra acids caused by metabolising protein. All of this can be enough to elicit nausea as well. In the face of such detox symptoms, make sure you’re drinking enough: at least a quart/litre or two per day. There is no fixed minimal limit to drink. This depends mostly on a person’s level of toxicity. The higher the toxicity, the more you’ll have to drink. Many people drink 3-4 quarts/litres a day.

I don’t want to lie to you. Personally, I feel that too many books and websites on fasting paint a rosy-coloured picture of how you’ll feel. Telling the full truth might turn off potential converts to water fasting… Yes, perhaps you’ll feel like a million bucks. But for the first couple of three-day water fasts it’s more likely that you’ll feel pretty awful, not entirely dissimilar to how you experience the flu: with aches and pains, and a general lack of energy. But don’t worry. And don’t give up at this point!!! You’ll survive. Just hang in there. All these symptoms will pass.

Day 3:

The third day is more or less a continuation of the second, both in terms of the physiological processes taking place, as well as how you feel. Many people feel at their lowest at the end of the second or at the beginning of the third day. Generally, though, things start to improve after this, as the switch to ketosis is completed.

If the toughest part of a fast is getting through the first three days, then isn’t it worth diving straight into a longer fast and reaping the benefits of what you’ve suffered through? Maybe. If you have the energy to do so – and especially if you have the mental energy to do so – then by all means continue your fast! Most likely, though, your first few three-day fasts will leave you feeling drained both physically and emotionally. There’s no need to do any more at this point. Three days is enough. Mission accomplished. You’ve successfully awoken your body’s healing metabolism, which you’ll be able to rely on increasingly in the future. You’ve also already experienced a significant degree of detox. Instead, I’d recommend taking on a longer, more cleansing fast once your body and mind have more fully acclimatised to and made friends with 3 day fasts. The most important thing here is to build up a stable, positive, long-term relationship with fasting. There’s no need to rush ahead, unless you have an urgent health issue which requires a more extended fast immediately.

Refeeding:

At the end of the third day, enjoy a glass of freshly squeezed orange juice and pat yourself on the back. Unlike longer fasts, there’s no need for a long transition back to eating. Nor is there any need for a long transition before the fast itself. However, do keep the first few meals light: mostly just fruits and/or vegetables (just as the last few meals before the fast should also be light). Don’t eat too much! If your ego is telling you to gorge yourself, avoid the temptation and try to honestly follow your appetite. Your stomach will have shrunk, your digestive system will have slowed down considerably, so you need a little time to get things up and running again. If you do follow your appetite, you’ll find you’re eating normally again within a day or two.

After breaking a longer fast, though, it’s extremely important to follow a well structured meal plan.

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.

Related articles:

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

386 responses to “3-day water fasts: cleansing, ketosis and metabolic change explained”

  1. Hi Tallis. End of day 2 (think I’m shooting for 5, must teach and have presentation tomorrow–don’t want to be ditzey–) and I’m not much uncomfortable at all. (For couple days before fast I ate only kitchati.) I have been drinking green and white teas on the “fast,” however. I went off coffee few days before the (modified) fast. Also drinking (Meyer, fresh squeezed) lemon water. One lemon in water each day, total. I read the lemon water assists with detox. So I’m cheating all the way, I guess. Thoughts on lemon water? And do you have feedback on the teas (Which contain caffeine)? I’ve read many blogs which endorse drinking green/white tea while water fasting.

    Also, can you say more about taking the small amount of mulled wine? Something about a small amount of alcohol not interrupting the biology of the cleanse.

    I eat very clean, ordinarily. Slender and 52 years old. I don’t know if these facts factor in (seems as though they would). Under these conditions, what might be the day ketosis begins during my fast? I have read typically end of third day, but I think somewhere in a blog you experiencing (assumedly) ketosis earlier in your fast.
    Thank you so much!

    1. Hi Sukhdev,
      Glad things are going smoothly, especially if you’re working through your water fast.
      “Cheating all the way”, huh? 🙂
      Well, to start answering your questions, it depends what you mean. In one sense, anything which isn’t water is cheating if you want to do a water fast, especially if you’re fasting for spiritual or emotional reasons. But it’s also true that the terrible (!) things you’ve done (drinking teas and using lemon) won’t affect the biology of the fast, especially if you’re using no more than one lemon per day.
      – Lemon is citrus, which can help detox, although quite honestly, in the amount you’re taking it, it’s not going to make much difference.
      – Same goes for green/white teas: they help detox.
      If the goal of your fast is purely physical, then yes, lemon and teas can help in certain ways. But it’s also true that since green/white teas contain caffeine, they prevent you from detoxing caffeine and likewise prevent you from dealing with caffeine addiction issues.

      Haha, mulled wine: you’re referring back to an old post of mine, I guess! Well since it was just a couple of sips, the calories contained in the alcohol wouldn’t have been enough to knock me out of ketosis, in the same way that the calories in lemon water don’t. Just remember that alcohol contains more calories than carbs: 7 kcal/g versus 4 kcal/g, and anything over about 100 calories is going to start to interfere with ketosis.

      As far as when ketosis begins, it’s going to start taking place as soon as you run out of glycogen. The question is: how fast can you make a full transition, so that it becomes your primary fuel supply? For experienced fasters, this can happen really quite quickly, within a matter of hours rather than days. Until you have more practice, though, a general rule of thumb is to assume that it takes up to three days, although in my experience many women tend to make the transition a little faster than this.

      All the best,
      Tallis

      1. Thank you for your attentive and comprehensive answers! So, one doesn’t really know when we each reach what I am going to call ‘the ketosis point’? Because, this is the useful part, where the detoxification occurs, correct? I mean, as I understand the process, the value portion of any fast is really only after this condition is activated. So, for example, a 36 hour fast isn’t doing much but training the body for longer fasts?

        1. Or even three day fast.

        2. I think you’ve hit the nail on the head. What you call ‘the ketosis point’ isn’t actually a point at all, but rather a process which begins once you’ve run out of glycogen and takes hours or days to reach full power. Even if there were such a ‘ketosis point’, detoxification works a little more subtley than that. Yes, ketosis allows you to access and cleanse the deeper toxins in your fat cells, but detoxification starts already as soon as your digestive system can begin to relax – and this is just a matter of hours after your last meal. Just think of stinky ‘morning breath’: in the same way that a fast gives you smelly ‘detox’ breath, so do the 8-12 hours after dinner and before breakfast.

          As far as the value of 36 hour fasts go, they don’t train you very much in developing ketosis, but they do provide an important switch-off for your digestive system, they do allow the early phases of detox to take place, and, equally important, they allow you to grow accustomed to not eating your usual three meals a day – which emotionally is very important in surrendering to longer fasts.

          1. I want to thank you for this comment:”In one sense, anything which isn’t water is cheating if you want to do a water fast, especially if you’re fasting for spiritual or emotional reasons.” I have since thought on this and I feel it is an important–in fact integral– component of a fast to be clear on our intentions. Your comment had me analyze what my intentions are with a fast. I was journaling about my fast experience in general and found this to be the plaguing question; the seed of the thing. What I had entered as intention of shifting HABITS, I discovered is ultimately indeed, a spiritual quest. Emotional matters sort of intertwine with that. That is, when we have our spiritual pillars firmly in place, it serves to take care of emotional aspects or conundrums. I think so, anyway.
            And so I may continue to bumble and compromise my way through water fasts. And I’m okay with that. Because I am learning what I need to know on this small journey. Which for me is that fasting provides the excuse to go inside. First two days I sauna-ed a lot. Took Epsom salt baths. Woke (automatically) as I am trained to, in the “ambrosial hours”(~Yogi Bhajan) between 3-5 AM to sit in that strange and silent blue pre-dawn light and be among only cats (naturally active at this time). Third day stressors and expectations of work resulted in my eating by evening to feel I could keep up. (I was getting spacey by late day and our administrative assistant became annoyed with me during a conversation. I still had a thesis reading to attend that night… I figured I have to be more on-the-ball.)
            So I begin again.
            What I learned is that I equate the SELF time we necessarily take in fasting as a sort of rebuilding–perhaps of spiritual fortitude. What the Buddha said:”Be your own lamp. Seek no other refuge but yourself. Let Truth be your light.” This requires devoted going inside.
            I hope this is not inappropriate for your blog. I just think the question you raised regarding intention is enormously relevant in anyone’s fasting experience, and thought I would share a bit of mine. Thank you.

  2. hello tallis… i just came across your really helpful site yesterday..i was searching water fasting and sinusitis..i think i read you have had sinusitis..there is not much about sinusitis and fasting that i have come across…i read about water fasting yesterday and started my fast immediately..3 day i think, maybe a bit longer if i dont feel too bad…… i plan to meditate a lot and chill out….i already have done loads of cleansing liver flushes and juicing for maybe 8 years..mostly vegan..so hopefully i will not have too bad a time headaches etc.. i am 67 years old..overcame chronic fatigue with those protocols.. but now.. following a huge shock i have had sinusitis for nearly 2 years..mucous goes onto my chest and i cough it up for an hour or so every night.. so i am slightly desperate.. so i would love you to tell me what chance do u think i may have of overcoming this barrage of mucous.. everything i eat makes it ….autoimmune i think.. ……with water fasting..thank you for creating this website.. it is just what i need..i am looking forward to reading about other peoples experiences…many thanks…sue..

    1. Hi Sue, thanks for sharing.

      Yes, I had pretty debilitating sinusitis every winter for a few years. Some days I’d hardly be able to get up. It cleared up through regular jala neti, meditation and – by far the most important in my mind – water fasting. For me, permanent healing came through a couple of 10 day fasts, in which I experienced a healing crisis. In other words, the symptoms returned for a few days, called forth by the fast, after which I never had a problem with sinusitis. That was 10 years ago.

      My case was pretty classic stuff. Whether or not yours will be, who knows… There are never any guarantees, but one thing is for sure: One of the problems water fasting addresses most effectively is swelling – that is, anything which ends in “itis”, like sinusitis. The same applies to autoimmune issues, and considering the way you’re reacting to food, this could well be the issue in your case.

      You’ll need to fast for more than 3-5 days to allow your body to begin deeper levels of healing, but it sounds like you you’re approaching fasting sensibly, not biting off more than you can chew on your first water fast. I hope it goes smoothly for you. I’d suggest doing as many 3 day fasts as necessary to feel comfortable with them emotionally. Maybe one is enough. Maybe you’ll need several more. Whenever you are comfortable with them, you’re ready to try either an extended healing fast or a couple of 7-10 day fasts. Again, there are never any guarantees, but I’d expect that a total duration of 14-21 days, either all in one go or split across two fasts, should bring relief. Hopefully we’re talking about a complete healing here, but at the very least, I’d expect significant improvement.

      Best of health, and let us know how you get on,
      Tallis

      1. thanks very much for your guidance tallis..yours is a very inspiring story..i wonder if i will be able to do 10 day fasts eventually..if thats what it takes to overcome this sinusitis it will be so totally worthwhile..i will see how i go with this one.. i doubt it will be my only one…. its great to have a bit of feedback..i will keep in touch and let you know how i get on..many thanks…sue..

        1. Of course you’ll be able to do 10 day fasts :-). It’s just a question of not forcing yourself into anything which feels scary or uncomfortable. Take your time working your way into longer fasts, but you’ll get there, I promise!

          1. well i only managed to do 18 hours.. i felt dreadful..but its a start.. next time a little but longer.. i dont think being generally unwell helps..i am definitely going to introduce fasting periods.. just when it feels right.. to go without food..for longer and longer periods..the more i read about it the more motivated and keen i get..many thanks for your help…sue..

            1. Yes, it IS a start, Sue, and you’re absolutely right about how feeling unwell can adversely affect your experience of fasting. Although, after many years, I’ve now reached the point of being able to fast the moment I feel illness in my body, without it really making the fast feel worse, this was DEFINITELY not the case in the beginning. So fair enough about how you felt too :-).
              18 hours is a typical period for when things first get difficult. So don’t aim for 3 days. Aim for 24 hours.
              You’ll get there. Just be a tortoise and not a hare!
              Tallis

  3. HI Tallis, this has been great to read about everyone’s experiences. I have just finished a 3 day fast. I was hoping to be longer but I found when I woke up this morning (4th day) I felt absolutely dreadful so I broke the fast. Day 1 was fine, day 2 I felt pretty weak, Day 3 I was expecting to feel better but I woke up feeling pretty weak and had to go to work. My kidneys started aching and I was going to break the fast then but I managed to bump into someone with experience in fasting and she talked me into hanging in there. By yesterday afternoon I was feeling great. Not weak at all, pretty energetic. Back to normal, but better I guess. But then this morning I could barely stand, was shaky and dizzy and had a headache. So I started drinking diluted orange juice to break the fast. Any thoughts,? If I had stuck it out through today do you think things would have improved?

    1. Hi Michelle,
      Congratulations on finishing your fast :-).
      Well, your experience more or less sums it up. Until you have a lot of experience and (1) you know how your own body reacts as well as (2) you’ve already done a lot of detoxing, it’s best not to have any expectations about how your fast is going to feel! You can have good days and bad days, good hours and bad hours, swinging wildly between each extreme.
      So I’d rather not venture to guess whether or not you’d have felt any better if you’d stuck through the day. What hit you this morning was almost certainly the first wave of serious detox after your body had switched to ketosis. Rather than feel bad about having stopped, it’s something to celebrate: your symptoms show some serious detox going on. Isn’t that great for your long-term health? Next time you’ll be able to pick up from where you left off and go even deeper.
      Tallis

      1. nice one. Thanks Tallis. It puts it into perspective.

  4. i have a little bit of experience with 18, 24, and 36 hour fasts. i spent a year or so doing them along with lifting weights. they always felt great, and i always loved the energy boosts during my fasts.
    however, i currently have 2 bulging lumbar discs and i have not worked out for almost a year due to the pain. my question is, will the body tissue repair benefits as well as the anti inflammatory benefits of am extended fast (3+ days) help heal a disc issue? or is that asking for too much magic?

    1. Hi Rick,
      Youch, spine issues 🙁
      Okay, the anti-inflammatory effects of the fast should certainly help the pain. However, some people find that their back can ache during a fast, due to detox, which might counterbalance the effect. (I do myself on occasion.)
      Longer fasts will also certainly help the body repair injured tissue. (Again, I speak from experience.) How much it can help, though, on a disc issue like this is another question, especially if the disc has slipped.
      Maybe it IS asking for too much magic, but it doesn’t hurt to try 🙂
      However, please be aware that the energy boost you feel during your one-day fasts is going to quickly evaporate once you run out of glycogen on the second day!
      Best wishes and good health to you,
      Tallis

      1. thank you, sir

  5. Hi – Thanks for your blog — it’s helpful. I’m doing my first 3-day water fast, and last night – pretty much all night and into this morning – I am struggling with nausea. Also my heart was just pounding all night, which made me feel weird. I don’t know if I can get through today – although I really want to since my 3 days will end tonight and I want to experience getting rid of toxins in my body. I have to do my daily tasks of picking up kids, etc, but the nausea is stopping me in my tracks. Will this pass soon? Will drinking more water make it better or worse?

    1. Hi Michele,
      Congratulations on doing your first 3-day water fast :-).
      The nausea and pounding heart are common symptoms, especially for those fasting alone, as well as for those working through the day as normal. In my experience, nausea rarely causes too much discomfort for those on retreat, because the environment positively impacts on their physical condition.
      Without having followed you through your fast, observing how you’ve reacted so far, I’m afraid it’s impossible for me to say whether drinking more water will make it better or worse. Sometimes, it’s the water itself which causes the nausea, depending on how much you’ve been drinking – so drinking more water will only make things worse! Sometimes, though, drinking more water can help to flush toxins out, thereby reducing the symptoms.
      Will it pass soon? Again, everyone is different, and without having had contact with you before now, it’s hard to know. One things is certain. Nausea DOES always eventually pass, and in your case the very worst scenario is that you’ll have to wait until tonight, when you break your fast.
      Hope this helps,
      Tallis

      1. Thanks for the response. I do feel better — I took a few charcoal capsules and that seemed to help. I figured if I didn’t find some reprieve, I would never do this again. And I want to want to do it again!

  6. Hello Tallis,
    Great article!
    I wish I read it 1 day sooner. I started a water fast 2 days ago after dinner around 7 pm. I knew it was going to be hard but by the third morning of my fast I felt just awful (flu like symptoms). My mistake was doing it on a work day…ugh. I was very nauseous & had a bad taste in my mouth the morning of my third day & so weak I could barely get dressed. Unfortunately I had to get up & moving & decided I was going to break my fast. I had a tomatoe soup, sipped on it slowly on my way to work. I drank water (not as much as I should’ve) but decided not to eat anything else & just had a cold pressed veggie juice by 4 pm & more water the rest of the day. I had waves of feeling a little better & then back to feeling awful. I didn’t know I was going to feel so awful, I thought I was going to be able to handle it. My question is, did I mess up the Ketosis process? Did I do some good by holding off to put soemthing in my stomach by the third morning? Just wondering if it worked? I know I will have to do it again.

    1. Hi May,

      Thanks for sharing. First of all, welcome to the club :-). I too felt pretty awful my first couple of fasts, as do many other people – especially those who fast alone or while working. Your nausea and weakness were a totally normal but unpleasant symptoms. In time you’ll outgrow them, until fasting actually becomes something to look forward to.

      Okay, did you mess things up?
      Well, I’d say that eating is eating and fasting is fasting, and it’s never a good idea to mix the two together for both physical and emotional reasons.
      I’d also say that working is working (doing) and resting is resting (being), and it’s not a good idea to mix up working and fasting until you’re totally used to being without food.

      My advice to you is to stick with shorter fasts, say 36 hours, until they no longer offer a challenge and your body actively wants to undertake a three-day fast. When that time comes, I’d suggest starting the fast on a Friday so that days 2 and 3 take place at the weekend, when you can rest at home. This should make a huge difference. Come Monday morning, you’ll find that your energy levels quickly revive, and (hopefully) it shouldn’t be much of a problem to get back to work.

      Glad you feel you’ll have to do it again 🙂
      Tallis

  7. Hello, Could someone advise me or help me get it? I’ve had about 15 attempts….
    I always end at a binge eating

    1. Hello,
      Binge eating after a fast ALWAYS has more to do with your emotional state than any physical need to gorge yourself. It’s the ego’s way of reasserting control after having given up food. I’d suggest trying shorter fasts until you feel totally comfortable with them, and then only gradually move on to longer fasts which feel easily attainable, without too much emotional effort to get through.

      Also, if you have any history of eating disorders, this will come into play when fasting. I’ve successfully guided anorexics and bulimics through fasts, but it’s something you should be EXTREMELY careful about if you fall into this category, because fasting can sometimes only make matters worse. If you have any eating disorder, do NOT try to fast alone.

  8. Good day Tallis, hope you are doing well.

    I’m starting my first three day fast today and I was wondering if one cup of coffee in the AM is ok. I’ve read different opinions on the matter. I admit I’m addicted to my coffee and know I will get a migraine at some point today if Io don ‘t have one. I think for my first fast I should have some coffee and once I reduce my intake to 1 coffee a day (the plan going forward) I can omit it from my fast.
    Your Thoughts

    Kind regards,
    David

    1. Wait!!!
      Don’t drink the coffee!

      It’s not a question of reading different “opinions” here, as you say. There are some very plain facts. If you drink a latte or any kind of coffee with milk, the calories are not going to help you get into ketosis. The milk, when it reaches your intestines, also becomes sticky – just like when you boil milk and it sticks to the saucepan – and mucks up your digestion. If you drink espresso, this is a little better, but the undiluted acids in the coffee are going to stimulate digestion just at a time when you want to be switching it off. These acids, especially once you’re no longer eating, will also provoke a mucous response from the lining of your intestines as a kind of self-defence. By stimulating your stomach acid (HCl), the coffee also acidises your entire body, blood and tissues, which gives your body extra work to do, when it should be devoting itself to detoxing instead.

      Are these enough reasons?

      I understand your point about caffeine addiction. Of course, some people might say you should go grin and bear the headaches, going cold turkey, but as far as I’m concerned you’re already hero enough to be doing your first three-day water fast :-). There’s no need to suffer.

      The solution? Green tea. If you’re a heavy coffee drinker, the idea of green tea may be quite nauseating. (For whatever reason, most coffee drinkers I know absolutely hate green tea…) But if it’s really just a physical addiction, green tea can easily supply you with enough caffeine to prevent headaches. I know there’s a myth that green tea hardly has any caffeine, but as someone who loves both coffee and tea (when I’m not fasting), I can tell you it does: especially if you use whole leaves and not tea bags. Get a good quality green tea and let it steep for 3-4 minutes at about 70-80 degrees Celsius (ie. not boiling). If possible find a tea consisting of only buds and young shoots, as these have the highest caffeine content. Use about a teaspoon per cup. This will provide plenty of caffeine, not unlike what you’d expect from a cup of coffee. This is stronger than most Westerners drink their green tea, and as a result may taste pretty bitter to you. Nevertheless, even if it does seem like “bitter medicine” to you, it’s going to do the job. Otherwise, the strongest of all green teas is Japanese Macha, although it would be a bit sacrilegious to use such a speciality merely to prevent headaches!

      The are several advantages of green tea. 1) No calories. 2) It’s not acidic like coffee or black tea, which is mildly acidic. 3) It’s packed with antioxidants which will help the detox process.

      Hope this helps,
      Tallis

      1. Hi Tallis,

        Great advice on the green tea of which I’m already an avid drinker. It will do the trick and keep my headaches at bay.

        Thanks again
        David

  9. Good day Tallis, hope you are doing well.

    Big thank you for simple, yet comprehensive, write-up about water fasting. Extremely helpful this is.

    Bumped into this blog while I was few weeks into 24Hr attempts. Started off with these fastings for a different purpose, but, reading through your blog, now believe that there are very many health benefits to pick on along the way. Hence ‘upgraded’ to 36hr. And now, after a total of about 5-6 24/36 Hr attempts, am in my 2nd day of the first 3 day challenge.
    Just like anyone else, got some queries and doubts. Am certain to get them answered here!

    Stats: age – 39, weight – 70Kgs, height – 173cms, medication – none.

    1. Doubt – 24/36 Hr Experience:
    – My first 24hr fast (about 5-6 weeks ago [Start – Sunday 8am with lemon/honey juice. End – Monday 8am with lemon/honey juice]) went well.
    – However, I felt a bit sick after the 2nd one (body ache, mild headache, dizzy/nausea feeling, bitter taste etc for about the whole work week starting Monday). But was determined to carry on with the 3rd one and, fortunately, felt ok by Sunday morning to start off.
    – Things were fine after the 3rd 24hr fasting. Hence I was inclined to believe that whatever happened after my 2nd fast was probably a coincidence. Maybe I was under the weather.
    – But I went through the same experience (body ache, mild headache, dizzy/nausea, bitter taste etc feeling for about the whole work week) after the 4th one. this one was 36hr (Start – Saturday 7pm post dinner. End – Monday 8am with lemon/honey juice).
    – 5th one was fine again.
    – Don’t remember if I attempted for another 36hr after the 5th one or straight jumped into this 3day thing as I write.
    Doubt: As you can notice, haven’t been through enough iterations to certify this unwellness as an alternate week occurrence. Quite possible this will never repeat. But, as I have now come across this blog, thought of clearing my doubt and seeking your expert advise/opinion on whether my experience is inline with others?

    2. Doubt – Supplements To Enhance Detox:
    – This video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gfmlKPOM9K0&t=907s) suggests that phase 2 of the detoxification process, that kicks in at 36hrs of water fasting, should be supplemented with antioxidants to catalyse breaking down of highly toxic metabolites into water soluble states.
    – Intake of green and orange vegetables (carrot, celery etc), at the onset of this phase 36hrs into fasting, is recommended hence.
    Doubt: Is this really needed? Eating anything would demean the fast is what I used to think.

    3. Query – Ketosis:
    – Reading through your summary, I understand that a minimum of 3 day fast is necessary for the body to unleash sources of energy other than glucose.
    Query: Assuming that the body does crack this code right after the first 3 day fast (or maybe after few), will it maintain this knowledge and trigger Ketosis, alongside utilizing the primary energy source, on a routine basis irrespective of whether one fasts or not? Or, despite the body now being knowledgeable about the process, a 3day+ fast is a must to trigger Ketosis?

    4. Query – Water Intake:
    – My water intake has been in the range of 3-5 liters during 36hr fast and it’s mostly in large proportions (750ml – 1500ml) at a time rather than thousand sips through the day. This has suited my body well so far, I guess.
    – Came across suggestions that heavy water intake tricks the body into believing that the stomach is full with food and digestion process should begin thereby calling upon energy resources. This defeats the overall purpose of conserving energy to fix other issues with the body.
    – I think about this more and more as, on regular days, my water intake is prior to consuming any solid food. With that said, the body must have gotten adjusted to triggering the digestion process, whenever it receives a heavy dose of water, assuming that food will follow.
    Query: Does large amount of water intake indeed trigger digestion process?

    5. Query – Expulsion Of Waste:
    – I am yet to experience the outcome of a long fast but short ones did produce some solid waste.
    Query: Do people experience elimination of defecation process altogether, assuming all the waste is expelled through skin/urine, as a result of longer fasts?

    Excuse me for the length of this post. Appreciate your patience!

    1. Hello,
      I’ll answer your long, detailed comment with some concise answers to your queries 🙂

      1. Every fast is different, especially during your first few fasts – even if it’s just a question of 24-36 hours. After years of fasting, things become smoother and more predictable, so long as you’re working with fasts of a length that you have experience with. Unpredictable things can still happen on longer fasts of about two weeks or more.

      2. and 3. Ketosis begins as soon as your body runs out of glycogen at about 24-36 hours. It continues to intensify so that from about the third day, it’s your main source of energy. In general, DO NOT take supplements, as this will only interfere with the transition into ketosis. The idea of antioxidants per se is relatively harmless, but if you take them in the form of vegetables which contain calories, this will only interfere with the transition into ketosis.

      4. Follow your thirst in terms of how much and when to drink. We all have natural biorhythms in everyday life, in terms of how and when we drink, and this will continue to an extent during the fast as well. Often, yes, people do drink out of an emotional need to substitute for food, but in my view this isn’t the end of the world if it helps you get through the fast for the first time. The only issue tends to be for people with chronic acid reflux. Too much water can aggravate this during the fast. 3-5 litres is quite a common amount to drink for the first few fasts, perhaps a little higher than average but nothing out of the usual. In the longer term, after more fasting experience, you’ll find you’re naturally inclined to drink less than half of this.

      5. Yes! There are always exceptions, and on prolonged healing fasts the detoxification process can cause a bowel movement if there is something to be expelled. I’ve heard reports, for instance, of cancer patients passing tumours during their fast. If you’re generally healthy, though, there may be an occasional (and probably unexpected) bowel movement, but only very rarely.

      Best wishes for your future in fasting!
      Tallis

      1. Thanks much for taking time to read through my long story and responding so soon Tallis!

        As I write, which proves that am alive still, am a few hours (4.5 hrs to be precise) over my first 3-day fast.

        As am not feeling too drained currently (though I continued through my regular exercise which includes 11 sun-salutations, few other yoga poses, stretching and about 8 mins of planks. Also added a ~35 min walk to/from office as its a working day today) I may continue for the 4th day most probably. But that’s if and only if I am able to keep up with my daily exercise as I am not prepared to break that routine yet.

        Am I going overboard? Hope not!

        1. I think that sounds very sensible to use your sun salutations as a measure for how much energy you have for fasting. When I hold fasting retreats, we always start the day with sun salutations :-). Also, walking is a good way to clear the blood of toxins, so don!t change anything and just keep going!

          1. That was encouraging, thanks Tallis.

            So, as I write this, am done with 168 hours of fasting today (local time 4pm, Friday)!
            – Planning to break ~12 hours from now to begin my routine of lemon/honey juice at 5am.
            – Will try to stay away from cooked food on Saturday and bite of some green/celery and orange/carrot and red/beat through the day.
            – Consume regular breakfast (muesli/oats/milk – 500gms) Sunday morning onward followed by regular vegetarian meal (brown rice and veggies) towards the evening.

            Hope that’s a good plan to wake things up?

            1. First of all, congratulations on finishing your fast. Glad it went so smoothly. Your general plan and sequence of returning to a regular diet sounds pretty sound. Just two thoughts: you may well find the muesli too heavy on Sunday morning, so go easy – especially in terms of the quantity! There’s nothing wrong per se with cooked food on Saturday, so long as you limit this to steamed veggies like carrots or perhaps a little broccoli. The main thing, I would say is to make Saturday a fruit/vegetable-only day, starting first with smoothies and then moving on to solids once only once you feel that you’re digesting the smoothies easily. This may take a little longer than you think, so you may have to push back the muesli breakfast until Monday. Everyone is different. Just try to follow what your body is telling you in terms of appetite, and avoid any temptation to gorge yourself to make up for the lack of food over the last week! Namaste

            2. Namaste Tallis!

              Here is how I tried to get back to non-fasting routine:

              Saturday:
              05:00 – Lemon Honey Juice
              10:00 – 2 x Angelino Plums
              16:30 – Greek Style Yogurt (30gms)
              20:00 – Lemon Juice (probably had some sugar in it – this one was in a restaurant)

              Sunday:
              07:30 – Lemon Honey Juice
              11:30 – 2 x Angelino Plums
              13:45 – Chyawanprash (1 tea spoon)
              16:30 – Lettuce (70gms)
              20:00 – Greek Style Yogurt (200gms)

              Monday:
              05:15 – Lemon Honey Juice
              12:30 – 3 x Angelino Plums
              14:00 – Chyawanprash (1 tea spoon)
              16:00 – Muesli + Oats + Milk (300gms)
              19:45 – Smoothie (bottled [200ml] – purchased this with an intention to consume on day 1. But changed my mind and stuck to more natural stuff. Unfortunately, neither did I have the equipment to prepare one nor did I find anyone selling fresh smoothie near my place)

              Tuesday: Almost similar to Monday. Didn’t keep track.

              Wednesday: All same until Muesli [increased to 500gms]. Had a heavy dinner (including white rice) at an year end treat that I had to host 🙁

              Thursday [today] – All same until Muesli.
              My bowel movement has seemingly returned to normal. Was a bit worried about yesterday’s rhetoric at the get together!

              Here is a quick summary of my 7 day water fasting experience:
              – No day was better or worse than the other within this 7 day span
              – The only thing that seemed to be a mammoth task was the exercise routine (11 sun-salutations, few other yoga poses, stretching and about 8 mins of planks) and got a bit tougher day by day.
              – Experienced bowel movements for about 5 of 7 days (1,3,4,5,6). Am still wondering where was the body producing solid waste, though very little, from.
              – About 8Kgs lost (I never intended to do this for a weight loss neither was I inclined to measure post fast. But came across a scale when I walked into the apartment gym, that I shifted in recently, for the first time and couldn’t resist weighing. So much weight loss shocked me for sure. Guess am underweight now @62kgs).
              – Weight loss was quite visible. Don’t fit into my trousers anymore and many commented too, that’s how I know.
              – Energy levels before/after: Am not too sure if I am able to notice any difference.

              Assuming that my body is now knowledgeable about Ketosis, am planning to continue with my 36hr weekly fast and maintain a quarterly frequency for 72hr ones. 7 day ones will be less frequent for sure unless I aspire becoming ‘invisible man’ 🙂

  10. Well, I finally finished 10 days, . I had a nice green smoothie and a small salad, with a glass of water. Tonight if I’m hungry I will do a fruit smoothie small, followed by water. Great that I’m done, . My expiercence, very clam through the fast, no real anxiety. Hunger day 3 and 7 and 10 today 3/4 through. My soarness in the leg reduced approx 25 percent. I have energy. I’m going to try another one of these 3 to 10 day fasted in feb or March next year. Thanks for the help, support, advice and motivation. Thanks allot

    1. Congratulations on finishing your fast, and I’m glad you’re breaking it wisely with gentle smoothies and no over-eating :-).

      That’s great you’ve been able to reduce the soreness in your leg. The amount of improvement you mention sounds about right to me. For a serious or long-standing injury, you’d definitely need more time. However, you’ve already made an improvement, and you could expect the healing to continue where it left off if you try another fast of similar length in the future. The timing you suggest of early next year sounds completely sensible to me.

      Just one word of warning. In the regeneration period after a fast, the body’s priority is to rebuild the inner organs first, moving on to outer muscles – such as those in your leg – only later. So please be careful not to overdo anything physically over the next week or two, just to minimise any risk of further injury to your leg during this time. There’s probably absolutely no need to worry, but better to be safe than sorry :-).

      Glad to have been able to give you a little support and inspiration.
      All the best for a full recovery in the future,
      Tallis

  11. Hi I was wondering, if I try to do 12day, as tomorrow is day 10. Are there any signifigant benefits for additional 2 days, or is 10 suffice to. My leg soarness is diminishing a little, I’m nit hungry, just wondering if 11 and 12 2 extra days have any signifigant benefits from your experience. I’m good with the hunger, my stress level is very low, almost no anxiety at all through the day. If you have any thoughts on 2 days let me know. Thanks

  12. Hi there, I’m completely fascinated with this ketosis thing and want a better healthy lifestyle which lead me to reading this 3 day fasting. I’ll be having my wisdom teeth extraction so thought it’d be convenient to start my 3 day fast once I have them removed. What are your thoughts on that considering I haven’t really practiced fasting before. I think I can do it especially that I need to lose some pounds for my vacation on late December. Great read, thank you for your knowledge and looking forward to hearing back from you.

    1. Hi there,
      Wow, it sounds like your a real trooper to think of having your wisdom teeth extracted and then fasting right afterwards. Isn’t it just a little bit over the top?… 🙂

      If I were you, I’d wait for a full recovery after the dental surgery, especially if you’re new to fasting. Wisdom teeth, in particular, have deep roots both physically and emotionally, and it may be just a little bit too much of a shock to the system to fast as well. I think I understand your logic, though: to use the healing power of the fast to accelerate the process after surgery. If you were an old hand at fasting I’d say go for it – in fact, it might be a good idea to start the fast before surgery and then let it continue afterwards.

      You still have plenty of time before your holiday to try out a 3-day fast.
      Be kind to yourself in the meantime, and good luck at the dentist!
      Tallis

Leave a Reply

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