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.

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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

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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.

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

  1. Hi Tallis.
    Prob a silly question.
    Re medication.
    I take blood pressure tablets as well as heartburn tablets .
    Nothing drastic but i assume i can continue taking them during the fast.
    What about cod liver oil tablets.

    Thanks again
    William

    1. Yes, you can continue to take them!
      But in the long run, you can use water fasting to heal both chronically high blood pressure as well as acid.
      When you feel ready, this would be an even better solution!
      Tallis

  2. This article and the posts that follow are excellent. Thank you!

  3. Hey,
    I’m the local milk man out here in lovely Lawrence, Ks. In reading a lot of comments, I see you saying a lot about not lifting weights or getting overly zealous about exercise while fasting. My crates are about 44 lbs and I’m usually swinging 2 at a time. (88lbs) is this weight chill since it is apart of my normal routine/day to day life?

    1. Hi Andrew,

      Whether working out or lifting milk crates 🙂 while fasting is a good idea or not all boils down to (1) the length of the fast and (2) how vigorous the exercise is. If you’re fasting for 24-36 hours, exercise is fine, but after your glycogen stores are depleted it’s really easy to end up burning a lot of protein, which leads to sore muscles. This holds true especially regarding vigorous aerobic exercise.

      If you’re already adapted to lifting crates and they don’t feel too heavy in everyday life, then I suspect you’ll feel fine. There are just a couple of potential caveats to this. (1) If this is your first three-day fast, then you might feel pretty low on energy on Days 2 and 3. If this is the case, the crates may seem extra heavy on those days, which would be a sign that it’s not so good to be swinging them around with too much zest. (2) If you’re thinking about a fast longer than 3 days, then you’ll probably find that you gradually feel progressively weaker as the fast progresses. Again, if this reaches the point that the crates feel too heavy, then swinging them around probably isn’t ideal.

      As long as you’re not actually working up a sweat or huffing and puffing with a pounding heartbeat, then the worst you’ll experience is probably just a few sore muscles. It’s nothing to worry about.

      Enjoy your fast. And enjoy your rounds in lovely Lawrence KS!
      Tallis

  4. Hi Tallis!

    Thanks so much for the info. Will drinking water with epsom salt prevent me from gaining the full benefits of this fast? Please advise.

    1. Hi KriT,
      In the end, Epsom salts are, as the name suggests, salts :-), which means that they don’t contain calories. They won’t interfere with ketosis, if that’s what you mean by gaining the fully benefits of the fast. My question, though, is: why would you want to take them at all while fasting? Ideally, a fast is a time to switch off completely, a time to stop putting anything extra INTO your body so you can allow it to start getting toxins OUT OF of your body.
      Hope this helps,
      Tallis

      1. Awesome! Thank you. That was my cousin asking the question so I’ll relay that back to her. Appreciate your time!

      2. Oh also is brushing your teeth run the risk of not getting the full benefits?

        1. No worries, brush your teeth to your heart’s content 🙂

  5. Hi Tallis
    Great read.
    I am about to start a 3 day water fast for first time.
    I have done 1 day in the past.
    Can i ask please
    During 3 day fast can i squeeze half a lemon in my warm water each morning and drink green tea during the day
    Or do you advise just water for the 3 days.
    Thank you

    1. Hi William,
      You don’t ‘need’ either lemon or green tea, but neither is going to interfere with the fasting process and ketosis. If this is your first three day adventure, then you want to maximise your chances of it succeeding, as well as feeling good about it. If you have any doubts then I’d say go ahead and use lemon and green tea. It’s certainly not going to kill you :-). Pure water can easily wait until next time!

      The main thing is that you’re doing this – and that’s great!
      All the best for your fast,
      Tallis

      1. William Russell Avatar

        Thanks Tallis
        I will go with pure water !

    2. Hi. Are you still allowed to work out/exercise during the 3 day fasting?

      1. Hi,
        GENTLE exercise is fine, but (1) don’t push beyond the anaerobic threshold (where you begin to feel out of breath) and (2) don’t work with too much muscle resistance (isometric exercise) or too heavy weights (isotonic). Otherwise you run the risk of damaging your muscles. It’s not like you’ll cause irreparable injury :-), but you won’t gain anything either. Also, think of fasting as a time to be turning inward rather than outward in terms of what you’re doing (or not doing).
        Sorry to be so brief here, but I’m busy working on a “Complete 3-day Fasting Plan” to put up on the website, in which any and all sorts of questions such as these will be answered. Should be ready in a couple of weeks.
        All the best,
        Tallis

  6. Hello Tallis,
    What a wonderful and informative read. I originally started my 3 day fast for spiritual purposes however, after doing some research, I fell down a rabbit hole. I definitely think it’s something that I will implement quite often for health benefits.
    I am on my 3rd and final day and honestly, it has been a breeze. When I feel hunger calling, I just tell it to be quiet. However, I am experiencing a strange pain under my right rib cage on the front side of my body that only happens in the late evening. It is sore to the touch. I wanted to know is that normal?
    I also woke up on my third day sweating almost like a sick/flu sweat. I wanted to know is this normal as well?

    Thanks again!!

    1. Hi Rue,
      Thanks for writing. Glad it’s been so easy for you. As you’ve probably noticed from the wide range of people commenting on this webpage, there’s also a huge range of different personal experiences. I suspect that the fact the reason it’s been so easy for you reflects the spiritual nature of your what you’re doing.

      As far as the symptoms are concerned, both are totally normal. I used to get that pain under the right rib cage too. I’m not sure whether it’s the empty digestive system rearranging the way your organs hang inside you, possibly pulling on the diaphragm as a result, or whether it has something to do with the liver working overtime to detox. In any case, it would likely pass in a few days if you were to continue your fast. Maybe next time :-). You hit the nail on the head, connecting the sweating with a kind of sick/flu sweat. Both reflect the body trying to detox. The fact that it happened as soon as the beginning of the third day makes me suspect you’ve already gone well into ketosis, which can certainly happen this soon (especially with women).

      Congratulations on finishing your first three-day water fast,
      Tallis

  7. Hi Tallis,

    I like the way you’ve broken down the different levels of fasting in your articles, very informative. But I’m wondering, how long does it take to get to the healing/repair stage?

    I’ve done several 36 hour fasts and a 48 hour fast. I was honestly hoping I might have tapped into it a little by now but from what I’m reading above I’m guessing I haven’t.

    Thanks, Adam.

    1. Hi Adam,
      No worries, you already start healing within the 36-hour and 48-hour fasts you describe. It’s just a question of what kind of healing you’re experiencing. Fundamentally, there are two types:
      1. Cleansing and healing caused by giving your digestive system a rest. The extra energy of not digesting – about 20-30% of your total daily energy needs – goes into this, and so it’s not something to underestimate. The detox here is already evident through “morning breath”, which is likely to continue through the rest of a one-day fast. Think of it like this: bad breath = cleansing and healing!
      2. A deeper level of healing is caused by ketosis, as toxins are drawn out from your fat cells. This does take a while to fully establish (about three days on average), but you’ll already be dipping into the first stages of ketosis after 24-36 hours of fasting.
      All the best,
      Tallis

      1. Hi Tallis, thanks for the advice!

        One more question, I’ve heard that tea and coffee (without milk and sugar) is alright to consume during a fast and won’t interrupt the process, what are your thoughts on this?

        Thanks again, Adam.

        1. Well, it depends what you mean by “won’t interrupt the process”… Given that tea and coffee hardly contain any calories, they won’t interrupt ketosis. However, since coffee is highly acid-forming in the gut (and black tea is too, to a lesser extent), your digestive system has to act in order to neutralise this. This means you’re not switching off your digestion to the fullest extent possible, which, by extension, means you’re not going to reach the maximum degree of detox and healing. If you’re hooked on caffeine and don’t want to address the addiction, then green tea is the best alternative during a fast, because it’s slightly alkaline and contains lots of antioxidants.
          Hope this helps,
          Tallis

          1. Exactly what I’m after, thanks!

  8. Hi, I’m almost halfway through the 3 rd day, feel great, in the morning had a little low energy, but it subsided. I will try a short walk today to make the time pass. This is my 6 th water fast, it seems to get much easier with time. Usually day 3 is hard for me with hunger, but this time I have not had any hunger issues at all. I will try to extend this fat to day 4 and or 5 . See how I feel. Hope all is well. I believe a three day fast is probably beneficial on a monthly basis. Your thoughts

    1. Glad each fast is getting easier for you – that’s exactly how it should be! It’s also good that you’re going to extend the fast based on how you feel, rather than setting an arbitrary deadline which you want to cling to at all costs. This means that you’re being sensitive and responding to your body’s messages rather than ignoring them through sheer strength of willpower.

      I agree: a three-day fast is beneficial on a monthly basis, but it’s also beneficial on any other basis too :-), so long as you’re fasting as a result of your body’s inner calling and not just following the dates on your calendar!

    2. Thanks for the advice, feel really great at the end of day three, so I will definitely go to 4, I just seem to feel better overall after these fasts, body does get a chance to heal mind becomes clearer. I walked 2 miles today and at this point the last. 2 hours to goes no hunger, from prior fasts the 4 and 5 days seem to go fast for me . No hunger and full of energy. I’ll keep you posted. Thanks as always good to hear from someone, and maybe my experience could give some of your readers encouragement to stick out the whole 3 days, as they do get easier with time

  9. hi, today I started my 1st day of water fasting I will try to do 4 or 5 days this time. I feel fine its going well so far. I will keep you posted.

  10. Hello Tallis,
    First of all, thaks for sharing your experiences!
    I started eating rawvegan on January 3rd as preparation for a 3 day water fast, on January 11th I started drinking just warm water…Right now (Jan 14th) I’m on the last hours of my fast but…my mouth has an awful taste since the 10th! on my first day of water fast I throw up bile :S now I feel better but the taste in my mouth is not dissapearing, should I continue my fast longer? should I wait until that taste dissapears or when I start feeling better?
    Im confused, I want to clean my body and I thought 3 day water fasting was enough for now 🙁 I would hate thinking that my effort is interrupted if I decide to end my fast now :(((
    send advice plis.
    Thanks a lot

    1. Hi Tammi,
      Sounds like things are going really well :-). The awful taste in your mouth is almost certainly the result of detox – and that’s good! As much as the taste may be unpleasant, it means that your body is benefiting from your fast. It’s hard to say any more than this without knowing what kind of awful taste you’re experiencing, as different tastes can reflect different processes taking place.

      It doesn’t surprise me that you started to taste this before the actual beginning of the fast, because a raw vegan diet can itself be very cleansing. The fact that you threw up bile on the first day of the water fast also suggests that you had already entered a good degree of detox. Such an immediate, strong reaction to the fast also suggests that there’s a lot of “stuff” which needs to come out.

      A three-day water fast is never going to be enough to tackle a life-long accumulation of toxins. For that, you’d need to be thinking about 7-10 day fasts once or twice a year for several years. So, without knowing any more about your specific background and the specific taste in your mouth, my advice to you is this: if you feel comfortable and if you have the time/energy to be able to continue your fast, then do! I don’t necessarily mean that you continue your fast until the taste goes away. Potentially, this could last for weeks. If you do feel like doing a 20-30 day fast – and it could certainly take this long – then fine! But this feels way too daunting for most people. Also, most of us have too many family and work commitments to jump into something this radical. If so, I’d suggest fasting for about a week this time, and then continue each year or so with another 7-10 day fast. If you live a healthy lifestyle in the meantime, you’ll be able to go into deeper levels of detox with each successive fast.

      Hope this helps,
      Tallis

  11. hi Tallis,

    thank you so much for your posts , i’ve been reading it for a while now but only now i’m doing my first 3 day water fast. I’ve been doing interminent fasting since april, twice a week and i’ve fasted the 24h and then 36h these last couple of months. As a virgo i might be overdoing when it comes to reading, so i’m confusing myself so here i am asking for advice.

    My reasons for fasting are a bit atypical , i was born in mozambique and , i’ve experienced hunger in the first 3 years of my life , my mother went through the same but for about 8 years. So food was used as confort after my teens , or at least i only started to notice it then. So after a lot of reading i decided to try a intermittent fasting routine and waim for a longer fast during the solstices, to help me overcome trauma related to food and so far it has been an amazing ride. So the 3 days fast started as a tea and water fast , evolved to choose to sip half a cup of bone broth (read yet another blog) , tea was hibiscus and horsetail, then through the day went on just warm water as the tea wasn’t sitting right, then i tried the bone broth and i only sipped about two gulps and the rest stayed. this morning i tried the warm water with bentonite clay (yet another blog) and it did not sit well either. Conclusion , my body is basically beging for a water only fast . So here i am … i know that reading too much isn’t helpfull , but a part of it for me. To reintroduce food i will have the oj that you recomend , and i wanted to double check, can i add easy digestion veggies raw or setemead or really depends on what the body’s asking? relearning how to listen to my body it has been very rewarding, but also overwelming too. Thank you for reading and for this amazing blog. Have a magical dayxxxxx Ju

    1. Hi Ju,
      Yes, easy-to-digest veggies are fine. I’d recommend steamed carrots or something else which will be easy on your digestion. Simple salads can also work weĺl. The fact that your body has already guided you to water suggests to me that you can probably trust yourself to follow whatever feels right at the end of the fast, so long as it doesn’t contradict what you know to be good for you. I often find that my body guides me to different foods at the end of each fast: sometimes salads, sometimes fruits, sometimes foods higher in protein, sometimes foods higher in water content (especially after a dry fast). Part of gaining experience in fasting includes the sensitivity to follow your body’s own messages rather than “rules” written by others.
      Trust your body and trust yourself ☺,
      Tallis

      1. hi Tallis,

        thank you so much for your kind words, last twelve hours and im feeling ok, the 3 days will come to an end at 11 pm, let see how i feel breaking the fast at night with just something super light or if i prefer to wait for the morning. This body is surprising me so much and slowly feeling that he is finally becoming happy that im listening its a relief. went a bit kamicase with a fasting solution to heal traumas without overthinking it and it was the solution for me. i’ve found that if i tell myself that i will fast for x amount of hours or days i can stick to it , the problem is when i decide to break the fast , that little voice in my head comes out telling to eat eat eat and then the frenzy beggins, but then the body rejects , i should loosen up a bit probably and allow myself to listen to the body instead of letting the mind dictate.
        thank you again, you are an amazing soul helping people to heal.

  12. Tallis – thank you so much for your detailed and honest information. I completed my first 3 day water fast, only adding some lemon on the first day. I think I was wanting some variety because for the rest of the fast I was able to stick with only water. My question is around the back and leg aches – I am on my 2nd day after the break and although it is better, the aching was so bad during the fast and right after that I was unable to sleep. My weakness then was high enough that I could not have worked. Very glad I cleared my calendar beforehand. Wondering if this will significantly lesson with future fastings? Or if I will need to progress to a longer and therefore higher healing fast?

    I also wanted to mention that the break from a busy schedule and amount of time I was able to devote to truly resting and restoring both mind and body was an amazing surprise. I feel this really gave me a renewed appreciation for slowing down and I plan to continue my fasting practice knowing I can return to this calm space.

    Lastly, I wanted to mention that I personally enjoyed essential oils in a diffuser during the fast as the aromas felt very soothing. I used a mix of peppermint and pine.

    Thank you again – your blog offers a true intention of offering help. Blessings. Shelby

    1. Hi Shelby,
      Congratulations on finishing your fast :-).
      The aching is very common and will definitely begin to subside in future fasts, just as the weakness you felt will do the same, until eventually it becomes a joy to fast. I experienced similar aching in a recent dry fast (described here), which I’m sure was due to higher than usual cleansing.
      Glad the essential oils helped. For some people any strong smell can be repugnant while fasting – which only proves the fact that everyone is different, and we all need to find what works best for us!
      Tallis

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