Why Intermittent Fasting Works for respiratory, heart and stomach disorders

Most who have tried intermittent fasting and done it right, swear by its benefits.
I did it for almost 3 months, a few years back and landed up with deficiencies. You can read all about that here.
One lives and learns and since then, I have learned to do intermittent fasting right.

To a naturopath, where intermittent fasting scores most is in activating the body’s self- healing mechanism: an empty stomach. When the stomach is kept completely empty for a period regularly, it gets a chance to contract to its maximum. And it is in this contraction (not expansion) that it renews its elasticity, thereby renewing and healing itself.

Whom does it benefit the most: those with respiratory, heart and stomach disorders.

At a very physiological levels, organs that are close together vibe together. The same applies to diseases. Issues with the stomach will affect the liver, pancreas, heart and lungs.So, if the stomach gets chronically bad: indigestions, gas, ulcers, etc, over a long period, it is not surprising then to find issues in lungs, heart liver and heart.

 

Recognising diseases of the stomach

  • At the very core of all stomach diseases lies indigestion. Why it happens can be varied but if you don’t feel hungry, feel heavy or tired after eating, get bloated or gassy post meals, get headaches, then these are all signs of a bad stomach.
  • Constant burping and belching are signs that the liver is also affected along with the stomach
  • Stomach ulcers are another disease that can plague the stomach.
  • A bad stomach that produces too much gas can get very troublesome for those with heart conditions.
  • Undigested food that sits in stomach, esp at night produces both acidity and mucous. This is the reason why so many with respiratory weakness & allergies struggle more at night and early morning than during the day. Sleep does not aid digestion and hence sleeping after eating a heavy meal is the worst thing someone with a heart or respiratory condition can do.

Treating the stomach: keeping it empty

Other than in the case of stomach ulcers and anemia, keeping the stomach empty for long periods of time, as a habit is what cures diseases of the stomach.

This is where the 12-14-16 hr intermittent fasting, when done right, works.  But there are other ways in which the stomach can be kept empty too. When I say ‘empty’, I mean totally empty sans drinks too. Only water is okay.

  • A gap of 5-6 hrs between meals was once a common practice but somewhere along the way got replaced by constant small meals. Small meals might keep the stomach lighter but don’t keep it empty to provide true healing.
  • Having only two meals a day, separated by 7-9 hrs gap is the other way that the stomach can be kept empty.
  • Keeping the stomach empty at night is sometimes the easiest. If you finish your last meal by 7-7:7:30 pm and then don’t eat till next day morning, you are automatically in the ‘intermittent fasting’ schedule. Depending on what the need is the duration of fast can be 12-14-1-18 hrs. What is important in this routine is the first thing that is consumed after the fast:
    • A fruit breakfast or vegetable/fruit juice is most recommended in treating issues of the stomach
    • If coffee or tea are consumed as the first intake, then be rest assured the stomach is being damaged. Sadly, people feel great after taking these two stimulants on an empty stomach and that is precisely because they are stimulants, not nutrition.

 

Foods that keep the stomach healthy

Oranges, apples, carrots, tomatoes and papaya are especially good in keeping the stomach healthy.
If you have diagnosed stomach disease, then best to consume these under a trained naturopath. But otherwise, one can use them as preventive medicine by including them in your daily diet.

  • Carrots: best consumed as early morning juice or in salad form
  • Papaya: best at breakfast, esp. if you are on any schedule of intermittent fasting
  • Oranges: best in juice form or large quantity of fruit either in the morning or around late noon: 3-5 pm. Again, breaking your intermittent fast with them each day is very helpful.
  • Tomatoes: Best as an added ingredient to a juice or as salad.
    If you have a stomach that does not digest protein too well (you feel heavy, or too full or constipated or gassy after protein intake), then eating apples and papaya regularly will help.

 

Foods that damage the stomach

  • Alcohol of any variety is the most harmful for anyone with stomach issues mainly because it can get absorbed straight from the stomach lining without needing to go to the intestine.
  • Tea is alcohol second cousin here, followed by coffee. Especially for those with anemia, B-complex deficiencies, tea on an empty stomach is a killer. If one must drink, make sure it has milk and is had after some substantial solid product has been consumed first. One thing to remember while dealing with the stomach is that what goes in first affects lining most. Have something with a little bit of fat: butter/ghee or fibre rich biscuit/roti first and then consume some tea.
    (I have all these memories of young Commissioned officers in the Army gorging on slices of butter before a regimental party where serious alcohol drinking was the norm)
  • Coffee surprising is the least harmful of the three, except for those with stomach ulcers. Here, drinking coffee on an empty stomach or black coffee is a killer.
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