>>Was this a voluntary seven-day fast, or were you forced into it by your situation?<<<br><br>It was entirely voluntary. It was also a long time ago- I had worked up to it by fasting for several shorter periods, in order to know what to expect. I have also, for instance, lived for 5 days on spirulina (farmed blue-green algae, often thought to be close to a perfect food based on it’s composition) tablets alone. I found it easier to fast. After 5 days I couldn’t face the smell of the tablets, much less swallow them. I was hoping they’d be a long-shelf-life backpacking/survival food. The longest I’ve fasted in recent years is 3 and a half days- but now you guys have got me thinking about it again…<br><br>The body does some interesting things when fasting, including getting rid of some noxious stuff, about which I can only say that you’ll be glad that it’s not in you anymore- that takes more than 3 days. I’m told that when it switches to internal resources it also scavenges damaged and diseased cells first, which is one of the things that leads some researchers to think that it might actually be a necessary cycle for long term health. The only negative effect I noticed from seven days was that my throat seemed to constrict a bit, and it was a bit difficult to swallow my first solid meal after it was over. By the second one, it was not a problem. Hunger was never a problem after the third day, often not after the second- unless I smelled food. Talk about sharpened senses!<br><br>>>I'd fall over, well, probably not dead, but in a dead-faint, anyway. When I fast for eight hours before a blood test, I get very weak. I'm built for three square meals a day. <<<br><br>I’m not a doctor, and wouldn’t presume to give advice, but I’ve found that people who report such things tend to fall in to two categories- those brainwashed all their lives to believe that they must be weak if they haven’t eaten, and those who’s diet is high in carbohydrates and sugars and who don’t get aerobic exercise much. For the first group, there’s not much to be done but reflect on the fact that virtually all of your ancestors went hungry on a regular basis- it’s natural, not something to be in a panic about. The second group seems to have trouble physically converting to burning their own fat for energy when their blood sugar is exhausted, because the enzymes in their bodies are adjusted to processing sugars, not fats. That group can work on it by running long slow distances and/or reducing sugar and carb intake- this exhausts blood sugar so the body gets used to processing fats, internal or external, again. That’s not a bad thing to happen once in awhile. <br><br>Believe me, I eat as much bad stuff as most people, but so much of what we eat, me included, is mostly sugar and wheat. Bread is not a natural food- you dry grass seed, grind it into a fine powder, make that into a paste, let the paste bubble and ferment, and put the resulting goop in a fire to kill it. This only seems reasonable because we’ve been doing it for thousands of years- but that’s not long enough for evolution to adjust. Your hunter-gatherer ancestors never ate anything like that. Someone will probably denounce all this as heresy- so be it. Your mileage may vary.<br><br>Quick story- way back when I was doing this sort of thing regularly, I happened to be working with a Vietnamese gentleman and some young guys in a religion famous for it’s activities in airports, and we all talked about fasting. The Vietnamese gentleman had been a jet pilot for the French, the South Vietnamese, and the Americans in the war there. The other guys and I exchanged fasting notes, and one of them asked the Vietnamese gentleman if he had ever fasted, and for how long. He said he wasn’t sure, that he had gone for a month without real food once, but “in the jungle, there’s a lot of green stuff in the water- I don’t know if that counts”.<br><br>You’re a lot tougher than you think you are.<br><br><br>