Blackmetalbunny wrote:Ultimately it depends on what you are seeking to achieve with intermittent fasting. From what I've seen, intermittent fasting seems to be primarily practiced by people with a physique objective in mind.Maxrip13 wrote:I want to look at intermittent fasting for convenience. I have read the warrior diet years ago and it makes sense, but I was wondering what peoples experience was on it while training TB barbell style with heavy conditioning and also some bjj or similar at the same time.
The supposed magic is that intermittent fasting can help you lose weight easily. I've personally experienced that - it's so easy to maintain a hypocaloric diet with IF, however; the flip side is that unless your protein numbers are dialed in well, you can expect lean mass loss too. Then again; once your protein numbers are dialed in, expect it to be harder to add mass unless you're eating protein 6 or 7 times in that 8 hour window. However; if your objectives are to control your total daily caloric intake, what's the point then?
Ultimately; IF is a lifestyle. It's not easy to transition between a IF and regular eating hours, because your body is receiving a shock each time you transition off or on it. On my days transitioning to regular eating hours, I feel so bloated after a light breakfast because I'm not accustomed to. On the flip side, transitioning to IF is a bit of a fight for the first week until you're well into the groove. Nonetheless; I find IF good for weight reduction, but less useful if you want to add mass.
I've found a bit of an in-between, doing 16-18 hour fasts about 3-4 times a week but allowing myself to eat breakfast if I want at least 2 times a week. It's not true intermittent fasting as such, and I'm certain it doesn't confer the significant health benefits, but sometimes; it's just not always so easy, especially when your dinner last night wasn't as filling (in my case; this means hitting my protein numbers for the day, and protein numbers for that meal).
Cheers for the response. I have experimented with it in the past and had mixed results in performance. I followed the warrior diet.
I am mostly looking into it for performance and ease of lifestyle. I want to know that I won't crash if I miss a couple meals at work before getting home. I may just start using snack type foods such as nuts and the like and save my main meals for before and straight after work.
Joys of being a tactical athlete means nutrition can't always be the best I guess.