Intermittent Fasting - How it Affects Sleep

11 months ago
82

Check out my Substack to get my free weekly newsletter covering 5 interesting points from the week!
▲SUBSTACK: https://josepheverettwil.substack.com/
▲DISCORD: Join the $5 tier on my Patreon to join the WIL discord! - https://www.patreon.com/WILearned
▲Twitter: https://twitter.com/JEverettLearned
▲IG: https://www.instagram.com/josepheverett.wil/
For business inquiries: Joseph.Everett.Wil@gmail.com

I get questions every now and then about intermittent fasting affecting people's sleep, and most people after just a few days find that their sleep is actually better. If you've been doing intermittent fasting for more than a week and are still having trouble with sleep, you should try shifting your eating window to earlier in the day (why is partly explained near the end of this video). However, (this may be unfortunate news...) it seems that coffee starts this eating window.

As Dr. Rhonda Patrick says on the Joe Rogan show, caffeine is a xenobiotic, it has to be metabolized. The first thing non-water thing you put into your body is going to start all these different clocks that affect metabolism, so after the clock starts, you want to consume everything in at least a 12 hour time frame (& earlier in the day) to reap the benefits of more optimized metabolism.

Here is another check out this excellent interview with Dr. Satchin Panda and Dr. Rhonda Patrick: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-R-eqJDQ2nU&t=0s
discussing the benefits of time restricted feeding.

You can find a pdf of the transcript with links to the papers referenced here: https://www.patreon.com/posts/intremi...

Featured Music:
Broke for Free’s ”Solitude”

Loading comments...