I have a question for you, Timar.
You are notorious in this little community for what I'd describe as your "pro calorie" stance.
(Maybe I'm imagining things... I have a recollection of you advocating consumption of hamburgers/hotdogs at social gatherings so as to avoid feelings of 'social exclusion').
Therefore, I'm interested to hear your thoughts on the 'mini-fast' aspects of this anti-dementia protocol.
This is becoming a running gag, right?
IIRC, I paraphrased a passage of Andrew Weil's book Eating Well for Optimum Health. He gave that example of a special occasion of feasting to counter a onesided perspective on eating, constricted to the biochemistry of nutrition and ignoring its various psychological and cultural aspects. I very much agree with his holistic approach. The antitheses of feasting and fasting a deeply rooted in human psyche and culture. It is perfectly fine and healthy to participate in an occasional feast, even if that involves eating unhealthy food.
In Germany it is a custom to eat jam-filled doughnuts on New Year's Eve. One of the doughnuts is traditionally filled with mustard instead of jam and the one who catches it is said to have a lucky new year. What do you think would be more supportive to your health, participating in the ritual by eating an odd doughnut or isolating yourself, being affraid of eating junk-food? I firmly believe that following an overly rigid diet often causes more harm than benefit, because the stress resulting from social isolation is actually worse than the harm of occasionally eating some junk. Moreover, demonization and obsession are two sides of the same psychological coin. If you want to make sure that your childred become addicted to sweets - tell them they are the Devil's poo and forbid them to have any sweets, ever. Allow them, however, to have some on occasion while teaching them how to eat a healthy and delicious diet and they likely will resist their addictive potential. The same is true for adults. Most people I talk to, who are overweight and crave junk-food, skip actually back and forth between indulgance and prohibition. The most effective way to break this viscious cycle of negative self-affirmation is a simple linguistic reprogramming, to change the "I must not eat that" to "I may eat it if I really want to, but I don't need it right now". When there is no negative feeling of guilt, there is no need to compensate it with further indulgance.
Anyway, the problem is not feasting, not even that it involves gorging on unhealthy food, but that in that all-American consumerist culture, feasting has become the default state. In a culture of collective ADHD and obesity, bombarding us with incentives to consume and consume ever more, we are constantly overstimulated, exceeding our capacity to absorb information as well as calories - junk-information and junk-calories, that is. Traditional cultures maintained a vital balance between the poles of feasting and fasting, being supportive not only to physical but also to emotional health, which has been completely thrown out of balance by modern consumerism.
So yes, fasting is crucial of a healthy lifestyle neglected in contemporary culture. As we have sadly lost the collective occasions for fasting, usually rooted in religious motives, whe have to rely on an individual incentive to compensate for our cultural shortcomings. The good thing is that today we have different variations upon the theme of fasting to choose from - anything between skipping a single meal (e.g. dinner-canceling) and eating a severely caloric-restricted diet for a period of months. I sometimes skip a meal or do a day of intermittent fasting.
Given all we know about the metabolic effect of fasting, I think that the 12 hour fast may be a crucial part of Bredesen's protocol.
Edited by timar, 13 October 2014 - 10:09 AM.