The stomach growling crampy emptiness in my stomach feels terrible, like LSD sometimes feels, but not so sharp as that, and it's very distracting and does not go away, whether I drink water or stop drinking water.
That's an interesting way to describe it. I definitely think the mental aspects of fasting can be both yay and nay. I'm wondering if your fasting experiment gave you any of the upside benefits of a, um, microdose of LSD?
I could talk your ear off on that one.
Food deprivation definitely stresses the brain in myriad ways no one is ever close to even identifying, yet alone explaining and understanding. No money for such nonsense (me and my sarcasm alert).
Have you checked in with Mark Mattson's work yet?
https://scholar.goog...XRBAIoQgQMIGjAA
He has an interesting TED talk, too. I like him a lot -- he's def a fellow traveler.
Just a side wonder: had you ever experienced hunger before this short fast? True hunger you assuredly did not reach, not even close, but I wonder if your brain understands what hunger is? That sounds insulting. I did not mean it that way. To your unconscious brain -- what's underneath the surface Nate -- what does it mean to go hungry?
After your 72 hour fast you most definitely derived many health benefits. I'll start with lower BP, BG, you may have raised up ketones a bit. Maybe not.
You'll get more into this gig the more you do it. And the practice of fasting pleasantly gets easier with more experience. You learn from mistakes and achievements. It's art. Fasting is an art project.
Be aware there are proper ways to break a fast -- even just 72 hours. Be easy with reawakening the chemistry surrounding those slumbering tubes inside of you.
You might find your taste buds a-reset. Fruits and veggies might taste better now. Salt may taste saltier; sugar may taste sugariarererrr. Bitter may be sharper. Sense of humor may increase or decrease -- depends on the art project. Feeling one with trees and plovers may come more naturally. Your poetry may get worse (mine did). While fasting, please I beg you to look up at that moon at night! All those stars!
I guess one of the reasons people do these expensive blood tests is to show themselves directly what benefits were gained (at least in the near term). But these tests are fucking expensive and questionable unless you spend thousands and do them over the years and decades. Some CR people test repeatedly, good for them, I wonder what benefits they see? General patterns and trends, I reckon, and does some value quickly and suddenly go berserk.