Fasting: The only introduction you’ll ever need. Leon Chaitow, N.D., D.O.
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The publishers would like to thank Jillie Collings for her suggestion for the title of this series, Principles of …
Contents
2 Fasting – Ancient and Modern
4 How to Fast (and How to Stop Fasting)
The evidence offered in this book about the possible value of therapeutic fasting should be understood to be provided for information only, and not as a recommendation in any particular case for the use of fasting as a therapeutic intervention.
If any fast is undertaken for longer than 48 hours it is strongly suggested that a suitably qualified, competent and experienced health care professional (see Resources section) should be consulted for advice and to ensure that supervision is available.
Fasting is to be actively discouraged outside of a residential setting for anyone with an eating disorder (such as anorexia and bulimia) or who suffers from any form of mental disease which requires medication to control it. Fasting is particularly contraindicated for anyone who does not fully understand and agree with its application.
The author and publishers specifically caution against lengthy fasting (anything longer than two days) without expert supervision.
At the age of 12 I experienced acute abdominal pain, and a doctor advised immediate hospitalization for removal of my appendix. My mother had also asked for advice from my father’s brother, a noted naturopath and chiropractor, Boris Chaitow (cousin of Stanley Lief, of whom more later).
My uncle Boris took the extraordinary – many would say irresponsibly foolhardy – step of advising against surgery, and placed me on a water fast. During the following 10 days I (a most unco-operative patient!) was subjected to the indignity of regular tepid enemas, as well as hot and cold packs and a water-only regime.
A few key facts are clearly embedded in my memory – that after the first day I lost all interest in and desire for food; that I detest enemas, and that I felt extremely well during the last week of the fast, with no sign of the agonizing pain previously experienced.
I am well aware that the whole enterprise could have turned out disastrously had my appendix ruptured, as the doctor had envisaged if surgery was delayed. But it did not, and I still have both it and a firm conviction based on personal experience of the value of therapeutic fasting. Incidentally, at the time of writing, Boris Chaitow is alive and well and just short of his 90th birthday.
Having subsequently trained in osteopathy and naturopathy (of which fasting forms an important element) I have over the years advised many patients with a variety of health complaints to fast – but have never had the nerve to risk what Boris (and my parents) risked with my appendicitis – nor do I recommend anyone else to do so.
FASTING DEFINED
Fasting is the avoidance – totally or partially – of the eating of food and liquid, except for pure water, for a particular period of time.
There are also a number of modified versions of fasting which allow the taking of juices, and even some foods, as part of their protocols. There are ‘mono-diets’ (single food fasting such as the ‘grape cure’), dry fasts (eating dry rusks with minimal liquid intake, as in the ‘Schroth Cure’), juice fasts and herb tea fasts.
In absolute terms, these methods are not really ‘fasts’ at all, but ‘restricted diets’. However, since they offer some of the benefits of fasting (especially if repeated regularly) they are included as possible alternatives.
FASTING IS NOT STARVATION
Not eating does not mean that you are starving. There is, in most people, enough reserve food stored to last for many days – usually many weeks. So, during a controlled therapeutic fast the body does not use any of its essential tissues as fuel, but instead ‘burns’ or metabolizes fat stores. At the same time a variety of important detoxification and repair processes begin which are of immense value to health, and these are explained in detail in later chapters.
RIGHT AND WRONG WAYS OF FASTING
The use above of the word controlled is meant to indicate that there are ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ ways of fasting, and just what should and should not be done when a fast is undertaken (to ensure both safety and effectiveness) is very carefully outlined as we look at the long history and use of fasting for health.