Some people (myself included) simply do not like eating before late morning. For me I cannot eat anything before 10:00 without feeling nauseous. I can work out, train clients, walk the dog and comfortably eat my first meal around noon without feeling low energy.
Other people are the exact opposite (again, refer to above where THERE IS NO cookie cutter program that works 100% of the time, EVERYONE IS DIFFERENT). If you are the type of person who gets sick without early morning food, intermittent fasting is most likely not for you (and that is okay!) Intermittent fasting does provide many benefits, but so do other dietary strategies!
Step 2: Create a Fasting Schedule and stick to it for ONE Week
This is the trial run.
I generally stop eating around 7:00pm and begin my next days meals at between noon and 1:00pm (6 hour eating window). This is personal preference however, limiting your eating window to between 6 and 8 hours is a good rule of thumb. This does not mean starve yourself, and it also doesn’t mean eat all the food in your house in 6 hours! You have to still eat the right amount of calories and macros!
You will NOT see massive weight loss, insane energy increases, or feel 10 years younger no matter what the Intermittent Fasting “gurus” told you.
What you may notice is maybe you feel the same (which is good!). Maybe your workout seems a little better? Or that first cup of coffee really focusses your morning work? Maybe you feel a little more productive or motivated? All of these things are a good sign that your body is going to adapt well to intermittent fasting.
If you feel a drop in energy or any negative effects after one week, it probably isn’t for you!