Our body gets efficient FAST!
It learns patterns and starts organizing itself around them — hunger, energy, output, even how it allocates resources day to day.
Fasting is one of the clearest places you can see this happen.
Most days, I naturally land in a 12–14 hour fasting window. Sometimes it’s closer to 15 depending on dinner, schedules, life. It doesn’t feel stressful because it’s supported on the other side. I still get 3 full, spaced-out meals in my eating window—real protein, carbs, fats, fiber, enough total intake that my body isn’t compensating later.
That daily rhythm becomes baseline. The body adapts to it. Hunger lines up. Energy stabilizes around it. It stops feeling like a “stimulus” and becomes just how things are.
This is where the concept of metabolic stressor vs metabolic signal matters.
A metabolic stressor is something the body sees repeatedly. It learns it, predicts it, and reduces the response over time to conserve energy. But a metabolic signal is something that breaks that prediction slightly. It creates a different kind of response because the system isn’t fully adapted to it yet.
At a cellular level, this is where things like AMPK activation, mitophagy, glycogen depletion, and shifts in nutrient sensing pathways come into play. When energy availability drops beyond the usual pattern, cells shift into more of a “resource prioritization” state. They use stored fuel, increasing fat oxidation, clean-up processes and temporarily changing how energy is allocated.
That’s part of why an occasional longer fast can be useful.
O-C-C-A-S-I-O-N-A-L
It creates a clear signal. For me, that could be a 24-hour fast, plus or minus, done occasionally — not on a schedule, but pulsed in. I can make sure when sleep has been pretty solid, stress isn't through the roof, and I’m already well-fed before I do this.
But I don’t do very long fasts daily.
When that becomes routine, instead of a clean signal, it becomes cumulative stress load — higher cortisol response, lower recovery capacity, and diminishing returns. No thanks!
So the way I think about it is simple. A daily 12–14 hour fast supports metabolic stability and routine clean-up. An occasional longer fast creates a stronger signal and a "deeper clean", if you will.
We all practice fasting overnight and in between meals. What's your current routine looking like?
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Excited for your future,
Tara
