Wednesday, September 17, 2025

The Spiritual Practice That Improves Your Health

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EDITOR'S NOTE

At Liberty Through Wealth, we believe real wealth isn't just about money - it's also about health, purpose, and longevity.

In today's Beyond Wealth column, Alexander Green explores a practice that's been central to spiritual traditions for thousands of years and is now winning over scientists, doctors, and everyday people alike: fasting.

Alex explains why this ancient discipline isn't just about faith or willpower... but also about unlocking better health, greater resilience, and even a longer life.

It's a fascinating perspective that blends timeless wisdom with cutting-edge science. Happy reading!

- Nicole Labra, Senior Managing Editor

THE SHORTEST WAY TO A RICH LIFE

The Spiritual Practice That Improves Your Health

Alexander Green, Chief Investment Strategist, The Oxford Club

Alexander Green

One of the most common practices found in many of the world's spiritual traditions is fasting.

The Bible contains dozens of references to fasting. Orthodox Jews fast during Yom Kippur, Tzom Gedalia and Purim. Early Christians fasted every Wednesday and Friday. Many do today during Advent, the Assumption or Lent.

The Buddha refrained from food and drink during his period of asceticism. Fasting is an integral part of the Hindu religion. And abstaining from food and drink from sunup to sundown during Ramadan is one of the Five Pillars of Islam.

For skeptics, fasting evokes some of the worst associations with religion: irrationality, guilt, self-denial or punishment. But practitioners contend it is a way of purifying and recharging.

Fasting strengthens temperance and self-control. It promotes humility and empathy. After all, is it not easier to identify with the plight of the world's hungry when your own stomach is rumbling?

Now science is trumpeting the benefits of fasting as well. Research shows that caloric restriction is an effective way to increase human life span.

During fasting periods, the body also kicks into repair mode, fixing and protecting tissues, organs and the nervous system. And it can lead to a powerful sense of catharsis, especially for those who have overindulged in processed or unhealthy foods.

In short, this ancient spiritual practice is gaining millions of secular adherents.

Fasting doesn't have to mean giving up food for an entire day. A popular technique is intermittent fasting.

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Intermittent Fasting: A Sustainable Strategy

This is not a "diet." Diets are about what you eat. Intermittent fasting is about not eating.

It involves no complicated rules to follow, no recipes to learn, and no lists of foods you can or can't consume.

And there are numerous health benefits. Studies indicate that intermittent fasting...

  • Improves your cholesterol and blood glucose levels
  • Moves you closer to a body mass index of 25 or less, reducing your risk of high blood pressure, Type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease, stroke, gallbladder disease, colon and breast cancer, osteoarthritis, and respiratory problems
  • Improves IGF-1 - a hormone that prevents cell death and slows the aging process - reducing the risk of a number of age-related diseases
  • Switches on millions of repair genes in response to the minor physiological stress of fasting
  • Gives your pancreas a rest, boosting the effectiveness of the insulin it produces
  • Promotes an enhanced sense of well-being - many fasters report a "glow," perhaps the result of something going on at a metabolic level that governs our moods.

Intermittent fasters often find they commonly eat not because they are hungry but because they are bored or thirsty or because food happens to be in front of them. We eat from habit or because it's a certain hour or because we are afraid that if we don't we will be ravenous later.

You might imagine that hunger builds and builds until it becomes so unendurable that you find yourself facedown in a pizza buffet. The reality is that hunger comes and goes in waves, then passes.

We tend to assume that fasting makes it harder to concentrate. Yet fasters report that it sharpens their senses and concentration. Most believe fasting will make them irritable. But studies show it improves mood and protects the brain from dementia and cognitive decline.

The biggest obstacle to fasting is fear.

Our brains evolved to persuade us to eat as much as we can as often as we can to guard against future hunger. That was an effective strategy in a food-deprived environment. But in our modern world of inexpensive, easy-to-access, fatty, salty and sweetened foods, it's a handicap.

Over time most fasters see their appetites moderate. And while it may seem like a tough slog at first, over time the sense of deprivation diminishes and eating this way becomes second nature.

I've personally eaten this way almost my entire adult life.

Not everyone should fast, of course. The list includes children, pregnant women, people with underlying medical conditions and those who are already too thin.

But for the rest of us, there are good reasons to give it a try, including greater resistance to disease and improved longevity.

Intermittent fasting offers a host of physical and psychological benefits. It is a sustainable strategy for a longer, healthier life.

Try it. You stand to gain a lot... and perhaps lose a bit as well.

Good investing,

Alex

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