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Is fasting a compounding effort? Does the body heal things in its own order?

I’ve read some posts of people who have done an extended fast and their eczema disappeared or massively diminished. Others have stated that even despite giving it a go, it didn’t have yield too many benefits, at least in the way they were hoping for.

Well I’ve been doing intermittent fasting and have noticed these things.

- Mystery rashes on backs of elbows vanished.

- Spot of dermatitis on scalp that NOTHING, and I mean NOTHING could defeat has all but faded and the bald patch is filling in.

- I popped a cyst I had on my face with a small needle. Somehow it left a scar that wouldn’t budge. That scar is now gone.

- It has single handedly wiped out any urges for sugar, coffee, you name it.

The problem is that I still have these types of red areas that show up on my face. They wax and wane. While it has most certainly gotten them under control, it has yet to defeat them. If I stick with this do you think there’s a possibility of putting whatever I have (Given it is autoimmune) into remission?

In other words, is time a key element in fasting? Is there a healing hierarchy for the body?

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Answer

There is no compounding effect. It starts from the outside and work its ways inward. When the fast is broken that starts over again. So there’s some levels that’s only reached by continuing the fast. More serious diseases require a longer more aggressive fast. And if you have an excess amount of fat you don’t reach those levels until the excess fat is consumed

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