What this is (in plain English)

Time-Restricted Eating (TRE) is not about eating less — it’s about eating within a defined daily window so your body gets time to switch from “feeding mode” to repair mode.

When you’re constantly eating, your body prioritises:

  • digestion
  • storage
  • insulin activity

When you stop eating for long enough:

  • insulin drops
  • stored energy (fat) is mobilised
  • cellular clean-up processes (autophagy) begin

Why this matters (especially mid-50s+)

As we age:

  • insulin sensitivity declines
  • muscle mass (SMM) drops
  • metabolic flexibility reduces

TRE helps counter this by:

  • improving fat burning capability
  • supporting metabolic switching
  • giving your body time for cellular repair

Combined with strength training + cardio, this becomes very powerful.


Autophagy — what it actually is

Autophagy is your body’s internal recycling system.

It:

  • breaks down damaged proteins
  • clears dysfunctional cell components
  • supports cellular efficiency

Think of it as:

“maintenance and clean-up that only happens when the kitchen is closed”

Important:

  • It is not all-or-nothing
  • It ramps up gradually the longer you fast

(See your below for how this scales across fasting windows)


The realistic benefits (cut through the hype)

What TRE can do:

  • improve energy stability
  • reduce visceral fat over time
  • support metabolic health
  • reduce bloating (via gut rest + MMC activity)

What TRE does NOT magically do:

  • it’s not a shortcut to fat loss without calorie control
  • it won’t replace strength training for muscle
  • extreme fasting is not automatically better

Your current approach (why it works)

Your pattern:

  • ~12pm → 6pm eating window (≈18:6)
  • 2–3 meals with protein
  • morning hydration + electrolytes
  • cycling + strength work

This is strong because:

  • you’re combining metabolic stress (fasting) with
  • mechanical stimulus (training)

That’s exactly what improves:

  • fat utilisation
  • muscle retention
  • insulin sensitivity

Where people go wrong

Common mistakes:

  • pushing fasting too aggressively → worsens BP / fatigue
  • under-eating protein → muscle loss
  • poor hydration → dizziness (relevant for you)
  • thinking autophagy = unlimited benefit

For you specifically:

Stability > extremity

Your body responds clearly to:

  • hydration
  • sodium balance
  • steady fueling

So consistency beats longer fasts.


Practical rules of thumb

  • 16:8 to 18:6 = sustainable sweet spot
  • 2–3 protein-rich meals > constant snacking
  • hydration + sodium = essential (not optional)
  • train preferably after first meal or well-hydrated
  • avoid chasing longer fasts if symptoms increase

Short, high-quality videos (worth your time)

🎥 1. Dr Satchin Panda (leading TRE researcher)

“Time Restricted Eating & Circadian Rhythm” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-R-eqJDQ2nU

👉 Best for: understanding why timing matters biologically


🎥 2. Dr Rhonda Patrick

“Fasting, Time-Restricted Eating & Health” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tRohh0gErM

👉 Best for: science-backed overview without hype


🎥 3. Peter Attia (practical lens)

“Fasting and Metabolic Health” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7nJgHBbEgsE

👉 Best for: realistic expectations and trade-offs


🎥 4. Andrew Huberman (clear explanations)

“Effects of Fasting on Fat Loss & Health” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9tRohh0gErM

👉 Best for: mechanisms explained simply


Bottom line

TRE is not a magic trick — it’s a timing strategy.

Used properly, it helps:

  • restore metabolic flexibility
  • support fat loss
  • enable cellular maintenance

But the real gains come when you combine it with:

  • adequate protein
  • resistance training
  • hydration and electrolyte balance

Personal note (for your setup)

Given your:

  • low BP tendency
  • strong response to hydration
  • active lifestyle

Your current approach is already close to optimal.

If anything:

refining hydration + protein distribution will give you more return than extending fasting further.


See: Autophagy Comparison Table for protocol differences and scaling :::

Autophagy Comparison Table for different Ratios

Protocol NameRatio (Fast:Eat)Level of AutophagyGeneral EaseMetabolic State
Standard Modern Diet10:14 or 9:15None/BaselineVery EasyChronic Insulin Elevation; Fat storage “locked.”
Circadian Rhythm12:12MinimalEasyGlycogen depletion begins; Insulin stabilization.
Intermittent (Level 1)14:10LowModerateEarly digestive rest; Inflammation begins to dip.
The “Sweet Spot”16:8ModerateSustainableFat-burning switch flips; Early cellular repair.
Warrior / OMAD20:4HighChallengingSignificant ketone production; “Cleaning crew” active.
24-Hour Pulse24:0Peak Short-TermDifficult
36-Hour Service36:0Deep CleanVery Difficult

Notes

1. The “Standard” Row (Non-TRE)

Most people eat from 07:00 (Breakfast) until 22:00 (Evening snack). The Engineering Flaw: This keeps the “delivery trucks” arriving at the warehouse constantly. The body never has a 12-hour window to even begin looking for damaged proteins to recycle.

2. Autophagy Scaling

Autophagy is not a light switch; it is a dimmer switch. At 16:8, you are “dimming the lights” on digestion. At 24:0, you have “turned the lights off” completely, allowing the cellular repair enzymes to see clearly and get to work. See 36 Hour Fasts for further

3. Ease vs. Benefit for your 81kg Goal

16:8 is your Maintenance Level: It prevents weight gain and stabilizes the gut. 24:0 (Once/twice weekly) is your Transformation Level: It drives the 7kg weight loss by forcing the body to use visceral fat as its primary fuel source.

4. Bloating Correlation

Generally, as the “Ratio” of fasting increases, bloating decreases. This is because the Migrating Motor Complex (MMC)—the “electri-sweep” of your gut—only functions during the fasting hours.

fasted exercise specifically in hour 17 has its benefits too