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The period after a fast where fat burning remains elevated and hunger is reduced.
After a fast, the body does not immediately return to its previous state. Hunger often stays lower for a short period, and energy use remains elevated. This makes it a good time to stay active or keep meals controlled. Using this window well can improve overall consistency without adding extra effort.

Fasting changes the structure of eating. This page covers how it works for weight loss, the difference between intermittent and extended approaches, and where it fits in a sustainable method.

How intermittent fasting actually works, what changes inside an eating window, and where it fits alongside calorie deficit and walking for sustained weight loss.
Repeating fasting, calorie control, and walking as the core routine.
A defined time period when food is consumed.
The predictable progression of physical and mental states during a fast.
The period where no calories are consumed.
A state where the body relies more on fat than carbohydrates for energy.
The point where fat becomes the primary fuel source after glycogen depletion.
The transition from burning carbs to burning fat.
The phase of eating after fasting where food and glycogen return.