2 Jan 2014

Fast times

9:07 am on 2 January 2014

After 72 hours of nothing but carbs, I couldn’t wait to detox.
After 30 hours of nothing but water, coconut water, and green tea (hot, flavoured water) – I couldn’t wait to eat. Anything.

A trip to Auckland had turned into an excuse to visit the newest and best big-city eateries: poutine at Federal Deli, tacos and sangria at Mexico, a baguette from La Boulange, a Little and Friday doughnut, Sal’s pizza before boozing, and a McDonald’s double cheeseburger combo the morning after.

Back in Wellington, I felt terrible, and decided to go on a detox to press the restart button on my eating habits.

a green smoothie

"Afterwards, I felt like nothing so much as a nice glass of coconut water." Photo: Unknown

The timing was right: there were no social events coming up that I’d have to pike on or, worse, attend sober; I had plenty to keep me busy at work; and my gym membership had expired.

Plus, saving for an upcoming trip overseas wasn’t going as well as I’d hoped, mostly due to meals out: my bank statement read like a list of restaurants around town (if you consider McDonald’s a restaurant). An added incentive to cook at home could only be good for my pocket.

I roped my sister into going halves with me on an Auckland nutritionist’s “kickstart” programme that I’d seen splashed all over Millie Elder-Holmes’ Instagram. If Millie could kick P, we could manage a fortnight without pizza.

Aside from one day of fasting a week, the two-week eating plan allowed for three meals a day. My last meal was a halloumi burger and a beer, followed by a Kit-Kat. From 11pm that Tuesday to 8am Thursday, I didn’t eat at all – unless you count three litres of water with lemon juice, half a litre of coconut water, one mug of black coffee and two of green tea eating, which, frankly, I don’t.

This was my first experience with restricted eating since the 40-Hour Famine in high school, and I cheated during that. (“It’s just an exercise in pretending to be poor,” I remember thinking with scorn as I ploughed into some vege crisps.)

The next day, I was surprised to learn that fasting between meals was harder than going without food for a full 24 hours: at first, the five-hour countdown from breakfast to lunch was excruciating.

That said, 30-odd hours without food was easier than I’d thought it would be. Feelings of actual hunger were fleeting: most of the time, I was just light-headed, like being hungover, but without the nausea or sleep deprivation.

“The worst thing is, you start to like that feeling,” said This Way Up producer Richard Scott cheerfully, as I grimly squeezed a lemon into my water bottle in the kitchenette. He had been on the 5:2 diet for a couple of months. “It’s like Kate Moss said: nothing tastes as good as skinny feels.”

The next day, I was surprised to learn that fasting between meals was harder than going without food for a full 24 hours: at first, the five-hour countdown from breakfast to lunch was excruciating.

But I came to appreciate the feeling of anticipating food, as opposed to absent-mindedly munching on the rice crackers and muesli bars I kept in my desk drawer (which I’d given to my colleague, who oscillated between concerned for my health and scornful of my folly, for safe-keeping.)

It helped that the meals were good: a frittata with goat’s feta, marinated beef shish kebab with grilled asparagus, baked chicken breast with pesto and broccoli. I’ve never been a natural in the kitchen, but cooking to the plan forced me to broaden my repertoire from ‘lazy pasta’ and ‘odd but not inedible combination of leftovers’, and I was proud of the results.

But I soon realised how much my social interaction was centred around eating and drinking, and the hours passed slowly without it. I cleaned the apartment; watched half of the first season of The Sopranos; painted all ten digits for the first time all year; and baked muffins for my flatmates (because I am, apparently, a masochist).

I also resisted the urge to maim my boyfriend when he turned up at my house with a Moro bar, which I counted as a win.

By day five, my energy levels had stabilised, and I was no longer exhausted after the short walk from the bus stop to work. My skin was clear, I was having fewer cravings, and I was dropping weight at a disturbingly rapid rate.

I stumbled for the first time on day six, when I ate a muffin from the second batch I’d made in two days, and I realised there was a fine line between anticipating food and obsessing over it.

Marge Simpson, fixing roof tiles, at 3am, while Homer asks "it's 3am, shouldn't you be baking?"

It reminded me of Marge Simpson acting out on her fear of flying with frenetic activity in the kitchen. Photo: Unknown

My feverish bouts of baking were not so much about wanting to treat my flatmates, as I justified them, as they were about wanting to be around food even if I couldn’t have it. It reminded me of Marge Simpson acting out on her fear of flying with frenetic activity in the kitchen.

Brunch that weekend posed a problem, too. Unfeasibly tipsy after a half-mug of Buck’s Fizz to celebrate our Saturday Morning takeover, I met a friend at a cafe, where I exceeded my daily limit of one black coffee by another two black coffees; neglected to ask for no dressing on my salad; and shared a slice of cake.

It was a grim reminder of how even the slightest amount of alcohol can dissolve your resolve – and how difficult it is to eat simply and healthily outside your own home.

At the end of the two weeks, carbs and sugar made me feel horrible. Nonetheless, I was raring to go for my much-anticipated ‘cheat meal’, which began with a malai kofta and naan, and then pushed the limits of the word ‘meal’, both in terms of nutritional value and volume, further than I care to explicitly itemise here. Afterwards, I felt like nothing so much as a nice glass of coconut water.

Keeping to such a regimen came at the cost of being a ‘chill bro’ (I regularly had to take ingredients for three separate meals – which is to say, half of Commonsense Organics – to my boyfriend’s house) and the kind of special treats and nice surprises that can make your day.

Today, a couple of months on, I try to keep to the principles of the detox about 70 per cent of the time. I feel better if I do more than that, and worse if I do less. It’s not rocket science, but though I could have started eating healthy without the programme, I think I’d have found it harder to stick to it. But the odd lasagne-induced headache is a small price to pay for being free to eat lasagne, every once in a while.