The Classic Diet Dilemma
For decades, the dominant approach to weight management has been continuous energy restriction, better known as calorie counting. This method involves tracking the energy value of everything you eat and drink, aiming to stay below a specific daily target.
While effective for many, it comes with a significant psychological cost. The constant vigilance—reading labels, measuring portions, and logging meals—can lead to decision fatigue and what experts call a high 'mental load'. This unending task of monitoring and restriction is often what makes long-term adherence so challenging.
Enter Intermittent Fasting
Intermittent fasting isn’t a diet in the traditional sense; it's an eating pattern that cycles between periods of eating and voluntary fasting. It doesn’t prescribe what foods to eat but rather when you should eat them. Popular methods include the 16/8 method, where you fast for 16 hours and eat within an 8-hour window, and the 5:2 diet, which involves eating normally for five days a week and significantly reducing calories on two non-consecutive days. The appeal lies in its simplicity: instead of counting every calorie, you just watch the clock.
A Different Kind of Mental Load
Recent studies suggest that while IF and calorie counting can produce similar weight loss results, the experience is vastly different. A July 2026 study from the University of Adelaide found that participants on an IF plan lost a similar amount of weight as those counting calories but reported that it required less mental effort. They didn't feel the need to constantly monitor their intake or resist overeating in the same way. Instead of the persistent 'food noise' of calorie counting, the mental load of IF shifts to managing hunger during fasting periods and planning meals within the eating window. For some, this trade-off feels liberating.
The Adherence Question
The single biggest predictor of a diet’s success is whether you can stick with it. Here, the evidence on IF is mixed but promising. Some studies suggest that the simplicity of IF can make it easier to follow than other plans. One study even found that a 4:3 fasting plan had lower drop-out rates than daily calorie restriction. However, other research shows that long-term adherence can be difficult for any restrictive plan, with dropout rates for IF being high in some year-long studies. Ultimately, adherence seems highly dependent on individual personality and lifestyle.
The Indian Social Context
In a country like India, where food is deeply woven into social gatherings, festivals, and family life, any dietary approach faces unique challenges. Intermittent fasting can be particularly tricky to navigate. Skipping a family dinner or refusing prasad during a puja because it falls outside your eating window can be socially isolating and culturally difficult. One study on weight loss seekers in Tamil Nadu found that while more IF participants reported their diet was 'easily manageable' than those on other diets, challenges during festive seasons and travel were extremely common for both groups. This highlights a crucial point: the 'best' diet must be compatible with your life, not just your biology.
Not a Magic Bullet for Everyone
Despite its potential benefits, intermittent fasting is not a universal solution. The initial period can be marked by hunger, irritability, and fatigue. It's also critical to focus on nutritious food during eating windows; filling up on processed foods won't deliver health benefits. Furthermore, IF can be risky for certain individuals, including those with a history of eating disorders, where a focus on restriction can trigger unhealthy behaviours. The constant focus on meal timing can, for some, increase stress and anxiety around food.
















