6/5/2026 at 5:08:58 AM
I had a long process with this that mostly manifested as exercise intolerance and general inflammation/discomfort, and sleep struggles. I made no progress for 2 years, lost most of my muscle (I had been very active before) and started thinking "is this how it's going to be forever?". After not finding anything promising from traditional medicine or supplements, I finally made some dramatic life changes. I'm fully past it now (with persistent lifestyle changes), but I really had to rethink my relationship with food.Ended up doing a paleo diet, avoiding stressors (some of which are not obvious like just being on your phone scrolling, bad posture/circulation/sitting for too long), improving sleep hygiene, and ramping up consistent cardio exercise, with an emphasis on getting up to 4x/week zone 5 cardio without triggering intolerance.
Since then I've discovered a lot of other things that are great for overall health, like HRV-reset breathing and long-duration water fasts (around 3 days is optimal for me). I imagine those would have been very helpful if I had tried them earlier. A water fast is a complete metabolic and inflammatory reset of the body, and it's not as hard as you might think.
Hopefully most affected folks have recovered and are living normal lives by now, but if not, there are things you can do! It seems like the more challenging those things are, the more efficacious.
by lend000
6/5/2026 at 2:02:45 PM
Having gone through this too, I also had to accept that a lot (not all!) of it was in my head and made worse by it. When I convinced myself that “this will pass” and “this slow steady plan will get me out of this eventually” was when I finally saw regular progress (progress, not immediate relief).by brational
6/6/2026 at 6:01:46 AM
I'm glad that this was the case for you, but presenting it as an universal truth is extremely cruel and harmful to people for whom it is not, and you should be really careful with phrasing. Statements like these is why people's symptoms are not being taken seriously.by Llamamoe
6/5/2026 at 5:28:47 PM
There is absolutely truth to this.by lend000
6/5/2026 at 10:25:18 PM
It's amazing how powerful the mind is and it's also sad that the default setting is to use that power against oneselfby neonstatic
6/5/2026 at 10:58:32 AM
How do you prepare/deal through a water fast? What kind of supplemens would be needed for the water?Can I read up on this anywhere? I'd welcome a suggestion over surfing the many many pages I found through a simple search. A book or paper reccomendation to read up on would be nice as well
by Cloonic
6/5/2026 at 5:38:56 PM
Honestly AI overviews are a pretty good guide, ask about a 3-5 day water fast. I was nervous going into my first one, but now I don't worry about it. The main thing is to drink a lot of water and have 1-3 LMNT electrolyte packs (unflavored, no sugar) per day, depending on how much you're sweating/exercising (which you absolutely can do, especially the first 2 days).You can expect to feel colder as your body doesn't conserve as much heat, and after ~2 days more lethargic physically, but your mental energy may actually be higher. I don't sleep as well when fasting, so 3 nights is about my limit. That being said, you feel rested on less sleep, because your body is probably producing a lot less waste.
by lend000
6/5/2026 at 8:16:09 AM
How do you manage zone 5 cardio 4x a week without PEM?I thought up to 3x a week and never consecutive days is the maximum.
by _nalply
6/5/2026 at 5:43:11 PM
Zone 5 is usually 1-2 minutes out of a longer 30 minute cardio session for me, I do it as a final sprint. I am not talking about repeated hill sprints where you would get 10+ minutes of zone 5 cardio in a session, which I agree would not be something a normal person should do 4x/week.From my own experience, it seems like hitting that Zone 5 briefly is a good nervous system reset (overrides any dysfunctional breathing and heart rate effects from long covid); it's less about training the heart, although that's an excellent side effect.
by lend000
6/6/2026 at 9:34:43 AM
> hitting that Zone 5 briefly is a good nervous system resetI ended up doing this inadvertently earlier this week due to some medication side effects (yay akathisia!) making me want to go outside and just seriously run fast, including up the nasty hill nearby. Which I could, so I did. I'm amazed at how much it seems to have helped, for how simple it was. (Another one from the past, though for different situations: alternating hot and cold showers.)
by exmadscientist
6/5/2026 at 11:33:04 AM
I'm happy you got better - but isn't healthy diet, moderate regular exercise and good sleep hygiene staples of traditional medicine?by e12e
6/5/2026 at 5:33:06 PM
Thanks. Unfortunately, not really, especially where diet is concerned. For example, I saw significant improvement after removing wheat, white rice, red meat, and dairy entirely, which is not something your typical US doctor would suggest. The first doctor I saw wanted to put me on antidepressants.I also think exercise recommendations are generally too low, especially with respect to high intensity cardio.
by lend000
6/5/2026 at 5:52:31 AM
What do you mean by water fasting? Do you avoid drinking water directly, or do you avoid all food? For example salads are basically sacks of water.by nurettin
6/5/2026 at 6:04:27 AM
Water fast is when the only intake is water (plus electrolites and vitamines). Basically "eat nothing".by mpreda
6/5/2026 at 7:06:58 AM
> Basically "eat nothing".Thanks for this, reading "water fast" and "3 days" gave me a shot of adrenaline. The "water" prefix is just confusing, the word for abstaining from food is just "fast" for those interested.
If this is engagement bait, then well played..
by layoric
6/5/2026 at 7:22:23 AM
It is a specific type of fasting. Saying only "fasting" can mean a lot of things, saying "water fast" means you only drink water.by Zobat
6/5/2026 at 7:26:52 AM
Water fasting is used to differentiate from dry fasting, where you don't even drink water.by rolisz
6/5/2026 at 8:16:22 AM
Is this even a thing? Never assumed you'd ever want to dehydrate like this on purpose. Just why?by pawelduda
6/5/2026 at 8:27:47 AM
dry fasts aren't always what they appear. if you have significant glycogen stores in your body as you begin your fast you wont be dehydrated for the first day or two as water is freed. what usually happens is someone who starts glycogen endowed discovers that they aren't thirsty when they start fasting and tout it as dry fasting.by teravor
6/5/2026 at 8:43:32 AM
Ok glycogen store was the only possibilty I has in mind. Thanks:)by pawelduda
6/5/2026 at 1:27:21 PM
Religious Jews have a couple of 25 hour complete fasts per year.by erg0s4m
6/5/2026 at 10:56:58 AM
Look up how Muslims fast during Ramadan.by hebelehubele
6/5/2026 at 10:27:46 PM
What you thought of (not even drinking water) is called a dry fast. It is a thing, but for obvious reasons is much more intense and shorter in duration.by neonstatic
6/5/2026 at 5:58:22 AM
no you only consume waterby empressplay
6/5/2026 at 5:24:08 AM
A non-inflammatory rocket shock diet can certainly aid in symptoms of long covid in many users, often people megadose on antioxidants to dilate their recovery window and not regress. Glad to hear you are feeling better and I totally agree that movement and diet are key in recovering from inflammatory disease.by stringfood