by
Ron Lagerquist
It is well known that thinking is sharper when hungry.
The experience of mental clearness
during a fast is much like an early morning drive in the country. The sun
is shinning; rolling hills are covered in brilliant light, then you drive
down into a valley. The car hits a fog patch, the surrounding landscape
disappears and you are barely able to see the road ahead. The up and down
sensations of clear and foggy mindedness are opposite mental states that are
able to trade off numerous times within a single day. I have even found my
eyesight to correspond with brain function: my mind and vision fuzzy, then
the blood clears and I am left with crystal clear sight and sharp
mindedness. It is obvious what is going on. Toxins in the blood are
interfering with fasting’s ability to enhance brain processes. As the fast
progresses and the body detoxifies, fog patches diminish, leaving days of
bright awareness. Unfortunately, most of the fog is at the start of the
fasting journey. It takes some perseverance to experience the joyous
clarity that can come during the fasting state.
Never overeat just before an exam or you may find a
heavy head on the desk fast asleep. University of Chicago students fasted
for seven days, mental alertness increased and their progress in schoolwork
was cited as remarkable. The universal testimony of fasters is that
thinking and focus is enhanced.
While fasting, thinking does slow
down. Surprisingly, this serves to enhance deeper thought; as if taking the
foot off the accelerator allows the little details to come into focus, like
neglected inner issues deserving important attention. In an
information-overloaded world a calmed mind can take time to seek out deeper
understanding instead of darting here and there accumulating years of
half-truths and shallow understanding. You might even start thinking for
yourself. Slower, deeper thought allows for creativity but more
importantly, opens the mind to God’s Word.
The brain has a saturation point.
When unplugging from the high-amped media of TV and radio, a numbed mind
finds it a difficult business to focus on the quiet words of Scripture. The
surrounding world is inventing increasingly powerful tools to get our
attention. God is in no such competition. He will wait until you quiet
your soul enough to hear.
Some, for the first time
during a fast will experience emotional stability. The reasons for this are
multifold—the elimination of the dependence on food, exclusion of
stimulating foods like caffeine, processed sugars and trans-fatty acids, all
of which can have a devastating effect on brain chemistry.