Daddy, My Tummy Is Full of Sleep
In this episode of Lowkey Dads, Chad and Randall dig into a topic Chad almost talked himself out of covering — fasting, food, and what it really means to fuel your body. Chad is deep into an extended water fast (he's logged 31-, 33-, 41-, 47-, and 53-day fasts in prior years) and walks Randall through what the experience actually feels like: the brutal first day, the way the body shifts into ketosis and stops demanding food, and why he thinks the fast itself is just a prerequisite — the real work is in what you reintroduce afterward.
The conversation widens into processed food, leaky gut, emulsifiers, the runaway popularity of Ozempic, and a college roommate who has happily survived for decades on enormous mixing bowls of mixed cereal. That story — a person who found his thing, accepted it, and lived his best life — becomes the episode's hidden thesis: clarity comes from acceptance, not from optimization.
The second half drifts into parenting, triggered by Randall sharing the last piece of advice his mother gave him before she died: "Don't mess with food." From there: potty training philosophies, a child who communicated entirely in sign language until suddenly, one morning, he walked out and said, "Daddy, my tummy is all full of sleep." And a theory — learned through pee-pong balls, Waldorf schools, and years of watching kids find their own timing — that growth happens best when the body feels safe enough to do it on its own terms. "Kids don't just learn what we teach," the episode concludes. "They learn the emotional climate we teach it in."
BEST QUOTES
"The fasting is just kind of the prerequisite. The reset is the point. The real wisdom is in what comes after — what you reintroduce, how quickly, what patterns return, whether the body actually got a new script."
— Chad
"What is hunger actually teaching you? Fasting changes the conversation from what should I eat to why do I reach for food when I do."
— Marin
"I had to accept it about myself before I could change it. That gave me clarity to find a path forward. My heart had to be open to it — if my heart wasn't open, it never would have been a solution."
— Chad
"Don't mess with food. Let them eat whatever they eat. Don't make a big deal about it. They will figure it out on their own. It has nothing to do with you."
— Randall's mom (her last parenting advice)
"Daddy... my tummy is all full of sleep."
— Randall's son, the morning he started talking in earnest
"The body remembers the weather of the lesson, not just the lesson. If food comes with shame, if reading comes with pressure, if potty training comes with conflict — the child doesn't just learn the task. They learn the atmosphere."
— Marin
"Make the atmosphere safe, playful, and a little surprising — and the child can meet the moment with curiosity instead of defense. Kids don't just learn what we teach. They learn the emotional climate we teach it in."
— Marin
"The real question isn't just what should I eat. It's: what helps me live honestly, energetically, and peacefully in this body I've got."
— Marin