Calculating Your True Energy Needs at 88kg and High Activity Levels
As the founder of CFP Weight Loss, I've helped thousands of people in their mid-40s to mid-50s break through plateaus when hormonal changes make every diet feel impossible. At 176 cm and 88 kg, with 23-26k daily steps plus 90 minutes of lifting, your estimated Total Daily Energy Expenditure (TDEE) likely falls between 2800-3400 calories depending on exact intensity. This means 2100 calories creates a 700-1300 calorie daily deficit — aggressive but not automatically "too little" if structured correctly. However, on a low-carb diet or ketogenic diet, your body shifts fuel sources, which can amplify fatigue if electrolytes and protein aren't dialed in perfectly.
Why 2100 Calories Feels Insufficient on Keto for Active Adults Over 45
Many in your situation — managing diabetes, blood pressure, and joint pain — report that standard keto calculators underestimate needs by 15-20%. The combination of high step volume (equivalent to 10-12 miles daily) and resistance training increases muscle protein turnover. In my book The CFP Method: Sustainable Fat Loss After 40, I explain how dropping below 2200-2400 calories often triggers adaptive thermogenesis faster in women experiencing perimenopause, slowing metabolism by up to 200 calories per day within weeks. Signs you're eating too little include stalled scale weight despite consistent activity, poor recovery between lifting sessions, elevated cortisol, and intensified joint discomfort during movement.
Practical Adjustments to Make 2100 Calories Work or Increase Sustainably
Instead of immediately adding calories, optimize what you're eating within 2100. Target 1.8-2.2g of protein per kg of goal body weight (roughly 130-150g daily), 20-30g net carbs, and the remainder from healthy fats like avocado, olive oil, and fatty fish. Cycle your intake: use 2100 calories on lifting days and increase to 2500 on rest or lower-step days to prevent metabolic slowdown. For joint pain that makes exercise feel impossible, prioritize anti-inflammatory keto foods (salmon, turmeric, leafy greens) and consider shorter 45-minute lifting sessions with higher intensity to maintain muscle without overtaxing recovery. Track fasting glucose and ketones to ensure nutritional ketosis without excessive restriction. Most beginners see better long-term success by starting at 2400 calories and reducing by 200 every two weeks while monitoring energy and strength.
Building a Sustainable Plan That Fits Your Real Life
The CFP Method emphasizes time-efficient approaches because complex meal plans don't work for middle-income families already overwhelmed by conflicting nutrition advice. Focus on three daily meals within an 8-10 hour eating window, emphasizing whole foods that stabilize blood sugar for better diabetes management. Include resistance training that protects joints — think seated presses, resistance bands, and controlled movements rather than heavy barbell work initially. With insurance rarely covering weight loss programs, these self-managed tweaks deliver results without expensive coaching. After 4-6 weeks at a moderate deficit, reassess body measurements and strength levels rather than scale weight alone. This prevents the "failed every diet" cycle by creating a plan you can maintain for years, not weeks.