Understanding the Weight Loss Plateau in Neanderthin
As the author of The Paleo Diet for Beginners and a longtime advocate of ancestral eating patterns, I've studied Ray Audette's Neanderthin protocol extensively. Audette's 1990s approach—essentially a strict carnivore-style diet of lean meats, limited fats, and no plants—helped him reverse his rheumatoid arthritis and drop significant weight. However, many following Neanderthin report hitting a weight loss plateau around the 8-12 week mark. This stall often stems from metabolic adaptation where your body lowers energy expenditure after initial rapid fat loss, a common issue for those in their mid-40s to mid-50s dealing with hormonal shifts like declining estrogen or testosterone.
During the plateau phase, Audette emphasized returning to basics: strict elimination of all non-animal foods and tracking ketone levels to confirm true fat-burning. In my work with clients facing similar challenges—failed diets, joint pain making movement difficult, and insurance limitations—I recommend measuring your basal metabolic rate drop. Studies show metabolism can slow by 15-20% after 10% body weight loss. For Neanderthin followers, this means recalibrating protein intake to 1.6-2.0 grams per kg of ideal body weight while keeping carbohydrates under 20 grams daily.
Practical Strategies to Break Through the Stall
To overcome the plateau, implement a 5-7 day refeed using only fatty cuts of grass-fed beef or wild game—Audette himself cycled higher fat days after lean meat phases. This prevents thyroid downregulation. Incorporate resistance band exercises you can do at home in 10-15 minutes, three times weekly, to preserve muscle mass without aggravating joint pain. My methodology stresses tracking waist circumference over scale weight; many see inches lost even when pounds stall.
For those managing diabetes and blood pressure alongside weight, monitor fasting glucose. Neanderthin often improves insulin sensitivity dramatically within weeks, but plateaus can occur if hidden inflammation from prior processed foods lingers. Add 30-minute daily walks in nature—low impact yet effective for cortisol control. Avoid the overwhelm of conflicting advice by sticking to Audette's core rule: eat only what a Neanderthal could hunt or gather without tools.
Addressing Hormonal and Lifestyle Factors
Hormonal changes in midlife make weight loss harder because cortisol rises while growth hormone falls. In The Paleo Diet for Beginners, I detail how sleep optimization—7-9 hours of consistent rest—can restart fat loss by 0.5-1 pound weekly. Many embarrassed about their obesity find success with simple accountability: weekly photos and measurements instead of public weigh-ins. Insurance rarely covers programs, so Neanderthin's minimal-cost meat-focused plan fits middle-income budgets perfectly.
Remember, plateaus are temporary signals to adjust, not failures. Ray Audette maintained his health improvements for decades by viewing stalls as feedback. Focus on consistent protein, movement within your limits, and stress reduction. Most see the scale move again within 2-3 weeks of these tweaks. Stay patient—sustainable change beats yo-yo dieting every time.