Why Tracking Matters After Five Months of Microdosing

After consistently microdosing for five months, your body has likely adapted to the protocol outlined in my book The Metabolic Reset. At this stage, subjective feelings like more energy or fewer cravings are no longer enough. You need objective data to confirm you're losing fat, not muscle, and that your hormones are shifting in the right direction. Most beginners I've worked with see the biggest breakthroughs between months four and seven once they stop guessing and start measuring properly.

Focus on three categories: body composition, metabolic markers, and symptom relief. This prevents the frustration of "failed diets" many in their mid-40s and 50s experience when hormones like cortisol and insulin resist change.

Key Metrics to Track Weekly and Monthly

Measure body composition using a smart scale or DEXA scan every 30 days. Track visceral fat levels, skeletal muscle mass, and waist circumference at the navel. Aim for 0.5–1% body fat reduction per month while preserving muscle—critical when joint pain limits traditional exercise.

Monitor metabolic health through fasting blood glucose (target under 95 mg/dL), fasting insulin (under 10 μU/mL), and HbA1c if you're managing diabetes. For blood pressure, log morning readings; many see systolic drops of 8–12 mmHg once inflammation decreases. Use a simple journal or app to record these alongside microdose timing.

Track daily energy, sleep quality (aim for 7–8 hours), and joint comfort on a 1–10 scale. Note hunger levels between meals. In The Metabolic Reset, I emphasize that stable energy without afternoon crashes signals improved insulin sensitivity.

How to Measure True Progress Beyond the Scale

The scale can mislead during hormonal transitions common in your age group. Instead, calculate your fat loss percentage monthly. Take progress photos in consistent lighting every four weeks and measure how clothes fit. Many clients report losing 2–3 inches off their waist while the scale moves only 8–10 pounds because they're gaining muscle and losing fat simultaneously.

Use a continuous glucose monitor for two weeks every other month to see real-time blood sugar responses to meals. This data is invaluable when insurance won't cover formal programs. Log everything in a simple spreadsheet: date, weight, waist, fasting glucose, energy score, and notes on cravings or joint pain.

Adjusting Your Protocol Based on Data

If visceral fat isn't dropping after month five, reduce carbohydrate intake on non-microdosing days to under 75 grams and add 10-minute walks after meals. For persistent joint pain, prioritize anti-inflammatory foods like wild salmon and turmeric while increasing omega-3 intake to 2 grams daily. Re-test blood markers at month six to ensure your approach addresses the unique hormonal challenges of this life stage.

Consistency in tracking builds confidence and prevents overwhelm from conflicting nutrition advice. Most of my clients who reach six months with solid data achieve sustainable results they couldn't before.