Congratulations on Feeling Better Already
After just three weeks on metformin and targeted supplements, many of my clients in their late 40s and early 50s report reduced cravings, steadier energy, and less joint pain. This early improvement is common because metformin helps regulate blood sugar and lowers insulin levels, which directly supports fat burning. In my book The CFP Method: Sustainable Weight Loss After 40, I emphasize that feeling better is the first real sign of metabolic repair, especially when hormonal changes have made previous diets fail.
Key Metrics to Track Weekly
Focus on four core areas instead of obsessing over the bathroom scale. First, record your fasting blood glucose every morning using a simple glucometer; aim to see numbers trending from the 110-140 mg/dL range toward 90-110 mg/dL. Second, weigh yourself once per week at the same time in the same clothes and log both weight and waist circumference measured at the navel. A half-inch loss in waist size often signals visceral fat reduction even when weight stalls.
Third, track your daily energy and joint comfort on a 1-10 scale in a simple notebook or app. Many beginners notice joint pain dropping from 7 to 4 within a month, making movement feel possible again. Finally, monitor how your clothes fit and take progress photos every two weeks in the same lighting. These non-scale victories prevent the discouragement that derails most middle-income adults managing diabetes and blood pressure alongside weight loss.
Using the CFP Method for Accurate Measurement
My CFP Method breaks progress into three pillars: Cellular repair, Food simplicity, and Physical consistency. For cellular repair, request an A1C blood test at your next doctor visit; improvements of even 0.5 points show the supplements and metformin are working. Keep meals to three per day with no snacking to amplify metformin’s effects on insulin sensitivity. Walk 20-30 minutes daily at a comfortable pace instead of intense gym sessions that feel impossible with joint pain. This approach respects your limited time and insurance constraints while delivering steady results.
How to Stay Consistent Without Overwhelm
Use a free phone app like MyFitnessPal or a simple spiral notebook to log only these five items: morning glucose, weekly weight and waist, energy score, and one sentence about how you feel. Review trends every Sunday for five minutes. Expect a 1-2 pound weekly loss initially that may slow to 0.5-1 pound as your hormones stabilize. If progress plateaus, check sleep (aim for 7-8 hours) and stress levels, as both sabotage results faster than diet mistakes. Remember, you don’t need expensive programs; these practical measurements build confidence and proof that this time is different. Stick with it and you’ll see sustainable changes without the embarrassment of asking for help or the confusion of conflicting nutrition advice.