The Gap in Understanding Body Size Differences
As the founder of CFP Weight Loss and author of The CFP Method, I've worked with thousands of women in their late 40s and early 50s who carry 80 to 150+ extra pounds. Straight sized women frequently underestimate how dramatically body size can expand due to hormonal changes, insulin resistance, and years of yo-yo dieting. A size 6 friend may picture "plus size" as a comfortable 16, but many women reach size 24-32, where joint pain makes movement excruciating and daily tasks become exhausting. This disconnect often leaves plus size women feeling unseen when well-meaning advice ignores these realities.
What to Track Instead of Just the Scale
The scale lies, especially during perimenopause when hormonal weight gain shifts fat to the midsection. In my CFP Method, we track multiple markers weekly. First, take body measurements at consistent spots: waist (smallest point), navel, hips (widest), chest, thighs, and upper arms. A 2-inch waist reduction often signals meaningful fat loss even if weight stays stable. Second, monitor non-scale victories like energy levels, blood sugar readings, blood pressure numbers, joint pain scores (1-10), and how clothes fit. For women managing diabetes and hypertension alongside obesity, these metrics prove far more valuable than pounds lost.
Practical Measurement Tools and Schedules
Use a flexible tape measure and weigh yourself only once weekly under identical conditions—same time, after bathroom, before eating. Log everything in a simple notebook or app. In The CFP Method, I recommend photographing your body monthly in the same outfit and lighting. This visual record combats the discouragement that hits when the scale won't budge. Track mobility too: time how long you can walk without knee pain or note when you can climb stairs without stopping. For middle-income women without insurance coverage, these free tools deliver powerful insights without expensive programs.
Building Sustainable Progress Without Overwhelm
Beginners often feel paralyzed by conflicting nutrition advice. My approach simplifies: focus on three 20-minute daily movement sessions that respect joint limitations—no gym required. Combine this with blood-sugar balancing meals that take under 15 minutes to prepare. Expect 0.5-2 pounds weekly loss while inflammation drops and energy rises within 14 days. The real victory comes when you stop comparing to straight sized friends and celebrate your unique progress markers. This method has helped hundreds move from embarrassed isolation to confident, sustainable weight management despite hormonal challenges and past diet failures.