Core Principles for Sustainable Weight Loss
As the founder of CFP Weight Loss, I've helped thousands of people in their 40s and 50s lose weight after years of failed diets. The foundation isn't another restrictive plan—it's creating a consistent calorie deficit while addressing hormonal changes, joint pain, and blood sugar management. Focus on eating 1,500–1,800 calories daily for most women and 1,800–2,200 for men, prioritizing protein at 1.6g per kg of body weight to preserve muscle and control hunger. Walk 8,000–10,000 steps daily instead of high-impact exercise that aggravates joints. This approach works because it fits busy middle-income lives without expensive programs or gym memberships.
My Experience with Supplements, Medications, and Cutting Inflammatory Foods
Supplements like berberine (500mg twice daily) and omega-3s (2g EPA/DHA) can support blood sugar and reduce inflammation, but they're secondary to food choices. I've seen berberine help lower A1C by 0.5–1.0 points in clients managing diabetes. Medications such as GLP-1 agonists (semaglutide) produce 15–20% body weight loss but work best combined with habit changes from my book The CFP Method. Never start without medical supervision.
Cutting inflammatory foods—processed sugars, seed oils, and refined carbs—delivers the biggest wins. Replace them with olive oil, fatty fish, berries, and leafy greens. Clients report 30–50% reduction in joint pain within 4 weeks, making movement easier. This isn't extreme elimination; it's strategic swaps that calm hormonal fluctuations common in perimenopause.
Intermittent Fasting: What Works for Beginners
Intermittent fasting (IF) using a 16:8 window (eat between 10am–6pm) improves insulin sensitivity and simplifies calorie control. Start with 12:12 if 16 hours feels overwhelming. In my practice, women over 45 lose 1–2 pounds weekly with IF when they focus on ending their eating window 3 hours before bed. Avoid IF if you have blood pressure medications that cause dizziness—consult your doctor first.
What to Track and How to Measure Progress Beyond the Scale
Track these four metrics weekly: fasting blood glucose (aim under 100 mg/dL), waist circumference (target 4–6 inch loss in 12 weeks), daily energy levels (1–10 scale), and photos in the same lighting. Use a free app like MyFitnessPal for food and a simple tape measure for waist. Weigh yourself once weekly, but remember the scale often stalls while fat loss continues—trust measurements and how your clothes fit. In The CFP Method, I teach the 80/20 rule: 80% results come from consistent tracking of these markers, not perfection. Most clients see blood pressure drop 10–15 points and report better diabetes management within 8 weeks. Progress isn't linear; celebrate non-scale victories to stay motivated when hormonal shifts slow results.