My Carnivore Journey: From Chronic Pain to Renewed Vitality

At 48, I carried 65 extra pounds, battled constant joint pain, rising A1C levels, and blood pressure that worried my doctor. Every diet I tried failed within weeks. My breakthrough came when I committed to a strict carnivore diet—eating only animal foods. Within three months I dropped 38 pounds, my joint pain vanished, and my fasting glucose normalized. This isn’t theory; it’s the exact path I detail in my book The CFP Reset.

Best Practices That Delivered Real Results

Start with a 30-day strict elimination: ribeye, ground beef, eggs, butter, beef tallow, and salt. I ate 2.2 pounds of fatty meat daily, roughly 2,400 calories, prioritizing nose-to-tail. Bone broth and liver twice weekly supplied micronutrients many beginners miss. Hydration is critical—aim for 3–4 liters of water with electrolytes (sodium 5–7g, potassium 3–4g daily). Track your ketone levels and blood glucose the first 60 days using a simple meter; I saw my morning glucose drop from 118 to 92 mg/dL. Walk 20–30 minutes daily instead of intense exercise—my inflamed knees couldn’t handle more at first. Sleep 8 hours; poor sleep stalls fat loss on any plan.

Common Mistakes That Sabotage Progress

The biggest error is “dirty carnivore”—adding cheese, nuts, or coffee. I did this in month two and regained 7 pounds while joint swelling returned. Another mistake is under-eating fat. Many women fear calories and stall; I needed 70–75% calories from fat to stay satiated and keep hormones balanced. Skipping electrolytes caused “carnivore flu” headaches for two weeks until I corrected it. Finally, expecting overnight miracles. My hormonal weight loss accelerated only after week 6 when inflammation dropped. Impatience leads most to quit before metabolic healing occurs.

Long-Term Maintenance and Monitoring

After six months I reintroduced small amounts of low-toxin plants only to confirm they triggered symptoms. Most of my patients in the CFP program thrive long-term by cycling higher-fat cuts during plateaus. Monitor bloodwork at 3, 6, and 12 months—my CRP inflammation marker fell 68%. If you have diabetes or hypertension, work with your physician; many reduce medications under supervision. The carnivore approach simplified everything—no calorie counting, no meal prepping for hours. For middle-income families it actually cut grocery bills by focusing on bulk beef and eggs. My energy is steady, clothes fit, and I no longer feel embarrassed at doctor visits. The key is consistency and listening to your body’s signals rather than internet noise.