My Carnivore Journey: From Failed Diets to Real Healing
After years of yo-yo dieting, joint pain, rising blood sugar, and hormonal shifts in my late 40s, I finally found lasting success with a carnivore approach. What made the difference wasn't just eating only animal foods—it was learning to track the right metrics and measure progress beyond the bathroom scale. In my book The CFP Reset, I outline this exact system that helps thousands move past the frustration of conflicting nutrition advice.
The carnivore diet eliminates plant-based irritants that often drive inflammation. Within weeks, many notice reduced joint discomfort, steadier energy, and better blood pressure control. For those managing diabetes alongside weight issues, this can be transformative when done correctly.
What to Track: The Essential Metrics
Don't just weigh yourself. Track these four key areas weekly:
- Body Composition: Use a smart scale or tape measure for waist circumference, not just pounds. Aim to lose 0.5–1% of body weight per week to preserve muscle.
- Inflammation Markers: Monitor morning resting heart rate (should drop 5–10 bpm), joint pain on a 1–10 scale, and how clothes fit around the midsection.
- Blood Work: Every 8–12 weeks check fasting insulin, HbA1c, CRP, and lipid panel. Many see fasting glucose drop 20–30 points in the first month.
- Digestive and Energy Logs: Note bowel movement regularity, bloating levels, and energy crashes. True healing shows as consistent 7–9 hours of deep sleep.
How to Measure Progress Without the Scale Obsession
Progress on carnivore isn't linear. In The CFP Reset I teach the “Four Pillar Score”—a simple 1–10 rating across energy, pain, cravings, and clothing fit. Most beginners see their score rise from 3/10 to 8/10 within 90 days.
Take front, side, and back photos every 30 days in the same lighting. Measure key circumferences: waist at navel, hips, and thighs. A shrinking waist while weight stays stable often signals fat loss and muscle gain. For those with insurance that won't cover programs, these at-home measurements become your free progress report.
Expect an adaptation phase of 2–4 weeks with possible fatigue. Once fat-adapted, most report mental clarity and reduced hunger. If joint pain makes movement hard, start with 10-minute daily walks—carnivore often reduces inflammation enough to make gentle exercise sustainable.
Common Pitfalls and How to Stay Consistent
Many fail by not eating enough fat initially. Target 1.5–2 grams of protein per pound of ideal body weight and fill the rest with fatty cuts like ribeye or ground beef with 20% fat. Electrolytes matter: aim for 4000–5000mg sodium daily, especially first month, to avoid “carnivore flu.”
Time your meals to fit your schedule—no complex plans needed. Most thrive on two meals daily. Re-test blood work at 3 and 6 months to show your doctor concrete improvements in blood pressure and glucose. This approach has helped people in their 40s and 50s reverse prediabetes and shed stubborn midlife weight when nothing else worked.
Start simple. Commit 30 days, track the metrics above, and let your body show you the results. Healing is possible when you measure what actually matters.