My Personal Journey Reversing Insulin Resistance
At 49, I was stuck in the cycle so many of you describe: failed diets, creeping weight despite “eating clean,” rising blood pressure, and an A1C that edged toward prediabetes. My fasting insulin was 18 uIU/mL—well above the optimal 5-8 range. Joint pain made movement feel impossible, and hormonal shifts in perimenopause made every pound harder to lose. Within 6–8 months I reversed insulin resistance, dropping fasting insulin to 6 uIU/mL, losing 38 pounds, and regaining energy without extreme measures. Here’s exactly how I did it using the CFP Weight Loss framework.
The Core Strategy: Targeted Nutrition and Timing
I stopped chasing calorie deficits that wrecked my metabolism. Instead, I focused on insulin sensitivity through a moderate-protein, lower-carb approach rich in fiber and healthy fats. Daily meals centered on 25–35 grams of protein per meal, non-starchy vegetables, and 1–2 servings of berries or apples. I eliminated added sugars and refined grains that spiked glucose. Using the 16:8 time-restricted eating window from my book Metabolic Reset, I ate between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. This simple change lowered average daily insulin output by nearly 40% according to my continuous glucose monitor data.
Movement That Worked With My Joints and Schedule
Because joint pain made traditional exercise unbearable, I began with 20-minute daily walks after meals—the single most effective way to blunt postprandial glucose spikes. By month three I added resistance-band strength training twice weekly, focusing on major muscle groups. Building muscle directly improves metabolism because muscle tissue is the primary site of glucose disposal. I tracked steps (aiming for 7,000 daily) rather than punishing gym sessions, fitting everything into a busy middle-income schedule without expensive equipment or memberships insurance wouldn’t cover.
Measuring Progress: Insulin, Metabolism, and Body Composition
By month four my fasting insulin fell to 9 uIU/mL; by month eight it stabilized at 6. Resting metabolic rate, measured via indirect calorimetry at a local clinic, increased by 180 calories per day. Morning glucose dropped from 112 mg/dL to 88 mg/dL. Most importantly, I lost primarily fat while preserving muscle—exactly what we teach in CFP Weight Loss. Blood pressure normalized without extra medication, joint pain decreased, and energy returned. The key insight: lowering chronic insulin levels unlocked fat burning that diets alone never achieved.
Practical Steps You Can Start Today
1. Get a baseline fasting insulin and glucose test—most labs run this for under $50 out-of-pocket. 2. Adopt a 12–14 hour overnight fast, gradually moving to 16:8. 3. Prioritize protein (aim 1.2 g per kg ideal body weight) and walk 10–15 minutes after each meal. 4. Strength train twice weekly even if it’s bodyweight or bands. 5. Track waist circumference weekly; it reflects visceral fat loss faster than the scale. These steps work for busy 45–54-year-olds managing diabetes risk, hormonal changes, and previous diet failures. Consistency over perfection produced results I never thought possible.