What Exactly Makes a Diet Paleo?
As the founder of CFP Weight Loss and author of The CFP Method, I often hear from adults over 45 struggling with stubborn weight, joint pain, and blood sugar swings. A paleo diet focuses on whole foods our ancestors ate: vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds, quality meats, fish, and healthy fats while excluding grains, legumes, dairy, refined sugars, and processed oils. If your meals center on grilled salmon, leafy greens, berries, and avocado but skip bread, pasta, and cheese, you are likely following paleo principles. However, many “almost paleo” versions sneak in coffee, dark chocolate, or occasional rice—track your intake for seven days to confirm alignment.
The Paleo-Gut Health Connection
Your gut microbiome houses trillions of bacteria that influence digestion, immunity, and even mood. Paleo eating removes common gut irritants like gluten and lectins found in grains and legumes. In my clinical observations, clients see measurable improvements in bloating and regularity within 21 days when they adopt strict paleo. Diverse plant intake—aim for 30 different plants weekly—feeds beneficial bacteria, increasing short-chain fatty acid production that strengthens the intestinal lining. This is crucial for those managing diabetes or high blood pressure, as a healthier gut improves insulin sensitivity by up to 25% according to metabolic studies.
How Paleo Lowers Inflammation and Supports Weight Loss
Chronic inflammation drives hormonal weight gain after 40, making joints ache and diets fail. Paleo naturally eliminates pro-inflammatory foods like industrial seed oils and added sugars. Instead, it supplies omega-3s from wild fish and polyphenols from colorful produce that down-regulate inflammatory cytokines. In The CFP Method, I emphasize pairing paleo templates with time-restricted eating windows of 10-12 hours to further calm systemic inflammation. Clients report 8-15 pounds lost in the first six weeks without calorie counting, while joint pain decreases enough to make daily walks enjoyable again. For middle-income families, focus on affordable staples: eggs, frozen berries, cabbage, carrots, and ground turkey.
Practical Steps to Make Paleo Work for You
Start simple to avoid overwhelm. Replace breakfast cereal with scrambled eggs and spinach. Swap sandwich bread for lettuce wraps. Batch-cook proteins on weekends so busy schedules don’t derail you. Monitor progress with a symptom journal noting energy, joint comfort, and waist measurements. If insurance won’t cover programs, this approach costs less than $12 daily. Consistency beats perfection—80% adherence still yields significant gut repair and inflammation reduction. When you reduce inflammatory load, your body finally releases stored fat, especially around the midsection affected by hormonal changes.