What Does "Fat but Fit" Really Mean?
I've spent decades helping people in their 40s and 50s reclaim their health after years of failed diets. The idea of being fat but fit suggests you can carry significant excess weight yet maintain good cardiovascular fitness through regular activity. While some markers like blood pressure or cholesterol may look normal, the underlying reality is more complex—especially for those managing diabetes, blood pressure, and hormonal changes.
Carrying extra fat, particularly visceral fat around organs, creates chronic low-grade inflammation. This directly disrupts your metabolism, slowing calorie burn at rest. Studies show individuals with obesity but high fitness levels still face elevated risks compared to those at a healthy weight, even if they can run a 5K.
How Excess Weight Affects Your Metabolism
Your metabolism isn't just about calories in and out—it's governed by hormonal signals. Excess adipose tissue releases free fatty acids and adipokines that impair mitochondrial function in muscle cells. For middle-aged adults, this often compounds with age-related decline: after 45, basal metabolic rate drops about 2-3% per decade.
In my approach detailed in the CFP Weight Loss method, we focus on restoring metabolic flexibility. Clients with joint pain who thought exercise was impossible discover that low-impact, consistent movement combined with targeted nutrition can improve resting energy expenditure by 15-20% within 12 weeks. This isn't another restrictive diet—it's sustainable change that addresses why previous attempts failed.
The Critical Link Between Body Fat and Insulin Levels
Insulin resistance develops when cells stop responding efficiently to insulin, forcing the pancreas to produce more. Visceral fat is a primary driver: it can increase fasting insulin levels by 20-50% even in active individuals. For those with hormonal changes in perimenopause or andropause, this effect intensifies, making weight loss feel impossible.
Elevated insulin promotes fat storage, particularly around the midsection, creating a vicious cycle. My clients often see their fasting insulin drop from over 15 μU/mL to under 8 μU/mL within months by focusing on real-food meals that stabilize blood sugar—no complicated meal plans required. This directly improves energy, reduces joint inflammation, and helps manage blood pressure and diabetes markers without relying on insurance-covered programs.
Practical Steps to Improve Metabolic Health Regardless of Starting Point
Don't let embarrassment about obesity stop you from seeking help. Start with 10-15 minute daily walks to protect joints while building momentum. Prioritize protein (aim for 1.2g per kg of ideal body weight) and fiber-rich vegetables to improve insulin sensitivity by up to 30%. Track waist circumference rather than just scale weight—losing 2-3 inches often signals better metabolic health before major weight drops.
The CFP Weight Loss framework emphasizes consistency over perfection. By addressing the real drivers of metabolic slowdown and insulin resistance, most clients in their mid-40s to mid-50s experience renewed energy and easier weight management without gym schedules that don't fit their lives. True fitness includes metabolic fitness, and that's achievable at any starting size when you use the right approach.