My Personal 1-Year Zepbound Journey

I openly share that after struggling with hormonal changes in my late 40s, joint pain that made movement feel impossible, and repeated diet failures, I turned to Zepbound. One year later, I lost 87 pounds, reversed my type 2 diabetes markers, and dropped my blood pressure medication entirely. This wasn't magic—it came from consistent tracking using the exact systems I now teach in my book, The CFP Metabolic Reset.

Zepbound (tirzepatide) helped quiet the constant hunger signals that sabotaged every previous attempt. My average daily calories naturally settled around 1,650 without feeling deprived. Energy returned within six weeks, and by month four my A1C had fallen from 7.8 to 5.4. Most importantly, the joint pain that once kept me from walking more than 10 minutes vanished, allowing me to build sustainable movement habits.

What to Track Beyond the Scale

The scale tells only part of the story. I recommend tracking five key metrics weekly. First, body composition: use a smart scale or DEXA scan every 90 days to monitor fat loss versus muscle. I preserved 94% of my lean mass by hitting 110 grams of protein daily. Second, fasting blood glucose and A1C—mine improved dramatically by month three. Third, waist circumference; I lost 11 inches, a far better heart health indicator than weight alone. Fourth, energy and mood logs using a simple 1-10 scale in my CFP app. Finally, inflammation markers via hs-CRP bloodwork every six months.

For beginners managing diabetes and blood pressure alongside weight, these measurements provide the objective proof that motivates when the scale stalls—as it will for 2-3 weeks at a time.

How to Measure Progress Using the CFP Method

My methodology in The CFP Metabolic Reset focuses on three non-scale victories that predict long-term success. Measure your medication reduction with your doctor—by month nine I was off two prescriptions. Track functional fitness: I went from being unable to do a single push-up to completing 3 sets of 12. Most powerfully, measure consistency streaks: I logged 312 consecutive days of 10,000 steps after the initial fatigue lifted.

Use a simple weekly review: photograph your face and midsection in the same lighting, record how your clothes fit, and note any new activities you can now enjoy. Insurance rarely covers these medications long-term, so building these habits ensures you maintain results even if access changes.

Realistic Expectations and Next Steps

Year one of Zepbound brought incredible changes, but it also taught me the importance of pairing the medication with behavior change. Average users in my community lose 15-22% of body weight in 12 months when following structured tracking. The real victory isn't just the number on the scale—it's regaining control over metabolic health while managing the hormonal shifts of our age group. Start small: pick two metrics this week, whether fasting glucose or weekly measurements, and build from there. The data will guide you when motivation fades.