Understanding the Right Way to Intermittent Fasting
As the founder of CFP Weight Loss and author of The CFP Method, I've helped thousands of adults in their 40s and 50s lose weight despite hormonal changes, joint pain, and previous diet failures. The right way to intermittent fasting isn't about extreme restriction—it's about creating sustainable eating windows that align with your body's natural rhythms while managing blood sugar and insulin levels.
For beginners managing diabetes or high blood pressure, start with a gentle 12/12 schedule (12 hours fasting, 12 hours eating) and gradually move to 16/8. This approach minimizes stress on your system and supports steady fat loss without the rebound weight gain you've experienced before.
What to Track During Your Fasting Journey
Successful practitioners track four key categories daily. First, monitor your fasting blood glucose levels each morning using an affordable glucometer—aim to keep fasting readings between 70-100 mg/dL. Second, record your energy levels, mood, and joint pain on a 1-10 scale in a simple notebook or app.
Third, log your actual eating window times and food choices, focusing on protein-rich meals (aim for 25-30g per meal) with plenty of fiber to stabilize blood sugar. Finally, measure your sleep quality and stress levels, as poor sleep can sabotage hormonal balance during menopause or andropause. Skip complicated calorie counting; instead focus on these practical markers that reveal what's truly working for your body.
How to Measure Real Progress Beyond the Scale
The scale often lies, especially when hormonal shifts cause water retention. Instead, take waist circumference measurements weekly at the same time of day—look for 1-2 inch losses per month as a strong indicator of visceral fat reduction. Track how your clothes fit and take progress photos in the same lighting every two weeks.
Monitor non-scale victories like reduced joint pain during daily walks, stabilized blood pressure readings, or needing less diabetes medication under your doctor's guidance. In The CFP Method, I emphasize the "Energy Score"—a composite of your average daily energy, hunger control, and mental clarity. When this score rises consistently, you're making genuine metabolic progress even if the scale moves slowly.
Common Pitfalls and How to Stay Consistent
Avoid breaking your fast with sugary foods or overeating during your window, which spikes insulin and negates benefits. Stay hydrated with water, black coffee, or herbal tea during fasting periods. If joint pain makes movement difficult, begin with gentle 10-minute walks after your eating window rather than intense gym sessions.
Review your tracked data every Sunday to adjust your fasting window or meal composition. Most middle-income adults following this structured approach in our program see sustainable 1-2 pounds of fat loss weekly without expensive programs or complex plans. The key is consistency over perfection—small daily habits compound into transformative health changes.