Round 2, Day 23 – When Progress Pauses, Learn and then Move Forward

Waking up after another 8 hours of great sleep feels amazing—but the scale didn’t move. For the third day in a row, my weight stayed exactly the same. I’ve hit a plateau, and that means it’s time to change things up. When your body stops responding, you don’t give up—you apply what has worked in the past.

In my case, that is breaking the diet for 2 days.

⚖️ Daily Progress:

Here’s how I’m doing today.

Weight Loss

DateWeight (lbs)
Weight Goal176.4 (80.0 kg)
8 May 2025 – Worst day207.2 (94 kg)
10 May 2025 – Day 1203.5 (92.3 kg)
16 May 2025 – Week 1198.2 (89.9 kg)
23 May 2025 – Week 2195.3 (88.6 kg)
30 May 2025 – Week 3192.5 (87.3 kg)
31 May 2025 – Day 22192.5 (87.3 kg)
1 June 2025 – Day 23192.5 (87.3 kg)

📉 Today’s Change: -0 lbs (0 kg)
📉 Total Loss (in 23 days): -14.7 lbs (-6.7 kg)
📉 Average Loss Per Day: -0.64 lbs (-0.29 kg)

Even though I ran out of food early last night, I stuck with my One Food A Day (OFAD) plan and didn’t break protocol. Still, the scale didn’t reward me. That’s three days at the same weight. It’s official—I’ve plateaued.

So I’m adjusting. Today and tomorrow are break days. I’m going to test something new: if my weight stalls for two days, I’ll step off the diet for one or two days, then return. It’s a tactical reset—not a failure. I replaced the word “failure” with “learning” in my vocabulary years ago—and that single shift has made all the difference in my life.

Blood Pressure (BP)

DateBP – Before Food
(Best of 3)
BP – Before Food
(Worst of 3)
Average
BP Goal120/80
12 Apr / 24 Apr 25 – Worst days134/86161/88
147.5/87
10 May 25 – Day 1151/86168/88159.5/87
16 May 25 – Wk 1133/83150/94141.5/88.5
23 May 20 – Wk 2125/86134/88129.5/87
30 May 25 – Wk 3132/79138/81135/80
31 May 25 – Day 22120/83134/81127/82
1 Jun 25 – Day 23134/82139/93136.5/87.5

💪 Today’s Systolic Change (1st number): +9.5
💪 Today’s Diastolic Change (2nd number): +5.5

Still sitting safely in the normal range—as expected with zero carbs. This is the power of consistency. Even when weight stalls, glucose holds. It’s one less variable to worry about.

Blood Glucose

DateBlood Glucose – Before Food
(mmol/L)
Blood Glucose Goal4.2
23 Apr 2025 – Worst day7.4
10 May 2025 – Day 16.4
17 May 2025 – Week 14.4
23 May 2025 – Week 25.3
24 May 2025 – Week 34.4
31 May 2025 – Day 224.7
1 June 2025 – Day 234.6

📊 Today’s Change: +3 mmol/L
📊 Days in Normal Range (3.9–5.6 mmol/L): 13 out of 23

No carbs = calm glucose

Still sitting safely in the normal range—as expected with zero carbs. This is thpower of consistency. Even when weight stalls, glucose holds. It’s one less variable to worry about.

Sticking to the plan means adjusting the plan

The body is smart. When it stalls, it’s telling you something. And my job isn’t to get frustrated—it’s to listen, adapt, and keep going.

I’ve learned that plateaus are part of the process, not signs to quit. If I respond well now, I’ll stay in control later. That’s what health really is: a flexible, thoughtful discipline.

Don’t Fight the Plateau—Flow Through It

If you hit a wall, don’t panic. Don’t double down. Instead:

Pause. Pivot. Then press forward with purpose.

Your body will fight change—it’s built for stability. But your success lies in being smarter than that resistance. When progress stalls, change the rhythm. Breaks are not backslides—they’re part of the climb.

Let’s keep learning how to listen to what our bodies are really saying.

See You Tomorrow! 😊

Warmly,
Paul

Share your love
Paul Snodgrass
Paul Snodgrass

Helping people is what lights me up. I’m a curious soul who loves diving into new ideas, uncovering hidden gems of knowledge and sharing what I find. Sometimes, my scientific side takes over, and I overthink things. But I’ve got a creative streak too. There’s an artist in me who loves to dream big and imagine the possibilities. But at my core, if I had to use one word to describe myself—it would be Engineer. I like to build things—whether it’s ideas, solutions, or meaningful connections. So let’s explore, learn, and grow together. I promise to keep it real, keep it fun, and always keep it supportive.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *