Dear readers,
Last month, I introduced our new continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) program and explained how it can uncover the hidden reasons behind weight loss plateaus.
Since then, many of our patients have started using CGM, and the most common response I hear is:
“I had no idea my body was reacting like this.”
That’s exactly the point. A CGM doesn’t just give you numbers. It tells a story. And when you know how to read that story, everything changes.
The Biggest Mistake: Collecting Data Without Knowing What It Means
Wearing a CGM is the easy part. Interpreting it correctly is where most people go wrong.
Seeing a spike to 140 or 160 mg/dL can feel alarming but is it actually a problem?
Sometimes yes. Sometimes no.
What matters is context:
- How quickly did your glucose rise?
- How long did it stay elevated?
- How did you feel afterward?
- What else was happening—stress, poor sleep, exercise?
Without proper interpretation, data becomes noise.
That’s why in our program, the CGM is only half the equation. The real value comes from understanding why your body is responding the way it is—and what to do about it.
What We’re Seeing in Real Patients
After reviewing multiple CGM reports with our patients, clear patterns are emerging:
1. “Healthy” Foods That Aren’t Working
Many patients are surprised to learn that foods like:
- Oatmeal
- Smoothies
- Granola
- Even certain fruits
…are causing significant glucose spikes that keep them in fat-storage mode for hours.
These aren’t “bad” foods universally, but they may not be right for your metabolism.
2. The Protein Gap
One of the most consistent issues we see is not enough protein early in the day.
When breakfast is carb-heavy:
- Glucose spikes quickly
- Energy crashes follow
- Hunger returns within hours
When we shift patients to a protein-forward breakfast:
- Glucose stays stable
- Cravings drop significantly
- Fat burning improves
3. The Hidden Impact of Stress
Some of the highest glucose readings we see have nothing to do with food.
We’ve had patients spike to 130–150 mg/dL:
- During poor sleep
- After a stressful meeting
- Even in the middle of the night
This is driven by cortisol, not diet. If we don’t address stress and sleep, weight loss will always feel like an uphill battle.
4. Exercise Isn’t Always Doing What You Think
Not all workouts lower glucose.
In some patients:
- High-intensity workouts spike glucose temporarily
- Fasted cardio increases stress hormones
- Poor recovery keeps glucose elevated longer
This doesn’t mean exercise is bad; it means it needs to be timed and structured correctly for your body.
The Shift: From Guessing to Precision
Before CGM:
- You follow general advice
- You hope it works
- You blame yourself when it doesn’t
After CGM:
- You see exactly what’s happening
- You understand your body’s patterns
- You make targeted, effective changes
This is where real transformation happens, not from doing more but from doing what actually works for you.
What Makes Our Program Different
There are now many ways to get a CGM, but most people are left trying to interpret the data on their own. That’s where patients get stuck.
At The Gajer Practice, we go deeper.
When you work with Troy, you’ll walk away with:
- A clear list of your personal trigger foods
- Specific meal structure recommendations
- Guidance on protein, timing, and food order
- Insight into how stress and sleep are affecting your metabolism
- A plan you can actually follow long-term
This isn’t just data. It’s a strategy.
Who This Helps the Most (After Month One)
After seeing the first wave of patients go through the program, this is who benefits the most:
- Patients stuck despite doing “everything right”
- Those on GLP-1 medications who want to maximize results
- Patients struggling with cravings or energy crashes
- Anyone with insulin resistance, PCOS, or metabolic syndrome
- High performers dealing with stress-driven weight retention
If you’ve ever thought, “I feel like I’m missing something”, you probably are.
And CGM helps us find it.
A Simple Example of What This Looks Like
One of our patients came in frustrated after months of stalled progress.
She was:
- Eating “clean”
- Exercising consistently
- Tracking everything
Her CGM revealed:
- Large glucose spikes after her morning smoothie
- Midday crashes leading to snacking
- Elevated overnight glucose due to poor sleep
We made three changes:
- Switched to a protein-based breakfast
- Adjusted meal timing
- Addressed sleep habits
Within weeks:
- Cravings dropped
- Energy stabilized
- Weight loss resumed
No extreme dieting. No more guesswork.
Your Next Step
If you’ve been reading this and thinking, “I need to see what my body is doing.”
This is your sign. The sooner you understand your metabolic patterns, the sooner you can start making progress again.
To get started:
Call our office at 703-666-4144 or schedule a CGM consultation with Troy.
Final Thought
Your body is not broken. It’s responding exactly the way it’s been programmed to. A CGM simply shows you the program. And once you can see it, you can change it.
Dr. Aleksandra Gajer
Founder, The Gajer Practice | Burke, Virginia
Board-Certified Physician | Functional & Performance Medicine