• Diets suck. I chose a different path and it worked. I designed a system, not a diet. By partnering with AI and using a little metabolic math, I lost the weight with less struggle then I had in the past. Here is the five-step system I used. I decided what an ideal weight was (or…

  • The American obesity epidemic is not the result of a sudden, collective loss of willpower among the populace. It is the predictable outcome of a system designed to maximize consumption. When the deck is stacked with $14 billion in marketing, foods engineered to “vanish” in the mouth, labels that allow for a 20% error, and…

  • How to Track Macros: A Beginner’s Guide to Consistency

    Make it easy, keep it easy, make sure the data is put to use (but keep it easy!) Most people quit tracking macros within two weeks because they treat it like a math exam. In 2026, tracking is no longer about manual data entry; it is about Nutrition Navigation. If you are new to this,…

  • How to track food consistently

    Most of us start tracking our food for the same reasons: we want control over our health, we are chasing a physical transformation, or we simply want to understand what we are actually putting in our bodies. Yet, for 50% of us, the habit collapses by the second week. This isn’t a lack of willpower;…

  • The “Future Self” Formula: A Smarter Way to Track Nutrition Nutrition plans, or diets, are often built on a scorecard mentality. You track what you ate, the app tells you that you went over your limit, and you’re left feeling like you failed. It’s a reactive system that records your “bad days” without giving you…

  • The Science of Success: Frictionless Tracking

    Understanding your macronutrient and caloric intake is the absolute baseline for achieving health goals. Yet, the high friction and inaccurate databases of legacy tracking apps are actively sabotaging user success.2024-2025 consumer data. Sources detailed below 78% More likely to lose weight Higher success rate in weight loss goals for active macro trackers. 65% of people…

  • Why do calories not add up to the macros?

    Is this company lying? Can I not do basic multiplication? What is going on? Recently, a member shared a perfect example of this non-intuitive experience: A protein bar listed 6g Fat, 24g Carbs, and 20g Protein. Using standard nutritional math, that bar should have roughly 230 calories. But the label proudly declared: 170 Calories. The…