164: Food over Fitness:  The Truth about Fat Loss

164: Food over Fitness: The Truth about Fat Loss

Author: Dr. Steve Hughlett January 5, 2026 Duration: 41:26

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In this episode, Dr. Steve explains why losing fat and getting healthy is driven far more by the food you eat than by time in the gym. He breaks down how insulin controls whether your body stores fat or burns it, and why keeping insulin low is the real key to weight loss, more energy, and reversing type 2 diabetes. You'll learn why sugar, flour, and man‑made processed foods are wrecking your health, and how simple low‑carb, whole‑food swaps can help you finally tap into your fat stores for fuel.

Dr. Steve also talks about why most "eat less and exercise more" advice fails, what insulin resistance really is, and how to know if you're drifting toward prediabetes and organ damage. He gives practical, realistic first steps so overwhelmed men and women can start changing their health without restrictive diets or long workouts, just by changing what's on their plate.


Main Talking Points

  • Getting healthy and losing weight has very little to do with exercise and almost everything to do with the food you eat.

  • If you are obese and not already working out, intense exercise is the last place to start; focus on food first.

  • Exercise is good for the body, but it has strict limits for fat loss because you rarely burn through stored glucose to reach your fat stores.

  • The "eat less calories and exercise more" message fails because fat loss is not about calories; it is about the source of those calories.


How Your Body Burns Energy

  • The body can run on two main fuels: glucose and fat, and it always uses what is already in the blood first.

  • Glucose in the blood triggers insulin, which lowers blood sugar but also decides whether you store fat or burn it.

  • You have about 2,400 calories of stored glucose but 4,000 calories in just 1 pound of fat, showing that fat is meant to be your primary fuel.

  • One pound of extra fat is like a huge "battery" you never reach if insulin stays high from constant carbohydrate intake.


Insulin, Fat Storage, and Diabetes

  • There is only one thing that puts fat into your fat cells and one thing that lets it out, and that is insulin.

  • High insulin levels force your liver to turn glucose into triglycerides and store them as fat, making you gain weight.

  • When insulin levels are low, your body is forced to burn fat out of your fat cells for energy and cannot store fat.

  • Insulin resistance is not "broken insulin"; it is fat cells so full of triglycerides that they cannot store any more.

  • Pre-diabetes is a long phase where insulin is high but glucose is still normal because you still have fat cells left to fill.

  • True type 2 diabetes appears when insulin has been high for years, all fat cells are full, and blood glucose finally climbs.

  • Focusing only on lowering glucose with medications often makes diabetes worse by pushing more fat into already full cells.

  • The real root cause of type 2 diabetes is insulin resistance from years of excess glucose intake, not a simple "glucose problem."


Warning Signs You're in Trouble

  • On a cholesterol panel, high triglycerides and low HDL are the real red flags for cardiovascular disease risk.

  • If your triglycerides are more than twice your HDL, you are likely causing organ and blood vessel damage and sliding into prediabetes.

  • Measure your waist at the level of your belly button; if that number is more than half your height, you are likely storing dangerous organ fat.

  • A large waist relative to height is a strong clue that you are already on the diabetes path and need to change quickly.


The Role of Stress and Glucose

  • Stress raises cortisol, which tells your liver to dump stored glucose into your blood for "fight or flight" energy.

  • When stress ends, glucose and insulin should drop, and your body should go back to burning fat for fuel.

  • The other way blood glucose rises is by eating it, especially from carbohydrate-heavy, plant-based and processed foods.

  • Rather than focusing on pushing glucose down, focus on not putting so much glucose into your blood in the first place.


Food Categories: Animal, Plant, Chemical

  • Animal-based foods (meat, eggs, cheese, full-fat dairy, fish, pork) provide protein and fat without spiking insulin.

  • Plant-based foods are built from carbohydrates, and their basic building block is glucose, though some have more than others.

  • Plants that grow below the ground (like potatoes) are starch-heavy and packed with glucose, while many above-ground vegetables have less.

  • It is possible to live a healthy life without plant-based foods, but if you eat them, you must be careful with quantity and type.

  • Chemical-based foods (man-made, ultra-processed foods from boxes, bags, bottles, and cans) are full of chemicals and seed oils.

  • These man-made foods are foreign to the body, highly inflammatory, and designed to keep you hungry and overeating.

  • Shopping mainly around the outside edge of the grocery store helps you stick to real meats, real vegetables, real fruits, and full-fat dairy.

  • Avoiding man-made foods reduces toxins and inflammation while helping keep insulin levels down.


The Big Lies About Fat and Glucose

  • One deadly lie is that "eating fat makes you fat," even though fat does not increase insulin levels.

  • Protein raises insulin only a tiny bit, while carbohydrates (glucose) raise insulin strongly and drive fat storage.

  • Another lie is that "glucose is your preferred energy source," despite the body storing far more energy as fat than as glucose.

  • Fat is a cleaner, more efficient fuel and is what the body was designed to use for daily energy, with glucose reserved mostly for emergencies.


Why Modern Diet Advice Fails

  • Food and drug companies profit from pushing high-carb, low-fat guidelines and more medications.

  • Many people born after the 1980s grew up under these guidelines and are heavier and sicker than previous generations.

  • Diabetic medications usually target blood glucose, not insulin resistance, so they treat the symptom instead of the cause.

  • Some drugs make the pancreas pump out more insulin or make cells more sensitive to insulin, which simply stores more fat and delays the problem.


Practical First Steps (Simple, Not Restrictive)

  • The goal is not restrictive diets or long workouts but small, daily food habits you can do almost without thinking.

  • Today can be your real "Day One" simply by reassessing every bite you put in your mouth.

  • Many people fail not because they lack willpower but because they start with huge, overwhelming goals instead of small, doable ones.

  • Think in terms of tiny, repeatable habits—like brushing your teeth—that you can stick with every day.


Key Food Swaps and Meal Ideas

  • If you love Mexican food, keep the meat, cheese, lettuce, and vegetables but skip the chips and shells.

  • For fajitas, order extra meat and vegetables and eat it without tortillas or chips.

  • When ordering a hamburger, load it with cheese, bacon, mushrooms, and even an egg, but skip the bun and fries.

  • Replace fries or pasta sides with options like buttered broccoli to keep insulin levels low and meals satisfying.

  • For lasagna, leave out the noodles and use layers of deli chicken or turkey instead to cut out the flour.

  • Avoid most fried foods at restaurants because they are usually cooked in toxic seed oils that cause inflammation.

  • Look for places that cook with animal fats like tallow or lard if you want fried foods more safely.

  • Building meals around animal-based proteins and fats helps keep insulin low and hunger steady for hours.


The Two Biggest Food Villains

  • Sugar is a mix of glucose and fructose; fructose is toxic to the body, and glucose drives insulin up and fat storage.

  • Flour is basically powdered glucose, and everything made from it (bread, pasta, pizza crust, crackers, cookies, donuts) spikes insulin.

  • Sugary drinks like soda, fruit juice, smoothies, and many energy drinks are essentially liquid glucose that hit the bloodstream quickly.

  • Liquid sugar spikes insulin fast and high, which is why cutting out soda alone often leads to surprising weight loss.

  • Man-made foods are usually built from sugar, high fructose corn syrup, refined grains, and seed oils, a perfect storm for weight gain.

  • Most boxed, bagged, and bottled foods are designed to keep you craving more by rapidly raising and then dropping your blood sugar.

  • Focus first on eliminating sugary drinks and flour-based foods, then replace them with simple animal-based options and water.

  • As insulin comes down, you begin burning stored fat for energy and naturally feel less hungry and more energized.


Building New Habits and Mindset

  • This process is not about perfection; it is about consistency and learning from small slip-ups.

  • When you "fall off," do not beat yourself up; treat it as a speed bump, not a dead end, and get right back on track at the next meal.

  • Your goal is to be smarter, not tougher—small, smart changes you can live with beat big, heroic changes you cannot sustain.

  • Think of health as giving your body nutrients (protein, fat, vitamins, minerals, water) and keeping toxins out (excess glucose, chemicals, seed oils).


Simple Action Steps to be Taken

  • Stop all sugar-sweetened beverages and replace them with water, unsweet tea, or unsweet coffee.

  • Eliminate foods made with flour: bread, pasta, pizza crust, crackers, cookies, and donuts.

  • Avoid man-made, ultra-processed foods in boxes, bags, bottles, and cans as much as possible.

  • Build most of your meals from animal-based foods like meat, eggs, cheese, full-fat dairy, and fish, with careful use of plant foods if desired.

If you want, the next step can be writing a short intro and outro script for this episode that speaks directly to overwhelmed 30–70 year olds who are tired, overweight, and ready for a simple low-carb, whole‑food plan.

  • "If this episode helped you, share it with a friend 

  • "To join the Thrive Natural Transformation course and get step-by-step help reversing type 2 diabetes, boosting energy, and getting off medications, visit drstevehughlett.com and click the 'Work With Us' tab."

  •  

    • If you'd like even more information on this topic, you can go to Amazon or Audible and pick up my book, Your Plate Is Your Fate.

      Check out our website: drstevehughlett.com

      You can also check us out on Youtube.

      Sign up for a FREE 15 minute Wellness Solutions Chat  to help you decide if you would like our help on your weight-loss journey.

      For more in-depth answers on how to lose weight the healthy way, how to decrease the need for medications, and how to eliminate diseases like type 2 diabetes, sign up for our FREE weekly Thrive Naturally Newsletter released every Thursday.

    • Disclaimer:  The information provided on this channel/podcast/publication is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for advice from your physician or other qualified healthcare provider. Always consult your doctor before making any changes to your diet, exercise routine, or medications.

       

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There’s a quiet revolution happening in how we think about health, one that questions whether a pill is always the answer. Nutrition Prescription: Wellness vs Medications explores that space where food and lifestyle intersect with conventional medicine. Hosted by Dr. Steve Hughlett, this podcast digs into real, practical strategies for building vitality that don’t rely on restrictive diets or costly supplement regimens. Each episode is built around actionable tips and genuine success stories from people who have navigated similar challenges. You’ll hear conversations focused on cultivating more natural energy and confidence, fundamentally shifting the approach from managing symptoms to fostering lasting health. It’s for anyone who feels stalled by their current routine, is curious about reducing reliance on medications under proper guidance, or simply wants a more balanced and informed relationship with food. The discussions steer clear of quick fixes, emphasizing instead sustainable habits and a deeper understanding of how nutrition acts as foundational medicine. Tune in for a grounded, evidence-informed perspective that makes holistic wellness feel accessible and practical, one meal and one mindful choice at a time.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 100

Nutrition Prescription: Wellness vs Medications
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