Building a Calmer Relationship With Food Using Your Body's Metabolic Data
Weight changes, energy dips, cravings, sleep disruption, brain fog, shifting hunger cues — in midlife, all of this can feel like your body turned against you. Metabolic data won't undo those changes, but used the right way, it can change how you relate to them.
How should I think about glucose and ketone numbers?
As information, not a scorecard. Women's health coach Amy Medling, creator of the Reset · Rebalance · Renew approach, puts it plainly:
“Metabolic data can be very helpful when it is used with the right mindset… I always encourage women to see glucose and ketone numbers as information, not a scorecard.”
That distinction matters. A scorecard implies pass or fail. Information just tells you something — and what it tells you is useful precisely because it's about your body, not a generic rule that's supposed to apply to everyone.
What can this data actually reveal about my needs?
Instead of following generic rules, testing can help you understand your own patterns — whether your body needs more protein, a different fasting rhythm, better sleep, less stress, more recovery, or a more nourishing approach overall. That's a more personal, more accurate way to make decisions than following advice built for someone else's body.
Does this change how I make food choices day to day?
It can. When choices come from feedback and awareness instead of fear or punishment, food decisions stop being about being “good” or “bad” and start being about what actually supports how you feel. That's a calmer place to make decisions from.
What's the end goal of using this data?
Not to become fixated on numbers. The goal is to use data as a tool for learning — so you build more trust in your own body and make choices that support your metabolic health, hormone balance, and long-term well-being.
Frequently asked
Is it normal to feel disconnected from my body during midlife hormonal changes?
Yes. Shifts in weight, energy, sleep, and hunger cues are common as hormones change, and they can make your body feel unpredictable — testing can help make sense of what's actually happening.
How do I avoid becoming overly focused on my numbers?
Treat readings as information to learn from, not a daily pass/fail score. Look for patterns over time rather than reacting to any single result.
Can this data really change my relationship with food?
For many women, yes — because decisions based on feedback and self-understanding feel very different from decisions based on fear or restriction.
Ready to start understanding
your own patterns?
Track your ketones and glucose with a BKT blood ketone meter — and start reading your body as feedback, not a verdict.
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Amy Medling
Women's metabolic health coachAmy Medling is a National Board Certified Health and Wellness Coach, author of Healing PCOS, and a Certified Health Coach with The Fasting Method. Through Amy Medling Health Coaching, she helps women in perimenopause, menopause, and post-menopause understand why what used to work no longer works — and how to reset, rebalance, and renew their health.
Her coaching integrates metabolic health, fasting rhythms, nutrition, hormonal change, and nervous system support so women can move out of self-blame and into clarity and trust in their bodies. She treats glucose and ketone readings as feedback rather than a scorecard — a way to turn vague frustration into patterns women can actually act on.
How she works
- Frames midlife changes around hormones, sleep, stress, and metabolic flexibility
- Uses glucose and ketone trends as feedback, not a pass/fail score
- Reset, rebalance, renew — foundations first, never extremes
- Guides choices on meal timing, protein, fasting length, and recovery
Where to find her
- Website: amymedling.com
- LinkedIn: in/amymedling
- Book: Healing PCOS by Amy Medling