At 40, entrepreneur Ritesh Bawri describes his life as a ‘systems failure.’ He was overweight, constantly fatigued, breathless after climbing a single flight of stairs and struggling with poor sleep, unstable blood sugar, wheezing, and chronic stress. Diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes, he realised he had spent decades prioritising professional success while neglecting his own body. Today, at 51, the founder and Chief Science Officer of nirā balance has reversed his Type 2 diabetes, lost 28 kilos, remained asthma-free for over 11 years, and maintained stable blood pressure without relying taking a single pill. But unlike dramatic transformation stories built around ‘90-day challenges’, Bawri says his journey was rooted in years of research, discipline,
and sustainable lifestyle changes. “I wasn’t treating my health with the same seriousness as my work,” he says. “That question changed everything for me.”
‘I Thought This Was Just What Middle Age Felt Like’
For nearly 25 years, exercise wasn’t part of Bawri’s life. His routine revolved around sedentary work, convenience eating, processed carbohydrates, endless coffee, irregular sleep, and unmanaged stress. “Food was functional. I would eat standing in the kitchen, quickly, without thinking about nourishment,” he recalls. The warning signs accumulated slowly in the form of breathlessness, chronic fatigue, afternoon crashes, persistent coughing, and low fitness levels. But like many people, he normalised the symptoms. “I would wake up tired even after a full night’s sleep. I thought this was simply what middle age felt like. It wasn’t. It was my body trying to get my attention.” The tipping point came after a chance meeting with Professor Ravi Rajan in Palo Alto, who informed him that his blood sugar levels had crossed into Type 2 diabetes territory. “The diagnosis was frightening, but losing control over my own body scared me equally. I was struggling to tie my shoelaces and avoiding photographs because I didn’t like how I looked,” he says. Initially, Bawri followed medical advice and started medication. But when he didn’t immediately see dramatic changes, frustration set in. “I realised I was treating it like a short-term problem and health doesn’t work that way.” He says that instead of looking for shortcuts, he began studying metabolic health deeply. Over the years, he read more than 700 books and analysed nearly 6,000 research papers to understand how sleep, stress, food, movement, and recovery work together. One of the biggest myths he had to unlearn was the idea that health improves simply by ‘trying harder.’ The body responds to inputs, not intentions,” he says. “What you eat, how well you sleep, and how consistently you move matter more than bursts of motivation.” Another thing that he says helped him greatly is that rather than obsessing over the number on the scale, he shifted his focus to metabolic health. For that, he built sustainable routines instead of following extreme diets or punishing workouts. He reduced processed carbohydrates and seed oils, increased his fibre intake from 15 g to 40 g daily, prioritised protein despite being vegetarian, and added fermented foods like yoghurt, kefir, and kimchi to his diet. He started with walking, progressed to cycling, and eventually incorporated strength training with squats, deadlifts, presses, and pull-ups. “I stopped chasing quick outcomes and focused on systems I could sustain,” he says. “Once sleep, nutrition, and movement aligned, the results followed naturally.” ALSO READ: Why Are You Not Losing Weight Despite Following A Calorie-Deficit Diet? Expert ExplainsNow that he work with others to help them lose weight, Bawri says the biggest struggle people face isn’t knowledge, it’s consistency. “People think they need motivation to begin, but motivation fluctuates,” he explains. “Consistency in small actions is what changes health.” He believes modern wellness culture often oversimplifies weight loss while ignoring the biological and psychological factors behind behaviour. Emotional eating, afternoon anxiety, or fatigue, he says, are sometimes rooted in blood sugar fluctuations rather than 'lack of discipline'. “The body is intelligent. When you stop working against it, it regains balance.”The Three Changes He Recommends To Everyone
For anyone starting their health journey, Bawri recommends three biggest changes:- Fix sleep and aim for at least 7.5 hours consistently
- Include daily movement, even if it begins with walking
- Prioritise protein and vegetables over processed carbohydrates
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