How did Pompeo do it?

Mike Pompeo tells The Post how he lost 90 pounds in six months

Salena Zito

America isn’t just seeing less of Mike Pompeo because the Trump administration is no longer in the White House. We are seeing less of the former secretary of state because there is literally less of him — 90 pounds, to be exact.

The former director of the CIA has faced a lot of challenging situations in his long career, but he hesitates to talk about his weight loss because of a nagging fear he will put all the pounds he lost back on. But, in an exclusive interview with The Post, he revealed how he did it and why.

It all started on June 14, 2021, when Pompeo stepped on the scale and saw he was just pounds away from 300 for the first time in his life.

The next morning, he said, he woke up and told his wife, Susan: “Today is the day.”

Pompeo says he lost 90 pounds in six months by himself with nutrition and exercise.
Pompeo says he lost 90 pounds in six months by himself with nutrition and exercise.

“I started exercising, not every day, but nearly every day, and eating right and the weight just started to come off,” he said. 

Pompeo, 58, said he invested in a home gym in his basement with some dumbbells and an elliptical machine, where The Post photographed him this week. “I tried to get down there five, six times a week and stay at it for a half-hour or so. And that was nothing scientific. There was no trainer, there was no dietician. It was just me.”

The weight started piling on when he was first elected to Congress as a representative for Kansas in 2010, Pompeo said.

Pompeo -- seen inside his home gym -- now tries to exercise "nearly every day" using an elliptical machine and weights.
Pompeo now tries to exercise “nearly every day” using an elliptical machine and weights.
Pompeo says he lifts weights and uses an elliptical machine.

“Although the truth is losing weight has been a lifetime struggle for me.”

To finally get healthy, Pompeo said, he had to be in the right frame of mind.

“For me it’s about getting it right and being sufficiently disciplined,” he said, a process he applied to all of the high-pressure positions he’s held in government but not to his own health until this year.

Now a Fox News contributor, Pompeo recently stunned viewers with his 90-pound weight loss.
Now a Fox News contributor, Pompeo recently stunned viewers with his 90-pound weight loss.

Gone were the cheeseburgers, carbs and sugary treats that lingered beside his computer as he worked long into the night — or traveled with him on long flights across the world.

But the change in diet hasn’t changed family restaurant traditions — IHOP is still the Pompeos’ favorite, but rather than ordering stacks of pumpkin pancakes smothered in syrup, the former secretary now chooses much healthier fare.

“We still go there as a family — it’s important to not take those traditions away. Now we get egg whites and turkey bacon,” he said.

Mike Pompeo, pictured with wife, Susan, and son, Nick, served as Trump’s Secretary of State from 2018 to 2021 — when he mostly ate cheeseburgers at his desk.
Mike Pompeo — pictured with wife Susan and son Nick — served as Trump’s secretary of state from 2018 to 2021, mostly eating cheeseburgers at his desk.

“For our family, food is where we gather. We are Italian and we like to get together around a good meal of pasta and bread and cheeses and dessert. We are still going to enjoy these big meals with family and friends except I am going to be the guy that says, ‘Yeah, I’ll have a salad,’” he said, laughing.

“It was a virtuous cycle instead of the vicious one that I had been in, and I’ve managed to lose the high side of 90 pounds in six months.” 

The California native — who graduated first in his class at West Point — said he used an old foot ailment as an excuse for not being able to lose weight in the past. 

Instead of eating stacks of pumpkin pancakes smothered in syrup at iHop, Pompeo now orders egg whites and turkey bacon.
Instead of eating stacks of pumpkin pancakes smothered in syrup at IHOP, Pompeo now orders egg whites and turkey bacon.

“I put on almost a hundred pounds over the course of 10, 11 years — years that coincided with my foot injury — so I told myself that was the reason I gained so much weight,” he said, adding that nothing specific happened to his foot. “The joint just wore out.”

His battle is one many Americans identify with: A January 2022 Gallup survey shows 41 percent of US adults over the past five years have characterized themselves as overweight, a percentage that is up from 36 percent in the prior five-year period. Gallup noted that its findings contrast with federal health statistics, which show that nearly three-quarters of Americans are either overweight or obese.

Pompeo said he gets it. “No one wants to admit they have gained weight or are overweight even if all the evidence points otherwise.”

His weight loss came with plenty of social media speculation — and Pompeo said none of the comments were particularly complimentary. “The posts were pretty nasty or just inaccurate, speculating that I had health issues with my neck, or that I had cancer,” he said.

“Nobody ever called me and really asked, ‘Hey, what happened?’”

Pompeo, pictured in his home gym, said his weight has been a lifelong struggle.
Pompeo (pictured in 2013) said he started gaining weight in 2010 after he was elected as a Representative from Kansas.
Pompeo — pictured here in 2013 — said he started gaining weight in 2010 after he was elected as a representative from Kansas.

But friends like West Point classmate David Urban sure did. The two men saw each other in November in Dallas — along with everyone else who graduated with them in 1986 — at the Army-Air Force game for their 35th class reunion.

Urban, a Trump campaign alum, said the first thing he told Pompeo was how fantastic he looked. Then he told him he wasn’t surprised he accomplished it.

“You don’t graduate from West Point, let alone become number one in your class at West Point, without being able to be incredibly focused.”

Friend and fellow West Point graduate David Urban (left) said he was impressed by Pompeo’s weight loss at their recent 35th class reunion.
Friend and fellow West Point graduate David Urban said he was impressed by Pompeo’s weight loss at their recent 35th class reunion.

Urban, who traveled with Pompeo from time to time when he was at State, said he saw how the job impacted him physically.

“He isn’t the first person who goes into politics and, because of the demands of the job, gained weight. He’s traveling all over the world, flying 13, 14 hours at different places, different time zones. It’s incredibly difficult to keep any type of routine, let alone an exercise regimen. You kind of put yourself behind the job,” he said.

“I traveled with him when he went to Europe for the 100th anniversary of the Armistice, and he worked the entire flight,” he added.

When he traveled, Pompeo said, there were previous secretaries who went out and had a nice dinner at a fancy restaurant if they finished their meetings at 7:30 or 8 o’clock. But not him. “You can ask anybody on my team, they knew exactly what I was going to do: cheeseburger from room service. I went back to the room and kept working, and ate my cheeseburger. That was my pattern of life.

“When you work and eat, you just keep working and you just keep eating.”

Pompeo served from 2018 to 2021 as the 70th secretary of state in the Trump administration after a brief stint as the director of the CIA and three terms in Congress. The former Army officer who attended Harvard Law School is a former businessman who made his mother’s home state of Kansas his own state in 1998.

Since leaving the administration, Pompeo has signed on as a Fox News contributor, serves as a senior counsel for global affairs at the American Center for Law and Justice, and chairs the Calvary PAC, an organization dedicated to electing conservative candidates to the US House and Senate. He and Susan now call Chantilly, Va., home.

Pompeo credits his weight loss to his wife, Susan, son, Nick and soon-to-be daughter-in-law, Rachael, who "supported my effort to get healthy."
Pompeo credits his weight loss to his wife, Susan, son, Nick, and soon-to-be daughter-in-law, Rachael, who all “supported my effort to get healthy.”

Meanwhile, Pompeo said he hopes his journey will inspire others struggling with obesity to lose weight. “It is hard, and it’s not permanent. There’s no guarantees that I’ll still be at whatever I weigh now, but if you realize that good things can happen if you keep at it, you can do it as well.”

Having the support of his wife, son Nick, and future daughter-in-law, Rachael, certainly helped.

“The biggest benefit I had in this journey was an enormously supportive wife and family,” he said. “Everybody supported my effort to get healthy, which was the real focus.”

Pompeo said he wants to be around for the grandchildren his hopes his son, Nick, has with his fiancée, Rachael.
Pompeo said he wants to be around for the grandchildren he hopes his son, Nick, has with his fiancée, Rachael.

Another social media rumor is that Pompeo dropped the pounds to gear up for a presidential run in 2024. He laughs at the suggestion.

“The truth is, I’m really getting ready for 2044 and hoping I’ll be around in 2054.”

 Why those specific years? Grandchildren, he says hopefully.

“My son’s getting married in July, and I wanted to be healthier and be around for what I hope the Lord will bless us with as grandkids before too terribly long. I’m not supposed to talk about that, I’m told,” he said with a chuckle, knowing he is going to get a little good-natured grief for letting his true feelings slip. 

“My clothes fit better, and I have more energy,” he said. But ultimately, “I want to be there for my family and hopefully lots of grandchildren.”

https://nypost.com/2022/01/06/mike-pompeos-weight-loss-story-down-90-pounds-in-6-months/

By Radiopatriot

A former talk radio host turned political activist, diving deep into the intricacies of political warfare and sharing insights on the shadow government and 5th Generation Psy-Ops. RadioPatriot's been diving into political intrigue, from FBI hearings to questioning staged events. Twitter.com/RadioPatriot * Telegram/Radiopatriot * Telegram/Andrea Shea King Gettr/radiopatriot * TRUTHsocial/Radiopatriot

3 comments

  1. I have been in the health and fitness world for over 10 years and I have helped countless people change their lives thru nutrition and lifestyle changes. While I love a good success story, I have to call bullshit on this one. His age and length of time that he carried the weight combined with his 1/2 hour workouts 5 or 6 days a week while still enjoying ihop??? Give me a break! I am half his size and 15 years younger, I workout for an hour and a half (Or more) 6 days a week and I eat 70% (Or more) clean diet and I have been chasing these last 20 pounds for 2 years.

    Over the course of my fitness journey, I have watched people loose 20-90 pounds and the one common denominator for all the big weight loss numbers (besides the obvious IT TAKES LONGER TO LOOSE THE WEIGHT THAN IT DOES TO PACK IT ON) was the loose and sagging skin. It makes older people look drastically older with wrinkles in their face and neck. And the extra “empty” skin folds around the torso and hips makes everyone look thicker. This new “pompao” breaks all the norms.

    If he didn’t get surgery (which I doubt because of the lack of wrinkles and skin flaps) then this is “pompao” is … whatever it is that is replacing so many of the key players. It is plain as day to me, and has been since they rolled out this new and improved version. It’s sad but true.

    1. Hi Tammi,
      I suspect that SecDef Pompeo has been on a strict low-to-no-carb plan which requires considerable will power /self discipline. He might be dining occasionally at Ihop but his menu choice is very low carb (egg whites and bacon — all protein).

      My husband and I went on the metabolic weight loss program and measured our ketone levels (in our urine) every day. If the keto stick indicated we were intaking too many carbs, we had to back off immediately. If the ketostick measurement indicated we were secreting TOO MANY ketones, we ate more carbs, typically no more than a strawberry or two to reset the balance. That’s how stringent this weight loss plan is.

      The fat melted off our frames and we could see the glorious difference EVERY DAY! In three months time (90-days without cheating) I lost 30 pounds, and hubs lost 45. Our clothes hung off our newly reduced frame. It worked.

      So I don’t doubt that Pompeo lost nearly 90 pounds in six months.

      BUT… His next challenge will be when he begins introducing carbs into his daily intake. He has to be careful because once we did, we were craving sweets, breads, pasta, everything carb loaded, and quickly gained back ALL the weight we lost PLUS. Would I do it again? Maybe. But to get and stay slim is a lifelong disciplined commitment. And exercise/physical activity to elevate your metabolism that burns off the carbs is a MUST.

      Which is why I suspect Pompeo hasn’t wanted to discuss his rapid weight loss for fear he could “fall off the wagon.” For me, my wagon downfall was ice cream. A two-scoop Carvel ice cream cone was all it took and it was all over — all that work, down the drain. I began craving carbs with a vengeance. The weight came back twice as fast. Very disappointing. I should have jumped right back on it, but after three months of limited menu, I was “over it.”

      I hope he has better success at keeping it off than my husband and I did.

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