The present world is obsessed with shortcuts for everything. Be it crash diets, fat-burning supplements, or 30-day transformation reels, almost everywhere we try to look, someone is promising a quicker, easier path to a fitter body.But IAS officer Awanish Sharan is one of those who stand on the path, far away from shortcuts, one of consistency, patience, and time.IAS Sharan, who is popularly known for his years of public service and his candid presence on social media, recently shared a detailed account of his own health transformation, one that began not with a gym selfie, but with a quiet resolve to simply get healthier.His story is one of what happened when that same discipline walked into a gym.
IAS Awanish Sharan before and after transformation of his fitness journey (Photo: @AwanishSharan/ X)
How IAS officer Awanish Sharan became healthier at 45 than he was at 39
It didn’t begin with a sudden decision or a wake-up call. In 2020, at the age of 39, IAS officer Awanish Sharan simply decided he wanted to be healthier.Sharan, a 2009-batch IAS officer currently posted in Chhattisgarh, shared his transformation journey in detail on an X post, writing that consistency proved difficult in those early years. Work pressures, family responsibilities, and life’s unpredictability kept interrupting his routine. Then in 2024, a surgery brought everything to a complete halt.June 2025, however, marked a turning point. “This time, I wasn’t chasing quick weight loss or temporary motivation,” Sharan wrote, outlining a philosophy that guided everything that followed. “My philosophy became simple: Train smart. Eat smart. Sleep well. Repeat every single day.”
Sharan designed a disciplined plan and decided to stick to it
Rather than just being suddenly filled with enthusiasm, which most people do and one that runs out fast, Sharan built a structured plan and stuck to it.As mentioned in is social media post, He did strength training five to six days a week, forming the backbone, supported by progressive overload to protect and build muscle. Cardio was kept supplementary, daily walking was non-negotiable, and recovery and mobility were treated as seriously as the workouts themselves.On the nutrition side, he focused on a high-protein diet built around homemade food, complex carbohydrates, healthy fats, and plenty of vegetables and fruits. He tracked his calories, limited processed food and sugar, and stayed on top of hydration. Sleep was a must, six to seven hours of quality as a priority, not an afterthought.
He set a meaningful deadline for himself
On 1 January 2026, Sharan set himself a clear target to achieve his best physical shape before his daughter Vedika’s birthday on 27th June. He credits his wife Rudrani for making sure he could stay on course. “Having a clear deadline made every decision easier,” he shared. “Every workout mattered. Every meal mattered. Every morning weigh-in mattered. Instead of searching for shortcuts, I focused on executing the basics consistently.“
The physical results were followed by numbers that matter most
But Sharan insists the most meaningful transformation showed up not in the mirror, but in a blood report. Between September 2025 and May 2026, his lipid profile changed significantly.His total cholesterol fell from 278 to 158, LDL dropped from 205.2 to 83, HDL rose from 51 to 62.8, and triglycerides came down from 109 to 61.9. In percentage terms: total cholesterol down 43%, LDL down 60%, HDL up 23%, and triglycerides down 43%. His TC/HDL ratio moved from a concerning 5.45 to a healthy 2.52.These just don’t look good; they indicate a massively reduced cardiovascular risk and improved long-term metabolic health.
What does Sharan advise anyone beginning their transformation journey?
Sharan’s advice to anyone starting out is simple and practical. He advises first getting a health check-up, prioritising strength training, eating enough protein, walking every day, sleeping adequately, and tracking progress through blood reports, not just body weight or photographs. Above all, being patient.“I don’t consider losing weight my biggest achievement,” he wrote. “The greatest achievement is becoming healthier at 45 than I was at 39. Discipline is more powerful than motivation, consistency is more valuable than perfection, and health is the greatest investment we can make.”


