Weight Loss Tips

INT. CLINIC OFFICE – DAY

Dr. Luka Kovač (from ER) sits across from Nelly Furtado in a serene, sunlit clinic room. He’s calm but direct, sketching a dietary plan in his notebook as Nelly, determined and curious, leans in.


DR. LUKA KOVAČ
Nods thoughtfully.
If you’re serious about this, we’ll take a holistic approach. No crash diets. No starvation. Just science, tradition, and commitment. Let’s talk strategies—real ones.


🔹 Diet Strategy: Ketogenic + Paleo Fusion

A blend of the Ketogenic and Paleo diets will help your body burn fat for fuel (ketosis), reduce inflammation, and cut out processed junk.

What to Eat

  • Proteins: Grass-fed beef, wild-caught salmon, sardines, free-range eggs, turkey
  • Fats: Avocados, olive oil, coconut oil, ghee, nuts (especially macadamia, almonds, walnuts)
  • Vegetables (low-carb): Spinach, kale, arugula, broccoli, zucchini, cauliflower, cucumber
  • Fruits (low-sugar): Berries (blueberries, raspberries), lemon, avocado
  • Seeds: Chia, flaxseed, pumpkin seeds
  • Fermented foods: Kimchi, sauerkraut, kombucha (unsweetened)

Avoid

  • Grains (wheat, corn, oats, rice)
  • Sugar and artificial sweeteners
  • Industrial seed oils (canola, soybean)
  • Legumes (beans, lentils, peanuts)
  • Dairy (except ghee or grass-fed butter in moderation)
  • Alcohol (occasional red wine is okay)

🔹 Teas to Melt the Pounds

These teas boost metabolism, curb appetite, and aid digestion.

  • Green Tea – powerful catechins, especially EGCG
  • Matcha – concentrated green tea with thermogenic effects
  • Oolong Tea – promotes fat oxidation
  • Ginger Tea – anti-inflammatory, improves insulin sensitivity
  • Dandelion Root Tea – gentle diuretic, supports liver detox
  • Yerba Mate – energizing, reduces belly fat
  • Cinnamon Tea – regulates blood sugar

🔹 Essential Supplements & Nutrients

To keep your body supported while shedding fat:

🌿 Vitamins

  • Vitamin D3 – immune + fat loss (take with K2)
  • B-complex – energy production
  • Vitamin C – antioxidant, cortisol control

🧂 Minerals

  • Magnesium (glycinate or citrate) – for sleep and muscle function
  • Zinc – appetite regulation
  • Potassium & Sodium – replenish electrolytes on keto

🍃 Herbs & Roots

  • Ashwagandha – lowers cortisol, balances hormones
  • Turmeric (Curcumin) – fights inflammation
  • Rhodiola Rosea – natural energizer
  • Berberine – mimics metformin, blood sugar control
  • Garcinia Cambogia – appetite suppressant
  • Green Coffee Bean Extract – fat metabolism

DR. KOVAČ
Looking directly at her.
But this isn’t just about the scale, Nelly. It’s about energy. Mental clarity. Hormonal harmony. You follow this, you won’t just look better—you’ll feel like you’re twenty again.


NELLY
Nods, energized.
Let’s do it, Doctor. I’m ready to fly like a bird again.

DR. KOVAČ
Smiles.
Then let’s make your body the instrument it was meant to be. Light, strong, and in tune.

Looking For a Sign: SCTV

Title: “The Sign (Portugal)”
Scene from the inner life of Dr. Luka Kovac / Joe Jukic

Interior – Small Toronto apartment – Night. The rain whispers against the glass.

Dr. Luka Kovac, a man shaped by war, medicine, and exile, sits in front of an old television. But this is no ordinary evening. Because Dr. Luka Kovac is not just a Croatian doctor on ER reruns. He’s Joe Jukic’s avatar—a vessel for memory, pain, and signs from the divine.

Tonight, Joe needs a sign.
He’s tired. Disconnected. Wondering if the thread of meaning has finally snapped.

He slips in an ancient VHS marked “SCTV – Happy Wanderers”. The tape hisses.
The screen lights up with John Candy and Eugene Levy as the Shmenge Brothers—fake Eastern Europeans playing polka for fake applause.
It’s corny. Offensive even.

But then—he sees it.

A Portugal travel poster, haphazardly pinned in the background:

“Visit Portugal — Land of Music, Land of Dreams.”

He freezes the screen.

The camera never meant to linger there. But Joe—through Luka—sees it.

It’s the sign.

Not just for Portugal.
For Nelly.

Flashback:

A church basement. Fluorescent lights. Cheap lemonade and plastic chairs.
Joe is 14.
He’s got two left feet and an oversized tie.
But he’s holding hands with a girl from Sunday School.
Her name: Nelly Furtado.

They’re square dancing to a cassette recording of “Cotton-Eyed Joe.”
The priest claps in time.
Joe trips over his own shoes, but Nelly laughs and spins him anyway.
Her voice: high, clear, playful.
She smells like cherry lip gloss and hope.

It was just a Confirmation party. But for Joe, it was the last time the world felt innocent.

Back to Present:

Kovac—Joe—whispers:
“Bože moj… it’s her.”

He reaches for his phone. Scrolls past hospital contacts and old war buddies. Finds her.

NELLY – DO NOT TEXT UNLESS IT’S A SIGN

He stares at it.

Then types:

“Portugal.”
“Remember the church basement? Cotton-Eyed Joe? You said I was the worst dancer you’d ever seen. You still owe me a rematch.”

He hesitates. Then hits SEND.

Joe gets up, walks to the mirror, and adjusts his hair with the care of a teenager before a first dance.

Dr. Luka Kovac may have lost love on primetime.
But Joe Jukic just found the courage to reclaim it—with a little help from a Portugal poster, John Candy, and the memory of a girl who danced like heaven was real.

Memes 16

Post by Dr. Luka Kovac on NellyFan.org

Title: What Sinead Needed Most — A Doctor’s Reflection on the Essentials of Life

Two years have passed since the tragic loss of Sinéad O’Connor, a voice that pierced the silence and a soul that cried out for justice and mercy. As a physician and a man of faith, I often reflect not only on physical healing but on what sustains the human spirit — especially in a world as harsh and unforgiving as the one that so often bruised Sinéad’s tender heart.

There is a Croatian proverb that says, “Bog je prvo stvorio čovjeka, a onda mu dao dom i ženu da preživi.” — “God first made man, then gave him a home and a wife so he could survive.” Whether you interpret that literally or symbolically, the message is clear: we are not meant to walk this world alone, unanchored.

I want to speak not just as a doctor, but as a fellow survivor of trauma. Here are the necessities of life as I’ve come to understand them — the things Sinéad needed more than fame, applause, or rebellion. The things many of us need to be whole again.

  1. Food
    Not just calories, but nourishment. Sinéad’s struggle with medications, fast fixes, and industry stress no doubt affected her diet. The healing foods of our ancestors — whole grains, fermented vegetables, bone broths, and clean water — are more essential than any antidepressant. Nutritional psychiatry is no longer a fringe idea. Healing begins in the gut.
  2. Shelter
    A safe place. Not just a house, but a home. Sinéad had many addresses, but perhaps no sanctuary. A space to pray, to cry, to laugh without judgment. Trauma survivors often become wanderers, running from memory and self. But stability is medicine.
  3. Clothing
    This means dignity. Self-respect. Modesty not as repression, but as armor against objectification. Sinéad rejected the exploitation of women’s bodies, but she also lived exposed — emotionally naked in a cold world. We need to clothe ourselves in ritual, purpose, and yes — actual warmth.
  4. A Wife (or Husband)
    Call it a spouse, a partner, a counterpart. We need someone to mirror our humanity, to correct us lovingly, to celebrate us quietly. I don’t speak here of lust or fantasy, but covenant. Sinéad needed someone who would not flee at the first sign of her sorrow.
  5. Children
    Not just biologically, but spiritually. A legacy. A reason to mature. Sinéad loved her children fiercely, but losing her son Shane broke her beyond repair. Parents should not bury their children. No amount of grief counseling can erase that wound. But had there been stronger community, extended family, perhaps she could have carried on.
  6. God
    Finally — and foremost — God. Not just as a concept, but as an abiding presence. I watched Sinéad wrestle with religion. She fought against corruption and hypocrisy, yet longed deeply for the Divine. Had she found peace in the Person of God, not just the institution, she might have survived the long dark night of her soul.

I am not here to judge her — God knows I have seen despair in my own life. But I do believe that if we had surrounded Sinéad with these six pillars — food, shelter, clothing, spouse, children, and God — she might still be singing.

Let her life be a wake-up call. Not just to reform mental health treatment, but to remember what truly sustains the soul.

May her memory be eternal,
Dr. Luka Kovač
Physician, Father, Survivor
NellyFan.org Contributor