@Skyrider - I suppose sometimes this site can feel a little like "have you accepted keto as your personal saviour"...
I was very much into scanning, weighing and logging all my macros -
If your current diet is working - by all means stick to it:
I feel more and more that the way we describe "diet" is counter-productive.
You may or may not know that there is a phrase in medical textbooks:
adipose tissue will hypertrophy in the presence of elevated insulin and sufficient energy.
Basically, it means - if both these things are true - high insulin and enough energy in the food - you will be in the game of storing/ locking away fat.
If insulin is low, or your energy level is insufficient, you will free up that fat to burn for energy. (Actually, in this state your body will free up anything it can, including muscle to burn for energy)
And by insufficient - I mean insufficient... your body can cope with huge variations of energy by dialing your metabolism up or down. But - if insulin is high, you are holding on to your fat.
So - your cells get fat because of high insulin. On the same page, there may be an explanation that people get fat because they eat too much. This just doesn't make sense to me [for clarity - I'm only quoting medical textbooks, they may also talk about willpower] - if fat cells "get fat" because of insulin, then people "get fat" because of insulin. So - if you eat in a way that drops insulin - it's simply difficult to hold on to weight. It's a bit of a revelation if you get that - Keto isn't necessary, just reduced insulin. It's then just what everyone used to "know" - sugars and starches are fattening. Not a fad diet at all; only what your granny would have said.
I spent 3 years doing the disciplined calorie counting thing - eventually getting to my "ideal" weight - and being diagnosed diabetic. (long story) - but when I gave up counting calories and ditched the foods that were raising insulin (sugar and starch) - my weight just dropped away to that "ideal" level in about 3 months - and stayed locked there.
If you see it as needing to keep insulin low, then you are left with needing nutrition and energy - which means protein
and fat; because if you don't - you are back into lowering energy, and that metabolism dial again.
Having said all that - do what works for you - there is no "right" speed for any of this to happen.