Showing posts with label new year. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new year. Show all posts

Thursday, 8 January 2015

Off to a fast start

When taking the decision to lose weight, a lot of people want a quick fix. I'm not necessarily one of those people as I've been battling the bulge over a number of years so know that a long term commitment is required rather than instant gratification. That said, I was delighted by the outcomes of 5 days of sensible eating. For those who missed it, my first Wednesday Weigh-In of 2015 showed a 10lb loss in less than a week.

On any other week of the year, that sort of drop would cause all manner of alarm bells to go off, but immediately following Christmas and New Year it is acceptable. All those extra calories consumed from eating junk and excess drinking had to be eliminated, and a little bit of a detox to start 2015 has paid off. Where others may fall off the dieting wagon is when the next week is not quite so successful. And it won't be. If you lose 10lbs a week, every week, you probably need to see a doctor rather than count your calories.

I achieved my loss through keeping things simple. Porridge for breakfast. Soup for lunch. Whatever I fancied for dinner in a good sized portion. No snacks. No alcohol. Bread off the menu. Throw in a 5k run and that was my recipe for success.

Imagine 10 of these. Gone. From your weight. Happy days

Last night I found myself eating a little more for dinner than I have on previous nights, and helped myself to pudding too. The scales this morning remained friendly. All things in moderation, then back to my porridge/soup combination so far today. I know this works for me, and I have the willpower (when motivated) to stick to the plan. Until I can raise my fitness levels and bring more exercise to my routine, food control is my chief method for weight loss.

I won't have lost another 10lbs by my next weigh in. But if I keep good habits and don't steer too from the path that I have found successful, I won't be gaining. I've made a terrific start to wrestling back control of my waistline. The challenge starts here to back that up in subsequent weeks and months.




Saturday, 4 January 2014

Me vs Statistics

Not surprisingly the start of the year brings about lots of talk about diets. I'm not the only voice evangelising about losing weight as part of a new year health kick. Newspapers have been talking about them, the bloggosphere is full of new year resolutions vowing that this will be the year that weight will be shed. Channel 5 dedicated two hours to a programme the other night in which they tried to debunk myths about dieting which made for very depressing viewing. Everything in that show was so negative that by the end of it I felt like saying 'sod it' and reaching for the Pringles.

Following a suggestion from my old school friend GourmetMum I recently signed up as a member of BritMums. I know, I know, what is a guy doing joining an online community of mums? Well, they take dads as well for a start, plus with no obviously comparable collective of male bloggers, it made sense to join this pre-existing network. In the forum section I posted a link to this site and suggested that if any other members were looking to slim down in 2014, they may want to have a look. My only reply to date read as follows
Not for me. Allegedly only 10% of diets work and most people end up fatter than they started
Hey, thanks for the encouragement! I don't expect everyone to want to sing from my hymnsheet, but really? Even if those statistics are true, that is no reason to buckle under unfavourable odds. Hell, if I made my choices purely on high percentages, I wouldn't have enjoyed the company of my gorgeous little boy this afternoon. (9 out of 10 diagnosed spina bifida pregnancies are aborted in the UK)

I'm not daft enough to think that dieting works for everybody, but then I know not everybody will work hard to make a diet work. It requires motivation, dedication and the ability to resist temptation, traits that served me well last year and I hope will continue to do so in 2014. I've written several times in the course of this blog about my motivation so won't go over old ground in this article. Resisting temptation is probably the most difficult to achieve. I've had my struggles with this at times, but being able to say no is fundamental for achieving weight loss. Just today, my eyes lit up at the mince pies and Christmas cake that was on display at my mother's house. They say the first taste is with they eye; in this instance that was the only taste I had.

As for dedication, this can take many forms. Sticking to your diet plan, abstaining from alcohol, settling for something nutritious on a Friday night rather than opting for take away. I demonstrated my dedication today by ignoring the weather, donning a ridiculous jacket and got my arse running. It would have been so easy to stay put in my warm lounge hearing the rain pounding the outside world, but instead I kept to my plan, ran my 5k and felt all the better for it.

Tango Man sighted near woods - Photo by John Tipping
I didn't lose more than 4 stone in 2013 because of luck. I made my diet work and having done so I'll be damned if I'm going to become just another statistic of someone that allowed themselves to become fatter than before. If the numbers aren't on your side, don't be afraid to the exception, rather than the rule. Somebody has to break the mould, and that somebody might as well be you.




Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, 18 December 2013

Wednesday Weigh-In 18 December

Without getting all flowery and emotional, this entry effectively represents the end of a yearlong journey. Today is the penultimate Wednesday of 2013 and with the last one Christmas morning, I can pretty confidently say this is the final Wednesday Weigh In. I mean I could mount the scales on 25 December and blog away rather than spend that time with my wife and boys, but then I might as well start looking for a bedsit and consult a family solicitor. It's not going to happen folks, so this will be final weigh in for 2013.

And like all good seasonal stories, we're going to end on a high note. Following last week's minor blip, 7 days of being reasonably on the dieting ball has resulted in a loss. I stood on the scales this morning at my lightest yet; a full 21 lbs below the target I set myself for the year and a grand total of 62 lbs lighter than when this project started back on 2nd January. Or if we want to look further back in time, 10 stone less than I was at the end of 2006.

What 14st looks like
What 24st looked like
I've little doubt that in the coming fortnight I will indulge and find the scales a little bit less respectable in the New Year, but I think I've done enough in 2013 to merit a little time off during the festive season. I have one eye on the half marathon in March so will continue to run the Saturday morning 5k this week and next, and even ventured out for a relaxed 6k jog on Monday evening with a view to upping my training in the new year. But in between times, I expect to eat, drink and be merry like everybody else.

The only cloud on the horizon that I can see concerns the future of this blog. With the 'YearOfTheDiet' drawing to a close, and my aim for 2014 to maintain body weight rather than actively diet, it would render this site rather redundant. Publishing my weightloss progress in a public arena worked as a great motivator to ensure I was successful, but if weightloss is no longer on my agenda, my witterings on here will become less prolific. And lets be honest, most of my readership don't want to witness me go on about running all the bloody time.

So is this the end? Probably not quite. The blog will remain open and dare I say it if things go overboard next week I may need to open myself up to public scrutiny on Wednesday mornings once more. Knowing me I doubt I'll be able to restrain myself from penning the occasional article, so this is more Vera Lynn than Good Riddance But thanks for following my progress over the last year, for the feedback I've received along the way and if you want to make 2014 the year when you want to lose a few lbs, you can count on my support.


Enhanced by Zemanta

Friday, 5 April 2013

The weekend starts here

It is Friday night and after several days of getting back into the dieting groove, inevitably things are becoming a little more difficult. For most of the afternoon I've been trying to keep my mind from thoughts of take out and cold beers, and writing this now I'm pleased to report I've stayed away from both, but I know that the rest of the weekend will present its challenges. A working day provides distraction; a weekend at home means 48 hours of temptation.

I've kickstarted life into my diet by entering a post-Easter detox. Nutritionists would likely disapprove but I've been living off porridge. Not in the three meals a day sense, but close enough. Porridge for breakfast. Porridge for lunch. Proper dinner in the evening. Believe me by the time I get to eat at night I am ravenous! This is just a short term measure, to get thing rolling but it is quite effective and given how bitterly cold the weather has been this week, three hot meals a day has been very welcome.

How things will pan out this weekend I'm not too sure. Staying away from my 4 year old's Easter Eggs should be straightforward enough, but the lagers in the fridge and the Pringles in the cupboard may be harder to resist. One thing is for sure, if I do give in to temptation, I'll have spent the last three days wasting my time with Oat So Simple. Wish me luck.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, 6 March 2013

Wednesday weigh-in - 6 March

4 weeks on from my last official weigh-in, and I'm finally returning to the scales. This is what they told me today.

First recorded reading starting with 16
So over the last 4 weeks I've lost a total of 8lbs, taking the grand total since the start of the year to a 24lb loss. I should probably throw in an asterix against these figures as I didn't manage to weight myself until I got home from work this evening, whereas my usual weigh-in takes place after breakfast on a Wednesday morning. There could therefore be a question mark or two over the numbers shown in the picture above, but not 8lbs worth.

I'm delighted to have lost weight in the last calendar month. A steady 2lbs per week when life has been extraordinary is a great result and proves to me that I can diet through adversity. For those catching up with the overall story, my son was born on 11 Feb with Spina Bifida, and required immediate corrective surgery to repair his myleomeningocele. During the next two and a half weeks he was in hospital with me either there with him or not far away. I've slept in a hospital chair, on a hospital floor, at a Ronald McDonald house, roomed with my son in a parent room in a special baby care unit and even managed one night in my own bed. So it is safe to say things have been a little disrupted!

Part of my problem with food is that I've always been a comfort eater. I won't deny that over the last few weeks there have been days when I have stuffed my face but on the whole I've kept things in moderation despite the challenges afoot. Now we are home, like all new parents adjustments are having to be made to cope with varying levels of sleep deprivation. I remember as new dad the first time around surviving days by feasting on lots of sugary snacks. Yesterday I came face to face with 2 dozen Krispy Kremes and resisted temptation. I'm allowing myself the occasional treat to ensure I've got the energy levels I need to get me through the days (and the long long nights) but not going overboard.

How things progress from here I'm not too sure. My immediate priority is not dieting, but my motivation to slim down is now in front of me, sleeping, crying, feeding and pooing day in day out. So long as I can keep my wits when I'm at the end of sleepless nights, I should continue to progress towards my weightloss goal.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Wednesday weigh-in - 16 January

Wednesday morning has come around again and so I had my date with the bathroom scales. Here is what they told me today.

Nice to see a 7 rather than an 8
17st 11lb represents a 4lb loss since last week, and a 9lb loss in total. Not bad for two weeks work! I did mention in my article last Wednesday that a 5lb weekly loss was unsustainable but I guess in the short term I've been able to maintain early progress.

What comes as a surprise though is how the loss has been achieved despite some of the meals I've consumed over the last 7 days. In that time I've eaten chinese take out, gone through the perils of social eating, enjoyed half a McDougalls chicken & asparagus pie and last night had 4 cheesy enchiladas for my dinner. I can imagine that a few of my readers right now are feeling pig-sick reading this, if they themselves are trying to shed a few lbs and making slower progress. I'm not going to apologise for my success but I will try to offer an explanation.

Frankie & Benny's aside, all of the above have been a fairly regular part of my diet in recent months. This combined with prolific snacking, the occasional can of beer becoming more regular and a lack of exercise helped me to balloon to the 18st 6lbs that I was two weeks ago. The changes I have made in the last two weeks have put a stop to all snacks, I've not touched a drop of alcohol since New Year's Day, and though I've not yet ticked all of the boxes and kicked off my exercise regime, I have become more conscious of my daily activity, meaning I'm less stuck to my office chair.

The meals themselves have scaled down too. Prior to Christmas I'd have ordered a rice dish and a beef dish from the Chinese restaurant. On Friday night, I just went with the rice dish. I'm under no illusion that Special Fried Rice is somehow a healthy option, but by sticking to just that the portion size is cut in two. Remove an accompanying can of beer and my evening consumption is well down on where it would have been before.

Pie, chips and a slice of bread  became pie and mixed veg. Enchiladas with wedges and coleslaw became enchiladas with a bit of fresh rocket. I'm reluctant to use the word 'balanced' to describe my diet, because the nutritional value in these meals would most likely be scorned upon by health professionals. But in reducing the amount of bad stuff I eat to accompany the main part of the meal, I'm consuming less, reducing calorie intake, and for me at this time it is working.

The other thing to bear in mind if you're looking at my 4lb loss with slightly envious eyes is our relative starting points. An 18 1/2 stone man who starts eating like a 14st man is likely to see more immediate impact than a 10st woman trying to eat like a 9st woman. There is more of me to begin with and so my body requires more energy to function. If I stop feeding my body more fuel than it requires, it will start tucking into my fat reserves, and I have a lot more of those to dispense with at the moment.

In statistical terms, 4lb represents 1.58% of someone weighing 253lbs. In contrast 4lb accounts for 2.85% of 140lbs. That is a huge difference.

I know it is easy for me to say this when I've already made progress, but if you are feeling discouraged by a slow start to your diet, don't. This should be a long term project and while it would be preferable to see immediate results, stick to your plan and the reward will come. Focus your energy into achieving your goals rather than comparing yourself to others. Apples and pears and all that.

Aware of the dangers of short-termism, I don't usually set myself a weekly target, but it would be a nice little milestone if I can lose 3lbs over the next week. That would recategorise me on the BMI scale, taking me out of obesity and into the overweight label. I'll report back next Wednesday on my progress in achieving this goal.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Thursday, 10 January 2013

Lead us from temptation

Yesterday was without a shadow of a doubt the toughest day of the diet so far. I know I'm only a handful of days into this and there will be more difficult challenges ahead, but my word this was not fun. On a day when I should have been incredibly proud of myself for completing the first week of the diet and being rewarded with a positive Wednesday weigh-in, throughout the morning I found myself thinking about food.

It started during my walk from the car park to the office. As I marched towards another day at work, my nostrils were filled by the smell of baking Subway bread wafting towards me. This is nothing unusual as it is pretty hard to avoid when your building is directly opposite a franchise, but today it registered on my hunger scale and got my taste buds jumping.

Throughout the morning, food was on my mind. Several trips to the water dispenser did nothing to appease my insatiable desire to eat something. Anything. At one point I even consulted the office diary to see if any of my colleagues were celebrating a birthday; my department having an unhealthy tradition of going overboard with cake to honour special occasions. In an office of 30 or so people, that is a pretty regular conveyor belt of sugary badness to feast upon, and I was visualising Krispy Kreme, chocolate cake, rocky road bites, the works. You can imagine my disappointment that nobody in the room was born on 9 January.

It really didn't help matters either when my Twitter feed filled up with tweets concerning a competition to win a Nando's voucher.

My lunch break offered an opportunity to escape my desk. I needed to head off-site to pick up some bran flakes having finished off the packet for my breakfast, so I donned my jacket, took a deep breath and waddled like an Olympic 50km walker past that sandwich shop as quickly as I could.

Now if I had been thinking clearly, I probably would have listened to my gurgling stomach and eaten my uninspiring ham and pickle sandwich before I went to the supermarket. I didn't and so for the first time since the diet began I found myself hungry in a store full of every imaginable type of food and only my willpower to stop me from investing in something I would later regret. The problem was I had ventured to a shop I wasn't completely familiar with and in my slightly confused efforts to find the cereal aisle I found myself staring at the head of Medusa.

There directly in front of me was the rotisserie. The first taste was with the eye. The second taste was with the smell. The inner carnivorous caveman in me started snarling. I was like a bull staring down the matador and wouldn't have been surprised if some startled old lady glared in amazement at a salivating 32 year male dragging his foot backwards in imaginary dirt. All I was thinking was meat. MEAT! My eyes were glued to a small rack of ribs. Had I seen them in a different frame of mind, I'd have recognised them as the gristle and fat that any normal person would, but in this frenzied state of mind, they looked like this.

What a mighty fine rack
Something made me blink. I really couldn't tell you what it was, but my trance was broken and I was greeted by the return of logic and reason. I stepped away from the hot meat counter, found my way to the cereal aisle and picked up the box of cheap bran flakes that was the purpose of my mission. For good measure I picked up a second box and bought that too, so as to avoid another mad moment when the next box is emptied.

The price of success

I headed back to the office, ate my sandwich and sanity was restored for the afternoon. Temptation was avoided for the rest of the day, and my will power just about remained intact. A small victory on what I hope will be a long road to success.

Having found myself temporarily reduced to a hungry dog eyeing up a juicy bone, maybe Diane Abbott had a point about banning unhealthy food outlets to protect those without self-restraint after all.

Today will be another day, another set of challenges. Hopefully without borderline lunacy.
Enhanced by Zemanta

Wednesday, 9 January 2013

9th January - Wednesday Weigh-In


Well, I certainly didn't expect things to get moving quite as quickly as that. 


One week into the diet and I have said goodbye to a massive 5lbs. I'm not going to get ahead of myself though. My goal is to lose 41lbs and there is a very long way to go. However, if I had been offered a loss of 5lbs over a fortnight I would have snapped your hands off, so to be there in 7 days is incredible.

This level of weight loss is unsustainable and will prove to be the exception rather than the rule. A new year diet offers the opportunity to shed a few easy lbs. In my case the early January detox has seen my body dispose of the Christmas excess. Think peanuts, think Quality Street, think turkey and stuffing sandwiches to the power of 10!

To achieve this 5lb loss, I have not starved myself. On the contrary I have had three meals a day, every day, and not shirked on portion size. However, where I may have had pie with chips and thrown in a slice of bread for good measure, I have subbed the chips and bread for some vegetables. Where I made more vegetable chilli than I really needed to consume in one go, I set aside a portion and added some fresh rocket for my lunch the following day.

While I have not gone wanting at meal times, the thing that has made a difference has been a strict curb on snacking. There has been no elevenses. Chocolate and crisps have been cast aside. I've not removed bread from my diet but it is only allowed for my lunch; there are no more sneaky slices of toast when I get home from work or as an accompaniment to my breakfast cereal. January is traditionally a dry month for me, and needless to say the removal of alcohol has been a good thing too.

How long I can stick to a regimented three meals a day remains to be seen. It has to be said that seeing the lbs fall off in week one is a great motivator to keep things going, and while I have no expectations that next week's weigh in will produce such a dramatic outcome, having found a formula that works for me I would be mad to change it.

Just as a slight note harking back to what I wrote about yesterday about over-using scales, I myself ignored my own advice and sneaked a couple of looks yesterday. And at different times of the day my weight dipped below 18st. I'm not going to get hung up on this. A 5lb loss is more than enough for one week, and I've every confidence that I'll be looking at the scales next week with the 18 replaced by a 17.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Tuesday, 8 January 2013

Scales are not your friend


When trying to lose weight, dieters invariably find themselves with a trusty companion. Those bathroom scales that have been ignored for however long suddenly acquire elevated status. It goes without saying that when you are cutting down on food intake you want to see results, but don’t presume that every time you climb on board, you’ll see what you want to.

Successful weightloss takes time. It is a long term project, not a quick fix. Realistically you only need to weigh yourself once a week, so pick a day when you’re going to do it and stick to it. Ideally you want it to be at the same time of day every week for the sake of consistency, that way you can chart your progress. It is what people do when they attend Weight Watchers meetings, and if it is good enough for them, it is good enough for me.

I personally opt for Wednesday mornings after breakfast. Why Wednesday? Well, conveniently my diet started on a Wednesday this year and so was able to record my starting point there and then. However the more practical reason is that if I do let my hair down over the weekend, I’ve still got a couple of days to do something about it before tilting the scales.

Some may question why I eat my breakfast before the weigh in. There is no particular science behind this. I just eat my bran flakes when I wake up and I don’t see any reason to alter my routine. It is a simple question of consistency. Same day. Same time. Same scales. This way you can put trust in the result. If you mix and match when you weigh yourself, there will be variance. Pick a time and stick with it. Certainly don’t go down the route of weighing yourself multiple times per day. Scales are not your friend, so don’t become over familiar with them.

I’ll be posting details of my weigh in tomorrow. Here’s hoping things are moving in the right direction.

Enhanced by Zemanta

Monday, 7 January 2013

Subway is dead to me

I don't know if it is just silly season at the moment, but certain sections of the right wing media seem to be trying to whip up a storm with regard to junk food. Labour 'should consider banning Frosties' was one article that caught my eye this weekend. Diane Abbott wages war with fried chicken was another. I'm not really interested in the politics of the stories, but I would be annoyed if there came a time when our elected officials dictate what you can or can eat.

I didn't get to 24st by eating celery and tomatoes. Over a prolonged period I overate. Some of that was junk food. Most of it would have been fairly decent food but in elephant sized portions. What went into my mouth was my choice and my responsibility. Unless there is legitimate medicinal reasoning for withdrawing certain foods, such as beef when mad cow disease was on the agenda, government has no business telling me what I can and can't eat.

When I was eating a kebab every night of the week, I knew it was not good for me. Now I am on a diet, fast food outlets are strictly out of bounds. At least twice every working day I find myself facing this

Subway, conveniently opposite the office I work in
Nobody has ever forced me to eat there, and I won't be doing so for the forseeable future. Mind over matter. I'd love to eat there every day, but to achieve my goal I can't. When I've lost 41lbs I may well go and grab myself a footlong to celebrate, but until then Subway is dead to me. A diet is a subconscious decision to lose weight. I don't need politicians, however well meaning, intervening on my behalf.
Enhanced by Zemanta