Saturday, April 30, 2011

When you come to the end of your rope—tie a knot and hang on!


How Did I Do This Week?
Well it’s week two and I had a mostly good week. I managed to make it to yoga two times, far better than any week since I had bronchitis. I feel almost as if I am on the mend. I am suffering from a variety of bizarre side effects from the prednisone taper including hot flashes and cold chills—which may be related to age (menopause onset) or may just be the prednisone taper. Who knows? But for those of you that have also gone through either a prednisone taper or menopause. OMG, I am in hell.

The Hard Facts

The facts are this: For the most part I feel like the week was a success. I had some ups (making it to yoga); I had some downs (making it to In and Out Burger). I felt overall like I stayed on plan and I kept up my previously good job of increasing fruits and veggies. I managed to lose 1.4 pounds for a total weight loss of 4.2 overall.

The Stuff I Feel Great About

  • Veggie consumption
  • Yoga
  • Water intake remained great
  • Got more sleep than usual
Things to Fix or Change
  • I have to seriously consider keeping cookies out of my house.
  • I would like to make it make to Pilates class next week as well as yoga.
Overall Outlook
I’m positive but only when I have both a sweater and an icepack at the ready at all times. I think a serious dose of some comedy-television viewing is in order to improve my mood. I am on my way to my facial and “stone massage” appointment in an hour or two. This is my first reward (that I missed last week because of a massive allergic reaction to something—I don’t know what). Do I sound whiny? I certainly feel whiny. I guess the best thing to realize is that every program has these valleys (as well as the peaks) and it’s the ability to stick to a plan during the difficult moments that eventually creates success.

Today’s Motto

When you come to the end of your rope—tie a knot and hang on!

Still working toward “Seniors in Space” and not settling for “Seniors in Florida.” Come on Beauty, show some chutzpa!



Friday, April 22, 2011

Practical Magic—The First Week—Slow and Steady and Recuperating—Or, if I ingest a whole cow with the bell still around its neck, will the bell continue to ring?

 


Week One

Well, first weeks are always hard, even if you have been doing something for a long time. And although I have been on this journey for over a year, since the holidays I have been stymied by circumstances. These include:

  1. Dental surgery
  2. Asthmatic Bronchitis
  3. Steroids—a common asthmatic bronchitis treatment with sometimes horrible side effects like the desire to take a whole cow and ingest it with the bell still around its neck.
  4. Downtime from gym and classes because of illness and eating differently from not feeling well. More comfort foods, less ability and desire to cook, etc.
Every one of us has their thing. In my case it’s bronchitis. The challenge is not letting that “thing” that holds us back beat us. With any dieting and fitness program there is that vulnerable place—the thing you have happen to you time and time again that makes you stop.  As a life-long dieter I have had lots of failures. But now I see these failures as opportunities for information.

Just like I can recite the calorie content of any food on earth by memory (if there was a game show for this I would be the winner) I am also a weight loss expert. I have tried every commercial diet program known to (wo)man or God and one thing is true: It’s all about me. There is no person, no outside force, no company or product that can change me. It’s that elusive tipping of the emotional and mental scales when it becomes better to do it and more fun to do it and more rewarding to do it and more emotionally satisfying to do it than not to.

And I have to admit to myself that eating can be and often is happy and interesting and emotionally and physically satisfying. Eating party food (we all have that list of celebratory foods in our heads) is fun. Maybe one way to picture that elusive GO point is like an actual set of scales—a plate on one side that holds all the stuff that makes being fat fun, and on the other side of the scale a plate where all the things that make being fit fun have to go. You have to tip the scales in your favor.

Getting Through the First Day

So getting through the first week—or even the first day—of this program takes some things.  A regular reader asked me to comment on what it takes to get through the first day of any program and here is a list of things that helped me:

  1. Having a real plan with an end date and a goal—and writing it down.
  2. Making yourself accountable to something—or someone—and deciding how to do that. Like daily food logging, weekly weigh ins, etc. Some people find a support group useful, others find a fitness friend. You have to decide what works for you.
  3. Getting what you need ahead of time. Go shopping and get the right foods to have in the house. (This also includes giving your kid’s friends all the Girl Scout cookies or anything else you can’t easily control your ability to resist.) Think about what and when you will eat. In my case I have been eating as many plant-based foods as possible so when I think about my plan it starts with fruits and veggies.
  4. Give yourself a carrot. And I don’t mean just a real one—but a motivational one. I have a visit to my brother in Florida looming at the end of these 12 weeks that is definitely a motivator (He hasn’t seen me in over a year!). Think about what makes it fun for you. Clothes shopping? A promise of something that gives you pleasure—a CD, a spa treatment, an hour at Starbucks with a good book and some well-deserved solitude.
  5. Give yourself a break. This all doesn’t happen in a day. Getting through a day isn’t black and white. Maybe the first day you add more veggies, maybe day five you start exercising. Maybe you pick something you commit to and do that first and then add from there.
  6. Give yourself permission to recover after you fall. I have messed up more things in my life because I am so unbelievably unforgiving to myself. Messing up is just a moment, not a lifetime. If you give yourself permission to take a little problem and use it to search for the information you need about yourself—you can readjust.
FIRST WEEK STATS
  1. Charting my food intake via an online journal. (I am using sparkpeople.com, which is an excellent totally free diet community resource.)  
Results: As I mentioned I have been using this free online diet and fitness community. This is a very useful tool but you have to be sort of obsessive or dedicated about it. I did pretty well—and for the most part kept my calories between 1250-1600 a day. This tool also can log your exercise and gives you information about calories burned for specific exercises.

  1. Doing 30-minutes or more of exercise daily.  
Result: This was a toughy this week. As I have been recovering from asthmatic bronchitis my energy levels have been way down. I did manage to do a 30-minute cardio session at the gym one day and take three 20 minutes swims at my pool on consecutive days. This is not nearly as much exercise as I like to get and I feel that this is definitely impacting how I am doing and feeling. As I feel better I really want to amp this up.

  1. Eight glasses of water daily  
This one seemed like an easy thing I could remember to do and so I did it. Sparkpeople.com logs this as well on the nutrition tracker.

  1. Increasing dramatically the amount of fruits, vegetables and whole foods I eat.  
Result: This I excelled at. I definitely added far more fruits and vegetables to my family’s diet. We often had three different vegetables at dinner and I definitely served more salad and ate more fruit. I feel great about this.

  1. 7 hours of sleep a night (say seven, hope for 8!)  
Results: I did okay in this area and supplemented with a few well-timed naps. (Naps are always good!)

  1. Inspiration  
Results: My daughter (who decided to join me for the 12 weeks) and I got journals to begin this process. This week we made some lists. My favorites were “ten self-esteem boosters” and “ten low cal snacks.” It’s been fun to discuss these and it’s provided an opportunity for us to support each other and spend some positive time together.

  1. Motivation and rewards  
The motivation for this week is a facial and a “stone massage” at Massage Envy where to the dismay of certain family members balancing our books I have paid for many massages and not used them. This starts the process of actually using these accumulated massages and will be a sort of a mini spa day for me too.

  1. Weekly weigh in results (measurement results monthly)  
Results: 2.8 pounds lost. I’ll take it.

  1. Before and after pictures  
Results: I took two pictures but as yet I am not drunk enough or brave enough to post these. I will work on my bravery in this process and I believe it will be easier when I see some progress to post them.

  1. Weekly Practical Magic Post  
Results: Check and double check. So far so good.

So on to Week Two of our Go Red Challenge. I hope people will continue to message me about how their lives are changing for the better. I am inspired by the impact this is making on the lives of people I touch. Keep sharing! And have a great Week Two! Go Seniors in Spaceä! Our slogan: “We aren’t dying to go!”

Monday, April 18, 2011

If You Feed Me Do You Love Me?


From the moment we enter the world and move from womb to breast we have someone who loves us encouraging us to eat, and that’s good. Women will do anything necessary to feed their babies. Nurturing and love begins with food. The attachment an infant makes with his mother is about the amazing phenomenon of taking food from her body. It’s instinctual and even sacred.

From the first time we have a full belly and lie in the arms of the person who, hopefully, if all goes well, loves us more than anyone on earth, we equate that comfortable, full and content feeling with staring into the face of the most blessed creature on earth. No wonder it gets confusing.

Our ability to feed those who need sustenance is a sign of our humanity. The breakdown of a society can be determined as much from our inability and unwillingness to feed each other as it can from the crime rate. Feeding the hungry will always be something about us that comes from a spiritually aloft place.

Food is complicated. The relationship between food and love is forged early and littered with confusion and collusion and lots of stuff. From the first moment a child gets a cookie for being good to the last meal of a prisoner considered the final comfort and courtesy, human beings learn early on that people who care for us feed us.

When I was four years old my parents divorced. I remember standing near the front door watching my mother hand my father a cast iron frying pan over my head. I looked straight up from my tender height and thought, "This is bad."

Actually I didn't think anything. I was baffled and confused, but I sensed the loss. I felt rather than understood.

In the months that followed, my mother, a recent divorcée with three children under eight, changed her life. She went back to college and got her teaching certificate. She held on to her children, her house, and her dignity. She began a life of working too hard the moment she handed my father that frying pan and, in the end, her body and her health suffered.

She was far more stressed than any human being should be, but she survived and she provided a stable, happy home life for her children. She used food from that day forward as a tool to comfort and sustain herself.

Prior to that day she had used food in other ways. It was an enemy—something to be fought against and triumphed over, something to portion out and ration carefully in an attempt to remain thin and beautiful to an unappreciative husband. She was someone who was a product of the times she lived in. A time when reducing diets included hard-boiled eggs and Rye Crisp and small servings of cottage cheese all consumed with one hand clutching a cigarette advertised by the media to help her control her weight.

In addition to this plan of almost-fasting and smoking were the inevitable diet pills and idea that exercise was harmful to those trying to reduce. The theory was that exercise caused people to get too hungry and thus consume more. It was a war. Every woman for herself.

At about that time fat reducing machines were the rage. Women flocked to health spas and attached themselves to turning and vibrating devices that “jiggled away the fat.” It did absolutely no good but they felt proactive. They might swim a lap or two, their heads tucked into bathing caps poised gingerly above the water so as not to spoil their "sets." The overly athletic girls or those with a country-club sense of the social might take a turn on the tennis court, but the rough stuff—lifting weights or hard exercise—was something for men. Women didn't want to get "big."

My mother, like anyone else, was driven by not only by the prevailing dieting culture but her own circumstances. She operated with not enough sleep and too many cigarettes, no exercise—and either not enough food, or the wrong kind for the wrong reasons. Her relationship with food made her its constant casualty—first gorging from stress and then punishing herself with abstinence. The whole thing was simply set up from the get-go to be a disaster.

And despite this constant battle with food as both good and evil, she somehow managed to conduct a career, excel professionally, feed her kids, keep her house clean, take care of first her ailing father and then mother, get a masters, make a slew of friends, and change the lives of hundreds of kids for the better.

No wonder she died before she was 70 years old.

Food became an evil lover—sustaining and beautiful and desirable and lovely and damaging and dangerous and mean.

The last thing my mother gave my father as their relationship was torn apart forever was a tool to cook with—the do-it-yourself version of the last meal. What I didn’t know was their attitudes—however healthy or unhealthy—would be the basis for all of mine.

End Part One



Friday, April 15, 2011

Practical Magic--12-Week Heart-Healthy Kick Off!


This kick-off post will be short and sweet—just to get me started and on my way as far as accountability. I have begun, charted my starting weight and waist measurement, and done some preparation to get ready for the 12 upcoming weeks. Here are my weekly goals:

  • Charting my food intake via an online journal. (I am using sparkpeople.com, which is an excellent totally free diet community resource.)
  • Doing 30 minutes plus of exercise daily. I will be doing yoga twice a week and adding cardio and swimming.
  • Eight glasses of water daily
  • Increasing dramatically the amount of fruits, vegetables and whole foods I eat.
  • 7 hours of sleep a night (say seven, hope for 8!)
  • Inspiration—something daily to inspire myself—stay tuned.
  • Motivation and rewards. I love rewards and I need them.
  • Weekly weigh in results (measurement results monthly)
  • Before and after pictures
  • Weekly Practical Magic Post

Big Arizona sky as seen from the pool

I started the program today by spending some time at the pool enjoying some blissfully perfect Arizona weather. I will “come clean” every Friday right here. Looking forward to an amazing 12 weeks and some fantastic results!



Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Fear and Loathing in Phoenix

Have you ever had one of those days—termed "Internet Research" where you proceed to look up all your risk factors and ailments and scare the living daylights out of yourself? Here is a brief log of my day:

11:00 AM—Read Facebook. Get into various debates with friends, check Blogger, check Twitter, check email, drink coffee.
12:00 NOON—Look up personal ailments. Check for statistics. Look up risk factors. Take BMI. Compare BMI to chart of obesity and stroke and heart attack risk. Read about how current existing health conditions are risk factors for more heinous life-threatening ones. Drink more coffee.
1:00 PM—Panic.
2:00 PM—Have random confrontations with family members. Decide dogs are being aloof. Drink more coffee.
3:00PM—Find an article that says women who drink coffee have less statistical chance of stroke than those who do not. Calm down slightly.
4:00 PM—Look for positive, goal-oriented solution. Find one.

Clearly my penchant for Hysterical Internet Diagnosis is its own disease. The advent of the Interwebs has made it extremely easy for me to be a hypochondriac in the comfort of my own home. It's a handy way for me to up my blood pressure, increase my negativity, and escalate my fear to the point where all I need is a tiny little push to fall out of my office chair in a dead faint, hit my head on the router and die (spilling coffee on the way down, of course).

Falling over and dying through self-imposed hysteria doesn't appeal to me. I have planned my demise—and it's in a program I have invented in my own mind called "Seniors in Space." This program will debut when I am 101 years old and chosen to attend as Blogger Laureate to Mars. I will venture into space with a few of my healthy and ancient friends, we will toast the good times with Tang, and succumb quietly among the stars. (I would go at 99, but I am waiting for the handwritten card from the President of the United States.)

Seniors in Space
So who wants to join me in the Seniors in Space program? We have plenty of prep time—and they say 100 will surely be the new 85. To make this happen we will have to get practical. Getting practical for me includes actually setting some goals, both short and long term. In the short term I have a new commitment—a 12-week heart-healthy eating and exercise program. Twelve weeks is so doable. It doesn't stretch ahead into the months and years in some far reaching and unattainable fashion, and the Internet is chock full of all sorts of get-healthy, cool websites developed by all kinds of cool organizations just waiting for you to use for free.

Go Red
I have decided to use the web-based tool of a very reliable organization—the American Heart Associationâ. In 2010 they had a big media blitz for the Go RedÔ program. I am usually a little behind the times (in fact, I am just watching Seinfeld all the way through at the moment), so it makes sense that I would participate in the Go RedÔ program in 2011. I like to schedule my procrastination. The web tools are all right there waiting to be used and for the most part things I already know. But, for me, the value is my own accountability. Short-term goals are really just that—deciding something and making a practical plan.

Sometimes practical things work like magic. Their simplicity is the key.

Practical Magic
So starting this Friday there will be a new theme—Practical Magic. For the next twelve weeks I will be accountable on Friday. I may be in Vegas on a bender on Thursday night, but come hell or high water on Friday I will be accountable here twelve whole times. I hope you will join me as I write about how I am improving my heart health by doing these things:

·        Lowering my BMI
·        Reducing my waist measurement
·        Charting and increasing my overall fitness
·        Eating heart healthy and calorie aware meals
·        And hopefully dropping the 20 pounds I need to attain 100 pounds of weight loss!

I could use a little cheering section and I hope some of my readers will join in for any part of the program that makes sense. I hope Fridays on “BatB” (Beauty and the Blog) will be lighthearted and fun as well as little steps toward a real achievement. Consider it our training program for Seniors In Space. Who will join me?

Go RED! And Hellllllloooooooooo!


http://www.goredforwomen.org/
http://www.heart.org/

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

The Celebration of Food

One of the big things about physical transformation is how people feel about food.  People with weight issues often think that food is the enemy—and it isn't. There is no enemy. Food is good.

When you diet—in contrast to dealing with other addictions—you can’t just give up the source of your trouble. An alcoholic can give up drinking, a drug addict can stop using, but food is necessary. You can’t stop eating—though people try to in their desperation.

My weight loss journey started years ago and has been a long and tedious one with many wrong ways and twists and turns. Once, long ago, I found myself at a self-help group in a church on the Newport Peninsula. In this room were a variety of people all dealing with their own personal food crises. There were people with hundreds of pounds to lose and people with twenty or so pounds to lose, and then there were two poor teenage girls, starving themselves to the point that the layer of peach fuzz that grows as a body’s reaction to starvation stood up on their little tortured frames as they sat and talked about their enemy. Food.

In an effort to embrace the disease there is an extreme faction of sufferers of anorexia called “Pro-ana.” This movement creates “Ana” as their goddess of starvation and there is a sort of hidden underworld of websites all about no-nonsense approaches to outwitting your loved ones, disciplining yourself and finding better, more secretive ways to stop eating completely. Some of the sites give detailed recipes and directions—how to cut up a head of lettuce and pretend you are eating it at dinner, how to use laxatives and other drugs to lose weight, how to distract yourself from the physical pain of eating 200 calories a day. They have message boards and photos of women who are abnormally thin that pro-ana devotees idolize as perfect. It’s an unexpected response to the hard fight that most people have against the disease—but then, anorexia is a disease of the mind more than anything else. It’s a frightening world of control and strict discipline where the only peace an anorexic has is when she rejects food completely. It didn’t take a rocket scientist to know these little girls—probably about sixteen or seventeen years old—were killing themselves. In fact they were close to death.

I felt pain in the room coming from every direction and it was palpable. It was inescapable. I couldn’t focus on my issues or anything healthy. I felt like I had entered a Sartre story, that I was sitting in a folding chair in a room with twenty other people who, while they were inside a place of God, were most certainly in hell.

I left the church that day knowing I had hit another dead end. That wasn’t the answer. I was frightened and depressed. I walked out into the late afternoon sun a block from the salt spray of the ocean feeling as hopeless and sad as those two little girls.

People are in crisis with food.

The diet industry and the fast food industry and the medical industry have taken the joy out of food. Watching The Food Channelâ is a guilty pleasure—especially for anyone dieting.

Lap band surgery seems to me to be the ultimate act of food crisis—altering one's body in an attempt to triumph over food. As a last ditch effort to lose weight people at hugely unhealthy sizes (far too heavy for any sort of surgery) have their stomachs reduced to make it more difficult, even life-threatening, to continue to pack themselves full of food.

Lap band surgery has always seemed like making your kitchen smaller with the thought in mind that less food can be stored in a smaller kitchen. Something is missing in the logic of a lap band even though the converted swear it works and it’s hard to argue with real weight loss success. For me, I always knew in my mind that no lap band would ever fix me—my inner-rebel would try to outsmart it. I needed a gentler, more life affirming, more loving way to treat my body and psyche.

The times when I have felt the most alienated and worried about food—the times when I have felt food was my biggest adversary—have not been the times that I prepared a beautiful dinner and shared it at a pretty table with people I love—but the times that I drove through a fast food restaurant or grabbed anything I could or found myself eating out of stress or emotion. Times when I used food as a drug or a friend. To those with weight control issues food becomes the Band-Aidâ and the wound.

Making peace with food—even celebrating food—is a healthier and a more long-lasting answer.

I am reminded of my mother's kitchen. It was the hub of our house. People congregated around the bar, sipping coffee and talking. My mother stood on one side cooking and when she was done sat with you and chatted. Many times in my teenage years I would walk in my door to find one of my friends already there—comfortably seated with my mother in long and in-depth conversations over coffee. My mother made that kitchen a place of love and acceptance where she dispensed not only amazing, loving meals, but friendship and advice too.

And even though she never made peace with her own health and fitness (which may be in part to the insane advice I found recently in one of her dated diet cookbooks that said "exercise is harmful for those trying to reduce") she definitely understood the beauty of food. She embraced the celebration of breaking bread with those in her circle of love. She made eating together an event—a celebration—a time to join in peace and even joy. And she taught me the beauty of that.

Once my brother told me that before he eats he takes a moment and thinks about where the food he is about to ingest comes from. I like this sort of grateful, Zen perspective. It’s very akin to the spiritual philosophy of the Native American about hunting. Thanking the source.

It makes sense. It’s sort of a Circle Of Life thing. You sit before a beautifully prepared and elegant, tasty meal and you think. Think about the fish and its struggle to live, swimming upstream, its surrounding natural environment, the light and color and sound of the swim. Or the grain or potato or vegetables and the sun shining on the tiny seeds. The small plant braving the elements and surviving a season to make it to the harvest. The exertion of human beings to hunt for the food or grow the food and effort over each bite you take—so you can eat. Then if you are lucky someone lovingly prepares the food for you and is happy you are there to eat it with them, or if you make it yourself hopefully you took a moment to feel the joy in creation, the moment of mastery, the act of being able to sustain yourself in an elegant and nourishing way. It’s a strange and wonderful symbiotic relationship we have to the food we eat.

And like my mother would have thought—food is for celebrating. Sitting at your table and eating nourishing food with people you love in the peace of the evening, with candlelight and music playing is one of life’s greatest blessings and pleasures.

Food isn’t the enemy—but the source and the celebration. We should make sure to attend this party.  I can almost smell my mother’s kitchen now…


In Memory of My Mother
September 10, 1930--April 7, 1999

Sunday, April 3, 2011

So You Hate Me Because I'm Fat?

There is something weird about being fat that people don't talk about. It's that hush-hush world of size bias. "Size bias" (the polite term for those engaged in intellectual discussion on the subject) is really just hating fat people and treating them poorly--publicly.

I am reminded of that Lifetime for Womenâ movie from a few months ago, “To Be Fat Like Me.” In this movie a young and very attractive high school girl dons a fat suit and enters another high school to film her experience for a documentary. In her previous life she was popular and attractive and had a lot of friends—basically leading a charmed high school life. As soon as she took that same pretty face and nice personality and added a hundred pounds to it her experience became extremely negative. She experienced size bias.

This movie pointed out an important truth: People just don't like fat people.

For some reason our society allows size bias. It's an acceptable form of bias. It's culturally acceptable to treat fat people as second-class citizens--to mock them, to stare at them, to not hire them, to treat them with malice and disdain, or to treat them like they don't exist. Bigotry and hatred are complicated. It's a huge subject that I don't feel like handling here today, but what I do often wonder about is why people think fat people are fair game.

I have experienced the phenomenon myself. At various times in my "fat life" I have heard things said when I entered a room of strangers or a public place. I have been laughed at and ridiculed and treated meanly. I can't decide if this sort of public harassment is overt anger toward fat people, if it's just people being unbelievably rude, or if people find the spectacle of a fat person so exceptional that they have to say something aloud (really loud) to their friends. No clue.

To be fair, I notice morbidly obese people myself. When I was 80 pounds heavier I played the "Is she fatter than me?" game and now I still notice but it's with a greater sense of empathy and understanding about what their experience must be like. I think as humans it is natural to react to anyone who is different. However, I do think that people could use more empathy when they deal with those around them who are fat or are limited in any way.

I think a reason people feel fat people are fair game is the belief that a fat person chooses to be fat. While it's true that my life has been a series of choices and some very negative choices fueled my weight gain, I would offer to anyone thinking about a fat person's accountability that it is far more complicated than that.

I feel the same way about a homeless person on the street. That person is standing there not necessarily because they are irresponsible or bad but because of a series of reactions and decisions to their life--things that happened to them, misfortune, lack of coping skills, even tragedy.

My mother used to say every time she saw someone whose plight she pitied, "There but for fortune go I."  Each of us comes with his or her own set of life experiences and coping skills. I am pretty sure we shouldn't judge and convinced we should really ramp up the kindness with which we treat others--no matter what predicament they find themselves in.

One benefit of losing weight and something I have seen change with each pound of weight loss is that people are nicer to me. I am sure it's a combination of things--and trust me I have thought long and hard about this: First, people are nicer to people who are more attractive. That sounds like a generalization, but I am convinced of it. Secondly, people who feel good about themselves expect to be and are treated better than those who do not.

So no matter what your personal situation--thin, average, overweight or obese--think about a few things the next time you see a fat person. What are they facing? What sort of personal challenges do they deal with daily? How can you be a little kinder to them? How can you level their playing field in that moment and help them to feel like it's okay for them to be there?

Who knows, they may have just lost 80 pounds and are well on their way toward personal success.