Showing posts with label cheating. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cheating. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

MAJOR MALFUNCTION



We interrupt this program to report A MAJOR MALFUNCTION!!!

I am sorry to report that since my last post on 9/20 (twenty days ago!) I have GONE OFF THE RAIL. Regressed. Fallen off the wagon. Reverted to my not-so-former evil ways. Partaken of the forbidden fruit (and pizza, and candy, and nasty fast food). Abandoned ship!

I have no excuse for having taken leave of my senses. I am clearly weak and deranged. Perhaps I have a death wish? I don't know how it started, but it did. The "switch" turned off, and I just didn't feel like putting forth the effort involved. I didn't feel like planning and executing the healthy eating plan. I didn't feel like sacrificing or abstaining from tempting (but bad) food choices. I felt like indulging - whatever, whenever.

(Warning: Rationalization approaching...) I suppose it could have been worse. In 3 weeks I gained 3.7 pounds, which merely erased my last "good" week's loss. Today's weight is 315.1 pounds, which puts me 1.1 pounds over my "pace" goal of 314 (I have computed a "pace" line from my start date of 8/22/07 through my end date of 11/12/08, assuming a 2 pound per week loss and an end goal of 200). So, while not ruinous, it has (depressingly) put me "behind the curve", which means I have to double-time it to catch up.

So, here I am - on the road to recovery. Needless to say I am not feeling good about things, but I have to (re-)start somewhere. At the very least, I did step on the scale this morning, and here I am, posting to the blog again. I have a healthy eating plan on deck for today, and packed myself some healthy food options for lunch and snacks. Back to the grind...

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Apathy



I think apathy may very well be the obese dieter's worst enemy. Somewhere along the line, you seem to forget about the rock-bottom feelings of utter fatness and despair, and just stop caring. Sometimes this is a momentary lapse, like a night out or a weekend binge. Worst case, a weekend binge turns into a few days turns into a few weeks, and before you know it, you're back where you started - or worse.

So it was for me yesterday. It started in the morning with an incomplete breakfast which left me feeling hungry at about 9am. I find that if I don't have a good breakfast, it throws off my entire day. Even if I make up the calories with a mid morning snack, I seem to retain that psychological scar of feeling hungry throughout the day.

Of course I also had a great weigh in yesterday. Ironically, a great weigh-in can erode my willpower, by helping me feel like I have a license to indulge. After all, I'm doing great! Way ahead of plan! Go ahead, live a little! Talk about EVIL thoughts!

Meanwhile I had a bad day yesterday. There's been alot of conflict in my life lately, mostly with personal relationships i.e. friends and family. Yesterday there was another incident involving conflict. Actually I was only indirectly involved - the incident was between my wife and a friend, but it affects both of us, so I got caught up in it. The whole thing left me feeling perplexed, as to why I seem to be experiencing so much conflict in my life, and this made me feel a bit depressed.

So went the perfect storm: hungry + depressed + license to indulge = recipe for failure. In reflecting on it, I think I was really just feeling apathetic. I just didn't care. I didn't care about counting calories, measuring portions, or exercising willpower. I just didn't feel like thinking about any of it. I think this is hard for most "normal" people to understand. If you've never tried to diet - seriously diet - for a long period of time, you don't realize: committment to a diet requires a near-constant expenditure of mental energy, as every morsel that passes your lips must be carefully considered. I might even venture to say that this is what sets dieting apart from other types of behavior modification, like quitting smoking or drinking. In the latter cases, for the most part it is possible to entirely avoid the subjects - just don't hang out with smokers or drinkers (I know, I'm over-simplifying, but I'm trying to make a point). With dieting, on the other hand, you must constantly think about the source of your pain: food. If you stop caring for one nanosecond about what goes in your mouth, you're on the road to failure. Hence, apathy is the dieter's worst enemy.

Unfortunately I think for many this is unavoidable. I, for one, am not capable of sustaining this level of focused mental energy for very long. My strategy is to mitigate the risk through pre-emptive damage control. For me, that means keeping healthy food options on hand at all times, so when I do lapse into apathy, the potential damage is contained. This strategy seemed to work pretty well yesterday. The only snack I have at the office is Quaker rice cakes. Ok, so I had six of them. A bit overboard, but what the heck - only 50 calories apiece. Likewise at home, my freezer is stocked with Skinny Cow ice cream sandwiches, about 100 calories apiece. And my fridge is stocked with fruit. And my pantry has plenty of 100-calorie snack packs (like those new Oreo crisps). So fine, I'm hungry and reaching for something to satisfy the hunger and not really caring what it is, so fine, it's 100 calories. Problem neutralized!

Meanwhile, I am ready to shock myself back on track this morning. Even writing this entry has been therapeutic. Already, I am motivated to stay on plan today, and most importantly: I care what goes into my mouth today. Phew!

Friday, August 31, 2007

The First Setback

It's like a switch.

I have noticed something about my commitment to dieting. It's like a switch. Either on or off. I am either totally cruising, no sweat, minimal effort, everything's good - OR - I'm off kilter, starving, and feeling frustrated and deprived.

Which is how I felt last night, when I had my first "off track" moment so far.

Fortunately the damage was pretty well contained. We scarcely have any "bad" food in the house, so my infractions were largely limited to diet food. I started with a 1/2 cup of fat free frozen yogurt, which was supposed to be my last snack of the day. But for some reason that didn't satisfy the beast, so I went on to wolf down:

  • 3 Quaker Apple and Cinnamon Rice Cakes
  • 2 Stella Doro Anisette Sponge cookies
  • 2 Snackwells Devil's Food Cake cookies
  • A few bites of Edy's Butter Pecan ice cream
Not so bad, right?

Well, not so bad from a caloric standpoint. But I was feeling quite glum afterwards. This was a bit of a psychological/emotional setback for me. Up until that point, nothing had passed my lips except for the exact amounts of the exact foods on my well planned menu. So here we are on day 8, already off-roading.

On one hand I should not be so hard on myself. I can't expect to execute the plan perfectly.

On the other hand, this was a binge, however small, and I want to eradicate binge eating from my behavioral repertoire. I am fine going off plan, provided I plan on it. Like, for instance, tonight. Susan and I are having dinner out with some dear friends. Now I will not take this opportunity to go off the rails on some indulgent rampage, but for heaven's sake - I'm going out for dinner, I expect my meal will contain more than 15 grams of fat and 400 calories. That's fine, I'm planning it. What I don't need to do, EVER, is sit here in my house, thinking to myself I'm hungry dangit and I'm going to eat whatever I jolly well please. That is a loss of self control. Not good. Not good. That is how I ended up where I'm at.

Anyway, enough flogging myself. I am looking forward to a terrific weekend with the fam and have lots of fun stuff lined up. I just need to take it one day at a time...