Tag Archives: planning

Playing Games

I just left a great workout.  Literally, it ended 23 minutes ago – long enough for me to drive home (while avoiding direct eye contact with Sonic), turn on my computer and start a movie (No Strings Attached).  I digress.

It was a great workout, and I wanted to share with you how I stayed motivated.

Generally, between parking my car and getting on a machine, I make a goal.  Sometimes it’s a distance or time goal, but usually it is a calorie goal.  That is, I can’t stop until I’ve hit X number of calories.  This way, if I’m tired, and want to stop earlier, all I have to do is work harder/faster.  If I have all the time in the world, and I’m feeling lazy/tired/sore, then I lower my intensity/speed and work longer.

Today, I tried a different machine.  The past few times to the gym, I worked on the elliptical trainer.  This was a recommendation from a personal trainer because it simulates running without the impact on your hips and knees (both which give me issues). For whatever reason, I was thinking, “Ugh” at the thought of the El Trainer today and so I hopped on a newfangled treadmill.  By newfangled, I’m talking the motor in the back, full color touch screen kind.

This is the first machine that let me SET a calorie goal from the beginning. So, when I hopped on and reviewed my buttons of choice, I saw one that said “set goal,” which holy smokes, is what I do anyways.  I click on it and picked my calories (450) and then I could choose incline and speed.  As I did, the amount of time it would take me to complete would change.  I played around with the settings and saw that at a speed of 2.6mph and an incline of 10%, it would take over an hour to finish.

I started my 60+ min workout and quickly – very quickly – got bored.  I increased my incline to 20% (whoa), and my speed up to 2.7.  The machine told me I now only had like 35 minutes remaining (as opposed to the 55 remaining).

This could be fun.

So, since the 20% incline was challenging, but not sustainable, I kept playing around with the dials to make it interesting.  For instance, I would do one minute at 20%, but once I “beat” that, I took it down to 19.5%, which added 15 seconds to the time remaining.  I kept playing around with the one-minute “intervals” until I started to feel a bit of a runners high.  At about 15% I felt really good and so I’d say, out loud mind you, “One more minute here.”  Then, “Just 30 more seconds here.”  I probably stayed at 15% for a good long time before it started to wind me.  So then I found another metric on the machine – elevation.  At this point, I’d climbed 985ft or so, and so I said (again, out loud – this seems to make a difference for me), “Hit 1,000 ft in elevation, then you can drop your speed.”

I played these little games for the full 39 minutes (where I ultimately hit 450 calories burned).  It made the time go by so much faster, I felt challenged, and I encouraged myself.

The one liiiiiitle thing I did not care for – this particular machine wouldn’t read my heart rate.  I don’t know if it was the whole series of machines at at the gym (there are 10 that are the same), or my particular one, but I would have really liked to know where I maxed out, and was walking too fast to take my own pulse.  One other thing, there didn’t seem to be a way to tell the machine how old I was or how much I weighed.  If you’re heavy like me, you want to do this because a heavy person burns more calories than an “average” person because of all the extra work it takes to carry the weight.

So then I did a 5 minute cool down on another treadmill (couldn’t figure out how to do it on the one I was on, plus the guy next to me was a little creepy).

Then, the next really fun part: strength.  I am still a little intimidated by the weight machines at my new gym.  I have used said machines at other gyms, but somehow stepping off the tiled walkways of the gym, onto the rubber mats of the weight area feels a little nerve wracking.  So, for now, I’ve been using a free weights/stretching/other area.

I did 100 crunches of varying kinds: toes in the air toe touches, angry penguins, standard, then did lower back crunches (100), including supermans, superman holds, and planks (not a crunch, but the idea was to work opposite muscle groups, so a count of one equaled one crunch).

I also did some arm work with free weights, but with a twist!  I got a BOSU ball, stood on it, and did curls and shoulder lifts.  I’m no fitness expert, but I know with challenge comes reward.  By standing on this thing while doing my curls, I was forced to engage my abs the whole time.

After that, I got a big (too big) yoga ball (I really don’t know the name for those things) and did some chest flies.

Next, feeling my triceps were under-worked, I attempted some tricep pushups using the BOSU ball.  I don’t know how well they worked, but they did something for me I’m sure, as I had a hard time doing them.

Last exercise, I did bridge crunches.  These are a nice way for me to tighten my butt (or at least that is the goal)!

Finally, stretching.  Oh how I love to stretch!  I made a mixed tape as a teenager called “stretching music,” full of Enya, monk chants, the Jurassic Park sound track, and a little Brian Adams.  No lie.

All in all, an excellent day at the gym!  How do you stay motivated at the gym, or how do you push yourself?

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Friday Update

Well, this is disappointing.  I had a great week in terms of workouts, but my weight is up due to bad food decisions.  Working out is not enough.  If I could just eat decent (and not horrible), at least I wouldn’t be offsetting my workouts.

Here is the (not so) skinny:
Weight: up 2.8 lbs this week, lost 23 so far
Waist – up 1/2″
Hips – down 3/4″ (down!)
Neck – no change

I have been thinking about Weight Watchers, which I have done about 3 times in the past, and how much I didn’t give it my all.  The way I see it, WW is about as effective as tracking calories, which I struggle to do as it is.  It’s just switching calories for points.  In my mind, if I struggle with calorie tracking, I will also struggle with point tracking.

It is partly a commitment issue, part stubbornness, part whining brat.  Oh, and part lazy.  Not lazy on the tracking as much as lazy on the executing a plan.

And so with those two  core reasons identified, I don’t think I’m ready to drop money on WW.  I need to find that inner commitment, get over my stubbornness, etc.  In the meantime, I am contemplating a no counting plan (e.g., South Beach Diet, Paleo, etc.).

On May 1st, I decided to take a month off from any place with (1) a drive-through or (2) a “meal deal.” It is May 4th and I have broken this 4 times now that I think about it.  Judge away, I deserve it.  The first occasion, my boss offered to buy lunch to a few members on my team, and the team voted Schlotzsky’s.  The second time, I was about to get a Freebirds salad but remembered they had meal deals.  As I thought about other things that I could prepare and eat in under 30 minutes, the next best solution I came up with was a frozen pizza.  And so, I picked salad over pizza.  So sue me.  Third time was this morning when not until now, I realized I got a green tea from Starbucks (ok, this isn’t food…).  Finally, and most regrettably, I got dinner from McDonald’s (I KNOW).  The reason: I had a pitiful lunch, a busy work afternoon, and without thinking, 6 hours passed since I’d last eaten and my stomach was growling.  I wasn’t going to be home for a couple more hours.

Once again, ill prepared.  Planning is something I simply must work on.  I think I just need to carry cereal, a bowl and a carton of milk with me.  I know there are options like shakes, protein bars, etc.  The irony: I don’t buy these things because I believe it’s better to prepare my meals (and it is), but then when I don’t have something on me ready to eat, I end up at McD.  Ugh.

While I contemplate eating, I hope the rest of you are off to a great start to your weekend.  Enjoy your Cinco de Mayo, or just your average May 5th – which ever suits your fancy!

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Friday Update

Whoa ya’ll.  The working out may have paid off this week (despite so-so eating) because I had a fantastic week!

Weight Loss this week: 5.4 pounds!!!!  I’m also now in the LOW 240s, and can deposit some $$ in my weight-loss rewards account :)
Neck: no change in a month
Waist: lost 1″ in a month
Hips: lost 1″ in a month

The possible lesson here: though I should strive harder for better eating, still showing up to the gym makes a difference.  Workouts this week included a body-pump-esq class (so fun, so sore, by the way), lots of machines (rower, treadmill, etc. etc.), and tennis lessons.  I worked out Saturday, Sunday, Monday, Wednesday and Thursday.  And, I plan to work out every day in the next week, except Tuesday (bible study).

Regarding food, it always comes back to strong planning.  I had lots of lunch time salads (that I made!) this week, but I struggled at breakfasts and dinners.  It’s back to meal planning and vegetable-rich meals.

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Shoot for the Moon

“Shoot for the moon.  Even if you miss, you’ll land among the stars.”  -Brian Littrell

It is completely possible you have seen this quote on a magnet at a cutesy gift shop.  Anyway, this quote has really been swirling around in my head quite a bit lately as I have contemplated the idea of perfect eating and activity.  It is no secret I have half-assed it (admittedly) at times in the past nine months.  I’ve had plateaus and so-called set-backs.  I’ve gained weight when my goal is obviously to lose it. My most unsuccessful weeks are the unfocused, whiney and feeling-sorry-for-myself because of the enormity of losing 100+ pounds weeks.

My best weeks are focused.  Well-planned.  Full of activity and vegetables, lacking in food cooked out of the home.

“Shoot for the moon.  Even if you miss, you’ll land among the stars.”  Perfection for me is the moon, but since I haven’t been shooting for it, I’m landing – nowhere.  No stars.  Well, maybe not NOWHERE, per se (I HAVE lost weight).  But this has me asking – where WOULD I land if I shot for perfection?

The idea of perfection has overwhelmed me for some time.  I have really been thinking of what it means I will need to give-up, rather than what it means I will take on.  It is completely possible I will learn even more healthy eating and activity habits. Will I always be perfect?  Much to my chagrin, likely not. BUT, I don’t want to be so forgiving with myself when I do fall off course.

As part of this effort (starting Monday Tuesday), I will also be aiming for a three-pound-per-week weight loss.  “GASP!” I hear?  Yes, it is drastic.  But again, it comes down to shooting for the moon.  If I shoot for 3lbs (based on healthy eating and increased activity), imagine what might happen on the scale.

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My New Favorite Cook Book

Ok.  I know I just said I found some pitfalls with meal planning alongside a cookbook.  The gist of that was I was over complicating the plan, so much so that I failed to recognize that between boot camp, tennis, work and church, I did not have time to cook three meals a week in the evenings.

However, I do love trying new recipes – keeps it interesting, and challenges my pallet.  I’ve resigned myself to the notion that I have to cook on Sundays though, and Wednesdays.  I will make and prep enough batches for the next few days.  The one thing that doesn’t work (for me, at least) are things like chicken breast, pot roast, etc.  I don’t like cuts of meat in general, let alone reheated.  #truth

I seem to be leading away from my point, instead of towards it.  So here’s a very abrupt change of topic: I’m in love with my new cookbook:

No, I have not come down with Diabetes.  However the Nutritionist did mention she had a few Diabetic cookbooks she recommends.  So, on my way to Barnes to pick up 300 under 300 – a book of 300 recipes under 300 calories – I changed it up when I came across this colorful, informative, picture-for-every-recipe book.  The principals of diabetic eating are basically the principals we should all follow.  The lesson for me: diabetics do not have a special diet, they just have to follow a healthy diet.  My grandma would be proud.

Aside from a ton of recipes I will find an appropriate time to work into my meal plan, there there are a ton of pseudo info graphics throughout the book like the following:

Calories would have been a little more helpful here, but the two are related.  Just a helpful visual.

As you may be able to see, there are little book markers throughout the book where I’ve taken note of things to try.

Lobster Mac and Cheese Casserole anyone?  Only 322 calories :)

 

 

 

 

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Planning and Puzzlement

Oh what a week it has been.   Last I wrote, I’d just been to the nutritionist and left rather confused.  What I don’t think I mentioned was that I had been to the dermatologist earlier that week, and was heading to south Texas for vacation later that week.

Well, the dermatologist was not really worth mentioning, or so I thought.  See, she put me on birth control to help regulate my hormones, in an effort to help my adult acne.  I have not been on that stuff in quite a while and man it messed me up.  For one thing, I spent a week being very crabby.  I caught myself crossing my arms a lot, was very irritable, did not want to see people, etc…. especially the past couple of days.  I bitched and moaned about going out with a friend for valentines day.  Ya’ll, I even drove all the way to tennis (about 5 miles) and felt like turning around and going home because I didn’t want to be around people while grouchy, and also didn’t want to put on a happy face.  I didn’t bail though.

Last Sunday was when another side effect of BC hit in a big and uncomfortable way home from  South Texas – constipation.  My God.  I thought (not for the first time in my life with this condition) that I would have to go to the hospital to have it taken care of.  I drove probably 150 miles with some major discomfort before the laxatives kicked in.  By the way, the other time this happened was also medicine-induced, but that was post-surgery Vicodin.

Anyway, I feel like I’m back to normal, but still confused as ever about my diet after my trip to the Nutritionist.  Before, when I did South Beach, it was very black and white on I what I could/should eat, and what I couldn’t/shouldn’t.  The nutritionist simply added carbs to my diet, and recommended 1600 to 1800 calories per day.  So, the list of food items out there was simply on a platter once again, and this overwhelmed me.

I have since reached out to her via email, but have not yet heard back.  I’ve spent the past few days  (well, past week if you count calories on vacation, which I should, but don’t), eating over 2,000 calories per day.  Hey, at least I’m tracking!  I’m just so lost, honestly.  The other issue is that Sunday I was all stopped up, Monday it was back to work, tennis Monday night, dinner with a friend Tuesday night.  Tonight is the first night since vacation that I wasn’t burdened with some other duty or task.  I can spend some time thinking more about my diet moving forward.

The way I think I’m going to approach this is think about things I WANT to incorporate into my diet.  For instance, I want more oatmeal in my diet – for the cholesterol benefits.  I want skim milk in my diet.  I’d like to keep nuts, fruits and vegetables in there, too.  I SUPPOSE by the time I put all the wants in the diet, plus the carbs my nutritionist wants to integrate, there will likely not b e a lot of room for much else.  Perhaps that’s my approach.

Truthfully ya’ll, if you have some advice here, I could really use it.  Why is a calorie restriction so confusing for me?  I started my diet this way, and now I’m back to it.  Puzzled.

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