Friday, December 31, 2010

Day 236: Mothers

My mother shits me sometimes. Of course, I love her, as sons should, but she can be a very annoying, selfish cow when she wants to be, like all mothers.

It's really been a miracle how much time I've been able to spend with her exercising these past 12 months. I think it has surprised us both.

She can be an extremely judgmental woman, and she is as subtle as a ton of bricks.

Like the time I got published in an international book. It was published in all the major English speaking countries, and is due to be translated into other major languages as well. It is a well known series, you would know it, and I did 33 entries and was the only person from Australia to do so.

You'd think you'd be able to be a little proud about that, wouldn't you? And so I announced one day that I was pleased to actually see the fucking book in a bookstore, and showed my brother a picture from my phone. My brother thought it was great. My mother said coldly, "That's not your book".

In her eyes I was a fraud because I hadn't written the whole thing. Where was my real book?

Isn't that shithouse?

I remember being 18 and bringing home my girlfriend. She was slim, fun, sexy, smart and leggy and I was madly in love with her. She left, and again my mother (who was only 42 it turns out) said to me, "Oh she's not very pretty is she".

Fucking bitch!

Even as recently as about 5 years ago, I took a girl home for a family dinner and mum commented afterwoods, "She's not very bright, is she. That will show up in the children".

How do you please a cow like this. Not that you should want to.

She has commented on others. Too fat. Too old. Too ugly. Too stupid. You name it. The bitch has it in for them.

As I said, it's a bit of a miracle that I've been able to spend so much time with her this last year.

Family can often only be taken in small doses.

Anyway, on the health front, I just did the 2 hour walk. With my mother. I was saying how well we were doing keeping the house clean, and we were making a real effort. Rather than just saying yes it looks good, and moving on, the bitch had to say yes she got upset when it was messy etc etc ie normally it looks like shit.

Now I'm not particually sensitive but this woman lived in a dire fucking shithole of a house for about 15 years before she reno'd the kitchen. So I reminded her of this. She denied it, which really shit me, and so I pointed out that this was the reason people didn't like to visit her for so long ie her house was a shithole.

She then went into a sulk and that was that.

I don't think I'll be going for a swim with her this afternoon.

Thursday, December 30, 2010

Swim

Well, great news, I went for a fucking swim for the first time in about 7 years.

One step towards the triathlon!

Went off to the local uni, ignored the fact everyone else was 22 and gorgeous, jumped in a lane, and saw if I could still swim.

Seems like I can. Slowly but surely, I swam 1k. 20 laps that is, of a 50 metre pool.

Exhilarating. Very fucking proud of myself. On a bit of a high I made enquiries at the front desk (manned by a skeptical 19 year old) about an oldies squad. He said the slowest lane was about 1.05 or 1.10 per 50, so I'll have to time myself in a few sets to see how I go.

I even saw a band aid in the water, floating around with a few hairs on it for the amusement of all.

Some things never change.

Day 235: Beautiful day



Well it's a stunning day out there now, after weeks of rain. As it should be, on my holidays....

Didn't go for my walk this morning. I was up last night taking advantage of my holiday status watching the old series "Rome", and didn't want my terminator mother turning up at 6.00am.

I now have a pair of togs though, and if today goes to plan I will go for a swim this afternoon for the first time in many years.

I woke up feeling lighter today, I think partially because I am three days into the exercise but mainly because we had our substantial meal yesterday at lunch time, and had a very light dinner.

I think all those European countries that do the same are really on to something. No, not you England.

The tough bit is working out what to do at work......

We have a new kitten, and for the last couple of weeks I have been a prisoner in my own home for fear of it getting out into the real world. Today is so stunning I refuse to have the doors closed, and the kitten is in the bathroom. My reward is a non-stop, mind bending series of meows that are driving me absolutely fucking insane. How can something squawk non-fucking stop for hours. Don't they get fucking tired?

I'd put the stupid thing on a lead but it would probably hang itself.

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Day 234: Third time the charm

Well, did the 2 hour walk again today, for the third day in the row. That's the sort of thing I need to keep up to do my big weight loss surge (as the Yanks would say).

Cooked the salmon last night. In a curry. And some dal. It was crap, unfortunately.

I think I just don't like salmon.

My super mother has been nagging me to go swimming with her. As in, in a pool. I used to be a good swimmer, in my glory days. Trained with Kerin Perkins when he was a lad, and went on to swim at high school and all the rest.

So it is something I could try and get back into.

In fact, I've been thinking that my real goal through all this health business is not so much to feel better, lose the weight and so on, but to do a triathlon. As I said, I can swim, if I got leaner and meaner I could ride a bike pretty well, and similarly if I got leaner I could run ok.

So that's my longer term goal.

But the next stage, for me, is to grind off some more weight. First I want to get back to the 15kg (how did I lose that exactly?), then 20, then 25. So basically I want to lose another 10kg (from the 15, which I'm close to).

Want to be smarter with my diet to do that this time, which is why I'm investigating things like salmon curry and the rest.

Got people coming for lunch today. Cooking some pasta and lamb.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Day 233: DIet

Ok, went for another walk this morning - almost 2 hours around the hill. Determined to knock off the kilos this year. I have two weeks off now, so the plan is to discover some tasty dishes to help me do it.

Things I want to eat more of are veges and fish. So I certainly want to look into salmon dishes and vege curries.

Funny the weight fell off for the first 13kg or so, now it isn't going anywhere.

My girlfriend's father gave me a 6 pack for Christmas. Thanks pop!

Interesting on my walk this morning, when I was planning the year out, and the things I want to do/weight I want to lose/fitness I want to gain, grog just didn't really fit in. If I really want to ramp up the fitness over the next 12 months, and look like a lean mean fitness machine at the end of it, then why would I get back on the turps.

Nobody, I mean nobody, would recommend going ON the turps to increase fitness/weight loss/to look better.

So that's really something to think about as the YEAR OFF THE GROG rolls on.

Monday, December 27, 2010

Day 232: Walk

Rather than be hung over today I instead walked off in the rain with my mother and ended up splashing around in a newly formed waterfall in the bush. Beautiful! I'm very lucky to be able to do this in the middle of the city.

Beats the fuck out of hungover.

Going to try and do some swimming this week, as well as the walking.

Was famished when I came in from my walk/swim. There was fuck all about so I made a beautiful fried bread and tomato salad with parsley and balsamic vinegar.

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Day 231: Down on drinkers

I guess it was bound to happen. But here it is anyway, breathtaking in its hypocrisy: drinkers shit me. I'm talking about drinkers who get drunk: drunk people shit me. They aren't cool. They aren't suave. They aren't even very fucking social, being so distracted with their drinking at all.

They just shit me.

One thing they aren't is witty. They think they are. They also aren't charming. They aren't attractive. They are boring. They are slow. They are annoying. They are irritating.

They shit me to tears.

What this means of course, which is a very horrible conclusion for me, is that I've been a drunken, disgraceful bore of the worst kind for close to 20 years. Drinking with a consequence of getting drunk, even if that wasn't the goal, and harassing people to get drunk with me, with raucous drunken laughter (reinforcing my wit, in my mind), no doubt spitting in peoples faces as I spoke (drunks do this), cracking beer after beer, wine after wine, saying how great my mates were (we had a special relationship you see) when I was younger, and pretending great sophistication and discernment as my age (and relative) wealth increased. Getting pissed either way. And encouraging others to do the same.

Every single fucking week. For at least 15 years.

Every. Single. Fucking. Week.

How many hours have I spent this way I wonder. How many women may I have bedded but instead repulsed? How many days did I spend in a hung over stupor instead of enjoying my fleeting twenties (now gone) or the first half of my thirties (on its way)?

How much cash did I spend? I could have had a flash pad in my 20s (see bedding beautiful women point, above). I could have bought a home earlier.

And don't get me wrong, like you, dear reader: I was not an alco. Not by Australian standards anyway. If I was an alco then let me tell you 85% of adults in this country were. Or perhaps 60%, as I did show some enthusiasm that more moderate drinkers do not.

But I guess, to my horror, that I used to shit people as well. People other than fellow piss heads. You might consider everyone to be a piss head. Yes, well that may be true. But not everyone drinks as much as you. You are shitting them. Including that cute sober girl in the corner, Claire.

It makes me a bit sick, to be honest, thinking about time and opportunities wasted. Why spend your life drunk, illogical and offensive; all the time damaging your health, getting fatter and sicker. Such a waste.

Saturday, December 25, 2010

Day 230: A sober Christmas


Well, I guess today will be my first Christmas without a drink in 20 years. I've probably been slipping in a glass or two since I was 16, so that's 20 years. Shit!!

Not sure if that's a good thing or not. Certainly my grandmother would not think it's a good thing. Nor my uncle. My mother would, but she is like that.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Day 226: Good walk food ok

Did 2 walks today. One around Cootha myself. One around the river.

Food was ok. Cooked a moroccan sweet potato dish for tea, and also roasted another eggplant.

Fucking knackered though. Bit funny from the 3.5 hours of walking.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Day 225: Walk and food ok

Had to go into work early this morning so went for a walk for an hour. Gorgeous. Why wouldn't you want to go?

Ate lots of fruit but had a poor lunch (food court).

I need to avoid the food court!!!!!!

Dinner was good. Basil and (fresh) tomato pasta, not from a jar thanks very much, followed by a baked eggplant.

Just need to improve the lunch.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Day 223: BFW (Big Fucking Walk)

Three cheers for me. Did the excellent long walk around the hill this morning with a mate.

Can't put a foot wrong after that. Plus the added joy of knowing that I would not have done it if I had gotten on the piss last night.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Day 222: Bad day and party observations

Well, had a bit of a mental spac out today, and ate poorly. I don't know why that was. I think that you have cycles, well some of us do, with our brains, and sometimes you hit a low point, and that can lead to poor food choices.

And today I made them.

On a brighter note, I attended a Christmas function tonight and didn't even think of drinking. Every other bastard was onto it though. Most of us think we are pretty good people watchers, but Jesus, trying being sober at a function like that. You see them all.

The old bastards, who think they are powerful because they are high up/own the place. These guys are just sad deluded fuckers who are really losers but have a pathetic aura in their company that doesn't save them elsewhere. They either get pissed and are obnoxious, or don't get pissed and are boring and superior.

The good bloke party guy. The one who shouts you beers. Thinks he is a good bloke so he will get the chicks. He won't. He might even be a big drinker. A pisshead. Thinks getting shitfaced will let him have a good time. It will, to a point. But his health will deteriorate, he may be overweight or on his way, he is everyone's mate but really pretty alone when push comes to shove. Also sad fuckers, in the end.

The boring turds. They don't look good. Their stories suck. They trap you, when you are trying to talk to the attractive or interesting people. You want them to die rather than keep talking.

The hot pissed girls. Everyone wants them. They look great. It doesn't matter if their stories are interesting, you are engrossed by their very existence. They laugh and they flirt and of course then end up going home with the hottest guys in the room.

The average guys. They get bought beers by the good blokes. They tell boring stories and laugh at the bosses jokes. They have ugly girlfriends. They get pissed by the end but not as pissed as the others.

The stylish guy who sits on his drink. Buff. Well dressed. Lets the average buffoons get more and more pissed while he keeps his cool and eyes off the hot pissed girls. Eventually, they come to him while Mr Average and Mr Goodbloke go home pissed via the pizza slice or kebab shop.

And so on. You get the idea. Party time. Excellent. Coronas (boo). House whites (boo). Vodka. Shots. Witching hour. Drunken messes. Fights for cabs. Home pissed, with the hot chick if you're exceptional, with your own drunken self if you are not.

That's what I saw. And I wasn't tempted. Except by the hot chicks.


Thursday, December 16, 2010

Day 221: Walk again

Well no walk wed, and ate poorly, but did a walk this morning. Hope to ramp up to a daily exercise. Funny spoke with brewery rep on weekend who has promised to send me lots of free product.

Wheeee.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Day 219: Walk


Well, did a short Cootha walk with mum this morning. Beautiful weather. Felt great. Inspired to get cracking.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Day 215: Post 2 of 2

Found this old post celebrating the 15kg loss: http://yearoffthegrog.blogspot.com/2010/09/day-133-154kg-in-19-weeks-19k.html

That was 12 weeks ago. I think the biggest retard in the world can lose half a kilo a week, especially off the piss.

So it is very disappointing that I didn't keep plugging away losing another say 5kg over that time. That would have me at 20kg instead of 13.5kg. 6.5kg difference .

Hopeless! That's the problem when you don't go in the right direction, or, worse, go in the wrong direction. Time passes, that is the one sure thing, and if you gain rather than the lose then the "sliding door" difference between one behaviour and another means a lot in terms of weight at the other end.

The main thing with weight loss is awareness. I think there are many many ways to move in the right direction. Low this, low that, exercise this, drink that. My theory is that if you make an effort - almost any effort - and measure then you will move in the right direction. And if you move in the right direction, with the passing of time then you will get to where you want to go.

Bit like doing a long walk one step at a time.

It is when you stop measuring that it all turns to shit. Nobody willingly looks at the scales every week and says, "Ripper, I'm up another kilo, that's 3 in the last month, best keep it up". Nope, more likely you subconsciously know things aren't going so well, or foolishly think things are, and put your head in the sand for a while and discover the movement to your horror when you hop back on the damn scales.

So what does this mean for me? Measure weekly. Keep it front of mind. Move in the right direction. Wait for time to pass.

Fat

Well, I jumped on the scales even though I had intended to wait till Monday.

Not great. Probably down to 13.5kg loss rather than the 15 I had at one stage and 14 I had a few weeks ago.

MOVING IN THE WRONG DIRECTION!!!!!

Strange it was so easy at the start. It just fell off. But this 15kg barrier seems to have fucked with my mind or something.

Anyway, official weigh in will be Monday. I want to be losing about a kilo a week. Once again, I need to do things incrementally I think in the following order:

1) no piss.
2) exercise every day;
3) cut out all shit;
4) eat real food; and
5) don't be greedy.

First goal is to get back to 15kg. Then 20.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Day 214: Walk

Well, dragged my fat ass around for an hour after work yesterday by myself which was good. Getting back into the swing of things. Want to keep up the daily walking, if possible, and then do Cootha again on the weekend and get into the morning routine after this.

Food wise yesterday I was good right up until 7.00 when I raided the biscuit jar at work. Arrrrrrrrrrr.

Sounds stupid but I've been getting compliments left right and centre (as my dad would say) about my holiday beard at work so I'm going to experiment with keeping it. "A younger, better model" was a comment from one young lady so I can go with that.

Not to skite but the accounting guy - who I generally loathe - said I was looking slimmer. So he is now in my good books.

I feel as though I'm in a pretty good space for it all. I've really just got to get the diet nailed during the weeks. Sometime really simple every night, that satisfies intellectually and physically. I can cook but I think it is more being organised, and having a clean kitchen. At the moment everything is all over the shop with us getting back from the trip and the bathroom getting done (still not fucking done). Came home late last night do a nightmare kitchen and there was just no way I was going to spend 30 minutes or more trying to cook up a storm. We just half cleaned the kitchen and had toasted sandwiches.

I think I need to cook something I can freeze for so-called emergencies when I can't be arsed cooking anything else.

Anyway, back on the scales on Monday, that will focus my mind.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Day 213: Food

Well, haven't walked since I've been back. Diet has been a bit chaotic too.

I've been thinking about what approach I should take with my diet. I've been eating a lot of Italian in the last year or so. I like Italian food because it uses real ingredients, and treats them simply. It has to be a good thing, in my mind, to eat an eggplant, or some lamb or some tomatoes. They tend to be made tasty using salt and olive oil.

One option is to move more in the Asian direction. I have been there before. There was a time I only really cooked Asian. I was thinner then, which is my goal at the moment. Unlike Italian though, I see a lot of Asian cooking as flavouring rice with bits and pieces. So in the end the meal really is the rice, whereas with Italian the meal is the ingredient.

Taking the "you are what you eat" approach to things, I think I'd rather be an eggplant than some polished rice.

Rather than being driven by cuisine though, I really should be driven by ingredients. I should really be thinking, what is it I would like to eat this week, and then use simple techniques drawing from whatever cultures I can to make those ingredients palatable.

Take salmon for instance. Not a big fan. But if I've learned anything in this journey, it is that you can change habits. I would like to eat it twice a week. It could be grilled with a herbs and oil in the Italian fashion. It could have a side sauce used by the French. It could be made into an Indian curry. Or it could be in a vietnamese soup.

I think my week would be more interesting if I nailed a couple of these dishes and cooked them pretty well every week. Repetition is fine by my book. I could sleep with the same hot chick of my dreams once a week. Same with food. I just need to find the hot chick, sorry, the recipe and ingredients, that do it for me.

So if I were picking things I'd like to eat once a week they would be salmon twice, eggplant, cabbage, broccoli and cauliflower. The other day could have a meat dish. Tomatoes could also be in there somewhere, simmered in olive oil.

Just need to get experimenting and sourcing.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Day 211: Back at work

Well, back into the salt mines. What a long fucking day.

I'm going to spend this week just trying to get back into the routine. Cooked nice vege stir fry.

I'm fucking exhausted. Travel really takes it out of you.

Got someone at work who said she had my card for years as her husband worked for a brewery and she wanted to talk to me. He'll be at the XMas party this Friday and we'll be able to talk about piss together all night. Wheeep.

So goals for this week are getting the food back on track (no shit) and getting back into my daily walk.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Day 209: Carpet

Ah, fucking bath leaked and now the carpet is wet in my flash apartment in Queenstown, on my second last day here.

Just what I fucking need.

Friday, December 3, 2010

DAY 208: Part II Winery

Well, I'm a sucker for temptation that's for sure. Just did a winery tour, complete with a tasting, in the fucking cellar. That's right, in the cellar, in the mountain, in the most awarded winery in New Zealand.

The smell hits you as soon as you walk in. Then wine by wine, they put a glass in my hand, the smell of which I inhaled like a starving man, and which reminded me, to my very core, of all the good wonderful things to be done with alcohol.

Did I tell you I really like alcohol? I really really like it. I appreciate it. I evangalise it. I seek it out, think about it, write about it, encourage others to bask in its wonder.

But not this time. I had to hand the glass to my girlfriend, who was grinning like a Cheshire Cat, and had 8 glasses in the cellar instead of 4.

She was on top of the world by the end of it. I was almost out of my mind.

My advice is not to do things like that.

Day 208: Next steps



Well, I've only got a couple of days more in NZ.

I've been thinking about things, and really want to ramp it up when I get home. Focus on results weight wise, rather than being fit for Milford.

So on my friend the scales on Monday morning. I'll keep the Cootha routine. I think it's a good one. It's just what next after that.

I might dump the backpack though. I don't think it's good for your back.

I've been refreshed a bit over here. I'm going to try and improve myself in a number of ways when I get back. At work. With health. Try and use this grog free time to really get some results professionally and personally.

I've only got 22 weeks left in this 'Year off the grog'.

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Comment

See Claire at http://nomorepissingaround.blogspot.com/2010/11/alcohol-is-not-my-friend.html

And my comment:

Grogger said...
Ah my friend, my non-drinking mentor who in truth inspired my year off the piss, my fellow drinker. The battle between good and evil. The battle between being social, bonding with fellow humans, participating in the rituals of society, letting one's hair down, engaging in debauchery, or just enjoying a drink.... and the negatives that come with it (including depression, weight gain, addiction and time theft).

I guess I have the non-drinking perspective now. You are slowly losing yours. The Year Off The Piss will become a blip for you. A dim memory. The perspective, slowly but surely, will be lost, and replaced with a drinking routine that has every chance of ramping over the next 12 months to exactly what it was. Alcohol is like that. It just seems so so good. Why not just one. And if you can have one, why not another, especially if you are having the time of your life. It wouldn't be fair not to. In fact, it would be rude and anti-social not to.

It is interesting you felt flat after two wines one day and was able to push through with a run the next. I found as I got older (35 now) that even small amounts of alcohol made me feel flat the next day. Larger amounts more so.

I think you hit the nail on the head in your blog post where you identified that being off the piss allowed you to focus on larger things. It did not distract you with the routine of being pissed, hung over, depressed or whatnot. You had some clarity.

There aren't any right answers here. No correct behaviour. It is just how you want to spend your time on the planet before it ends, or before you get so old as to not enjoy it as much. Much pleasure can be found in either route, and it is deeply personal.
December 1, 2010 11:19 AM

Day 207: Walked Milford Track

Well I walked the Milford Track again with my olds and cousin. 53k including 1 mountain.

It was much easier than last year, which I put down to my increased fitness and weight loss since giving up the piss and training every week around the bloody mountain.

So great outcome.

Yes I did feel like a beer at the pub at the end. But no, I didn't have one.

So where to from here? Well, I'm relaxing now still in Queenstown, recovering, and will be back in Oz on Sunday. I think from there I weigh myself and get serious about dropping a kg a week on an ongoing basis until I'm happy.

I want to keep up the mountain routine. And perhaps add some more exercise as well. I'm thinking perhaps weights and swimming.

It was good on the track to not be in pain cardio or legs wise. That's the benefit of fitness. I can only imagine what it would be like if I dropped a shitload more weight.

Friday, November 26, 2010

Day 201: Survived


Had the wine tasting. It went fine. Nothing like the pangs I had near the Emerons bar. I guess that shows you never know what's next if you are trying to give up the piss. You can never get too comfortable.

Once again it was interesting to watch everyone (3 people) get pissed with the tasting, all in the name of sophistication (and getting pissed). The more pissed they got the more they raved about how lovely the wines were, and they would have to order them, and all the rest of it. And get pissed again, no doubt, talking about their trip to NZ.

Boring.

They also thought the food was out of this world - it was the PISS talking. The food was so-so.

Ah piss.

Off to te anu today, and the Milford Track tomorrow. Hopefully I'll be a lot fitter around the track this year due to my efforts over the past 201 days.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Day 200: Time flies



Wow, 200 days with no piss. And pretty much over it or so I thought. I've been tested a little here in NZ. Fine in the house. But on holidays, overseas (is there an overseas loophole? come on....), where I had a great pissy time last time. I felt real pangs here. Real physical pangs. First outside a little pub, which has the best beer in the world in it, and second in the supermarket where they stock the best beer around also.

I felt pangs, and almost a little sick or sad or something. A sense of loss, regret and desire.

I had to get out of there quick smart. Fine back at the house, as I said.

But, off to a wine tasting tonight. That will be the test - do I give a shit there. I suspect not.

Have I enjoyed the trip any less? I don't think so. I've really enjoyed it. And if you are hungover, can you really enjoy natural beauty? I think you enjoy it less. Everything is a bit shit when you are hungover, even a nice mountain.

Funny my cousin is coming over as well. Pretty much first SMS was inviting me out for a beer. Declined. Asked him if he wanted to walk in the morning. Got a reply a bit later saying he was 'on the soup' and no chance for morning. And couldn't come to dinner because had booked into wine tasting (which I'm now going to).

So, first night in foreign country. Pissed. Presumably hungover.

Second night in foreign country. Pissed. Presumably hungover.

Look, I've been there. I get it. I've written about it. I've loved it as much as any man.

It is just a different perspective. A drunken one. Different experiences. Different choices.

But it's a choice (at a binge level) that does not lead to one improving one's health, which is where I'm trying to go. And it is a slippery slope. A few drinks and I'd be back on the turps for sure.

So still on track, in beautiful NZ. Off to walk the Milford track on Saturday, for 4 days.



Sunday, November 21, 2010

Day ????: Weakness

Well, I tell you what, I think I've found my weakness.

I'm posting from Queenstown, New Zealand. Bloody beautiful place if there ever was one.

Also home to what must be the greatest cravings for a drink I've had in 5 months.

And the trigger: Emersons. It must be the most beautiful range of beer in New Zealand, and probably shits on almost every Aussie beer as well. I had to walk past a little bar here in beautiful Queenstown and I tell you what, the pangs were strong. I had a fantastic time drinking at that bar, and in Queenstown itself, 12 months ago.

And then I went into a supermarket, where they sell beer, and the Emersons was just lined up and I could imagine drinking every beautiful one of them: Pilsner, London Porter, IPA, Strong Ale. I know every one of them would really be something special. And what a beautiful location to drink them.

The pang was almost overwhelming.

Anyway, I removed myself from the aisle and got out of the shop. No Emersons for me.

But I really really really did feel like buying some beautiful Emersons beer, in beautiful New Zealand.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Day 188: Brewery tour

Well, Friday could not have been much more bizarre. Up at 3, walk at 5 (very slow), off to work, called to lunch at last minute, to watch my lunch mate down his beer that came with the meal, and then mine. Then off to, of all things, an intimate gathering of people interested in beer at a local microbrewery hanging off a pub, to meet the guy who has been a brewer for 50 years, try his efforts and then do a tour of the brewery (which is right through the bottleshop).

I asked a lot of questions but didn't drink any of the amber fluid. For that, I brought with me a beer loving young lady I work with, so she drank the beer and smiled and partook in that side of it while I just had my waters and chatted to the beer journos who were there.

All the while fucking exhausted from lack of sleep, which made me act at least as relaxed as those who were drinking. I think I've mentioned that before, but I find it fascinating how I seem to go into 'drinking mode' in a social sense when I am around people who are drinking. I can banter, laugh and carry on with the rest of them, and then when I leave them I'm still in a relaxed, non-work mode as though I have been drinking.

Talk about conditioning! It's a good thing, I think, as it means I don't miss out.

It only works to a point of course. People there yesterday were not binge drinking. You can't fake it to that level, and probably just as well.

I am well and truly off the drink though. At least for now. For the most part I didn't feel any pangs of exclusion or desire or regret yesterday. I didn't even think about breaking or whatnot. The only time I sort of thought about it was when one of the beer guys asked me how I was going and what was it like etc. This again shows how habits can be broken; and how your mind can change if you give it a chance.

I wonder what other habits I could change in the same way for the greater good? Food is an obvious habit, and exercise. I guess cleaning up around the house.....

Sounds a bit dull doesn't it. But I think there is something in a realisation that you can change habits that are deeply ingrained. That would suggest that almost any behaviour can be modified, be it smoking, drinking, going to the gym, working harder or less - anything.

On an intellectual level though yesterday was an example of the good beer can do. It brought us all together. It provided pleasure. It made people feel good, laugh and enjoy themselves. It let me enjoy myself, and I wasn't even drinking.

Not one of the participants was drunk, in a binge sense (at least as I define binge).

I think perhaps had I been drinking though I would have drunk more than any of them. I would have had a pint or so to finish, rather than a few pots. I would have been nicely pissed, a bit raucous, and I would have continued drinking afterwards if I could find someone to drink with me (in this case I would have gone to work drinks back at the office and had a few more).

I would be feeling like shit now, and perhaps eaten shit last night and be thinking about a bakery run this morning.

No way I would have exercised today.

Ah alcohol. How complicated you are.

Friday, November 12, 2010

187: Shithouse sleep

What a shithouse sleep I had last night. Up at 3.00am and not getting back to sleep.

How shit is that?

And I'm off for a walk in 15 minutes around the fucking mountain, at 5am. I'll be completely rooted for that.

I don't know if I've been drinking too much caffeine, or if my mattress is fucked, or if I need to lose some more weight to sleep better or what.

All I know is that I feel like shit for work today and it is only 4.48 in the morning.

I've had a big week or two at work. Bit of stress. Someone I work with said to me, "At least I can have a drink before I go to bed tonight". She was right, although I don't crave a drink when I walk in the door after a shit day.

Theoretically at least my sleep would be even worse with alcohol. Although it's hard to see how that could be the case at the moment.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Day 183: Drink to live!

Christ, look at this:


News From the Field

Moderate Drinkers May Live Longer Than Non-Drinkers

When compared to abstainers or heavy drinkers, moderate drinkers have the lowest mortality risk.

A new study published online in Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research has shown that moderate drinking among older adults is associated with lower mortality rates than those observed in adults who did not drink at all. What makes this study different from previous studies with similar findings was that the researchers controlled for additional factors, most notably non-drinkers who previously drank problematically. In similar studies that do not control for the health problems caused by previous heavy drinking, the interpretation of findings regarding the potential benefit of moderate drinking is more difficult.

The study, led by Charles J. Holahan, Ph.D., of the University of Texas at Austin, included 1,824 adults between the ages of 55 and 65, and controlled for former problem drinking status, existing health problems, and important sociodemographic and social-behavioral factors. When controlled for these factors, the data showed that non-drinkers had a 45 percent increased mortality risk over moderate drinkers. Additionally, heavy drinkers showed a 51 percent greater mortality risk than moderate drinkers.

The authors note that, “The apparent health-protective effects of moderate alcohol consumption compared to abstention may be related to reductions in cardiovascular illness.” The authors caution, however, that these health-protective effects “appear to be limited to regular moderate drinking. Heavy episodic drinking—even when average consumption remains moderate—is associated with increased cardiovascular risk.”

http://www.spectrum.niaaa.nih.gov/newsfromthefield/ModerateDrinkers.aspx

A 45% increased mortality rate compared to non drinkers??? And these are non-drinkers that aren't ex-alcos. Unbeliveable.

Here is more:

RESULTS: Controlling only for age and gender, compared to moderate drinkers, abstainers had a more than 2 times increased mortality risk, heavy drinkers had 70% increased risk, and light drinkers had 23% increased risk. A model controlling for former problem drinking status, existing health problems, and key sociodemographic and social-behavioral factors, as well as for age and gender, substantially reduced the mortality effect for abstainers compared to moderate drinkers. However, even after adjusting for all covariates, abstainers and heavy drinkers continued to show increased mortality risks of 51 and 45%, respectively, compared to moderate drinkers.

CONCLUSIONS: Findings are consistent with an interpretation that the survival effect for moderate drinking compared to abstention among older adults reflects 2 processes. First, the effect of confounding factors associated with alcohol abstention is considerable. However, even after taking account of traditional and nontraditional covariates, moderate alcohol consumption continued to show a beneficial effect in predicting mortality risk.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20735372

Two times more risk? On this study, non drinkers are worse off than heavy drinkers, unless I am reading this wrong?

At least in older people.

What does this mean for me? Well, I think if you are wanting to slim down and look like the greek god who runs through the hills, then being off the piss is very helpful. If you want to live from 50-85, and don't knock off half a bottle of scotch every night ,then it would appear a daily glass of the happy water is the way to go.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Day 182:: No walkies for me

For the second weekend in a row I haven't walked; also had a bit of a crap blowout today....... as for why I guess you'd have to see a shrink.

But I haven't had a drink!!!!

Just need to get off my ass in the morning and walk around the hill again.

Off to NZ in 2 weeks.

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Day 181?: 6 months tonight......

Tonight, at about 11.30, it will be 6 months since I was last pissed (apart from that dessert I had which doesn't count). 6 months since I had a drink. 6 months since I was standing, drunk, with embers dangerously close to my hair, as I stood in front of the bonfire.

I did enjoy the pissed bit, although it was the hangovers that really killed me. 6 months ago tomorrow it was a beautiful morning on a beautiful mountain, with my family, and I just sat there, feeling like crap, looking like crap, 1 foot in the grave and not wanting to participate in anything around me.

I have to say it is fucking incredible I made 6 months. I guess you take it for granted because this is a "year off the grog" blog but believe me there were no guarantees. Even though like everyone else who writes about it, "I wasn't an alco", alcohol was a huge part of my life. It still is to be honest - I just don't drink it!! Just last week I was sent a free mixed six pack from a major brewery, unsolicited. It just arrived as I was sitting there. A couple of months earlier another brewery sent me a beer worth $90, beautifully presented as though it was the world's finest bottle of wine.

It is still sitting on my desk.

Just last week I was invited to a craft beer afternoon with the brewer in the Brisbane CBD. I'm going, but someone else is coming with me to do the 'tasting'.

Grog was a massive part of my life. I'm not saying a grog free life is the right thing, but if you think it is the right thing for you, and seems impossible because of all the social and habitual uses of it you have, well, if I can not have a drink for 6 months then anyone can.

That wouldn't apply to any poor sods who have a real medical addiction or whatnot, but if you are a normal drinker who wants to give it a rest then let me tell you it is possible, even if socially you think it is suicide, or if you think your sophisticated or needy habits are too much - they aren't.

Drinking habits can change. And you feel better within 2 weeks. I used to drink most days at home - generally 1, or perhaps 2. I might have more on a weekend - perhaps 3 or 4 on a Friday night at home, more if at the pub. My greatest weakness was a fancy lunch during the week - thinking i was all sophisticated and all. What a load of bullshit. You are just a pisshead, getting pissed, and you don't look sophisticated, you look like a middle aged, overweight lush that young people fear becoming.

And socially? Unless you are with a real young, immature crowd that thinks a good time is going out and getting pissed at a night club every week, then no one gives a shit. You might think they do, but really, like every other aspect of your life, no one gives a shit. Think about it, if someone in your group or at work said they weren't drinking for health reasons, would you really care? You'd just get pissed around them wouldn't you. You might even look up to them, or wonder how they do it. Ultimately, no one cares.

So forget that excuse.

This doesn't mean you turn into a borning, non-drinker. You're not a non-drinker. You're an ex-drinker. You still like a good time. You'd still shag one of the girls on 30 seconds notice if you could. You just had your share sooner than everyone else.

But really, noone gives a shit, unless your peer group is immature (if you are younger), or frankly, a bunch of deadshits you'd be better off ditching (if you are older).

I can't imagine being hungover now. I'd be scared of it. And looking at drinkers around me, they spend their whole time either being pissed, being hungover, or planning to get pissed. Let's not forget alcohol is a drug, and these people are just planning their next hit!!! That's all they do, some of them, although they dress it up in all sorts of cultural bullshit (typically mateship if young or poor or sophistication if well off) to justify it.

How the hell did this happen to every fucking person in my country? Almost.

As for benefits, I'm pretty sure my health/weight has been slowly but surely improving over this 6 month period. I'm probably about 14k down, and even though it has slowed, I'm in a pretty good routine with the exercise and some good has to be coming from it. It makes me feel better if nothing else, and not drinking has let me get in a good routine that way.

On the whole my diet is also better not being pissed or hungover.

I also have a heap more time.

At the moment I can honestly say my life is better without piss.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Day 175: 25 weeks

I've been working hard the last couple of weeks. Really exercising my arse off after my slack period. Today, if all goes well, I'll do the 4 hour Cootha walk. I really hope I'll do it anyway.

The weight loss bit is strange in terms of when it happens and when it doesn't. I really think the body loves holding out, and can ignore effort for some time. But when it breaks, and you start losing, then it just falls off you and you think that you are super weight loss man for some reason which can lead to you stopping doing the things that caused you to become super weight loss man in the first place.

At the moment I think my body is in the 'hold' pattern. I was on a roll, took a break in part due to illness, and then have been gearing back up for 2 weeks, and should really be seeing some results. But I've had a sneak peak and am not so sure I've moved anywhere really these last 2 weeks. The 15 for 1 weeks time is looking a little iffy unless I really really bust it out this week.

The trick is, of course, to ignore this and continue to smash it out. Your body cannot ignore a serious effort forever, and eventually you start to make progress.

UPDATE: I was looking back at my posts, and in fact I weighed just a little less than I do now at the 10 weeks. So that's 15 weeks of hard work with very little progress. I know you need to look at the long haul and all but that's hard going. I think I'll have to work even harder this week, and really watch my diet, just to prove I'm still moving in the right direction.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Day 174: The big picture

Most of the time, when trying to do something that takes a while, it is best to take it one day at a time. A bit like when you are on a big hike, or walking up a big hill, in which case it is best to take it one step at a time.

I've worked out that if you take one step at a time for long enough in the right direction then eventually you get to where you are going. That's how I managed the unlikely outcome of walking Kokoda a few years back (5.5 days thank you very much). I was by far the slowest in the group, and arrived hours after everyone else each day, through the stinking, wet, slippery, muddy jungle. But I made it. I made it each day and collapsed in a heap. And then got up again the next day and did it again. Trudging step by step.

But in the last day or so I've been thinking more about the big picture for me health wise. Basically I, like most of us, was quite fit in my glory days (15 years ago say). I ran. I swam. I played all sort of sports. I engaged in a low fat diet, which was what we were told to do, and I was at a healthy weight.

Looking back I should have gotten up to more mischief than I did but then they say youth is wasted on the young don't they.

For a lot of my 20s I didn't treat my body really well. When I was 23 I lived above an Irish pub in Canada for 6 months, and that really fucked me up health wise. I think that was the time I went from being young and fit looking to being a bloke looking like he had been pissing it up in an Irish pub every night and eating pub food for 6 months.

Back in Oz I thought I would be able to do a body reset pretty quickly. Mentally I was still the same, after all. But instead I threw myself into my work, which involved sitting in an office in Sydney initially with lots of other people who sat in an office, and hit the turps once or twice a week.

Fitness has always been front of mind. I walked a lot. Tried different things. But then at 25 I think I mentioned I had what turned out to be a panic attack at work, and I had a full health check up as part of that. The doc said I was a fit young person but I had to lose some weight, and then, out of the blue, she also asked if I drank a lot 'because your liver is not looking so good'.

That shocked the shit out of me. What she meant was the blood test had detected that my liver was leaking enzymes, which meant it was working a bit too hard. How could this be when I wasn't drinking every day? Just once or twice a week really. Whatever she meant it spurred me into action, and that was pretty well the only other time I have gone off the grog. It was 2000 and I was living at Coogee in Sydney, near the beach. For 13 weeks I walked almost every day to Bondi and back (a huge walk in the mornings before work), didn't drink a drop, and lost 13kg.

What a fantastic effort that was. But at the end of the 13 weeks, icy cold schooners called and before I knew it I was back at the Coogee Bay Hotel enjoying the good life pissed with a view of the ocean. One of life's pleasures indeed.

Unfortunately that meant that I put the weight back on quick smart. The sad thing is that I remember a girl at work saying to me, "You seem a lot happier", when I was off the turps and exercising like a champion while losing weight.

The next decade - yes decade, past without me thinking about alcohol, at least in any negative sense, much at all. I enjoyed getting pissed, but no more than any other Aussie bloke I knew, and a bit less than some. Through work I probably had access to more grog on more days, and work probably drove me more too it as well..... but I would never have said I had a 'problem' by Australian drinking standards in any event.

But something was obviously out of whack health wise. That was evidenced in my weight gain, as well as me sleeping poorly, being a bit run down and perhaps even depressed. Even my face seemed to be getting puffy.

Something had to give. I couldn't keep going up in weight could I? Where would that end? Even if you only put on 2kg a year (hell I could do that in a weekend) then over a decade you put on 20kg!! And what, 15 years is 30kg!!! That's the insidious nature of weight gain over time - just as if you move in the right direction you can lose weight over time (because it always passes....) so too you can turn into the body of your teen nightmares over 20 years if you just put on a paltry 2kg a year. God help you if you put on 5kg a year. That would mean you put on 100kg!!! 3kg would be 60. 3kg is not a lot of weight to put in 12 months of hard living, and so the head in the sand approach over a decade can lead to catastrophic health disaster, at least from the point of view of you at 17 (and really, by any objective measure as well).

Denial is what allows this to happen. Every one of us does it. We lose the perspective of the 17 year old, but we keep the mindset. How many middle aged hags think they are pretty? How many tubby 40 year old blokes who look like shit still think they would be competitive as a second rower, and are still attractive to the 23 year old ladies?

If they really knew how they looked, and I mean really knew how they looked - the way the 17 year old sees them - they would probably top themselves. I mean if the 17 year old put on 30 or 40kg and aged 20 years in a weekend they would probably top themselves from horror wouldn't they. They certainly wouldn't get up and go off to work thinking it was normal, and get pissed on Friday and still think they were in with a chance, would they.

That my friends, is denial. It protects us from the horrific reality of it all. It wouldn't do to have everyone topping themselves now would it. The ego is far too strong and clever for that. I'm fine mate, although I must say, poor old Sam is looking like shit these days isn't he. And christ he's a mess when he drinks. Lucky for me I get wittier and better looking when I'm pissed.

Yeah right.

For anything to change, I guess the first thing is to smash through that ego, and gain some (but certainly not all) of an understanding that you have transformed into that fine young specimen into, really, a fucking disgrace. Someone the young version of you would be horrified, absolutely horrified, to become. A person they would throw eggs at. Or taunt. Certainly not hang around. In a sense, most people become the nightmare they feared when they were 16.

So some perspective is required. Not full perspective, or, indeed, suicide rates may rise. And that just wouldn't do. Nor is it required.

But what to do when you have that perspective? Many panic. They do something they cannot sustain and do not enjoy. They crash diet. They drink shakes (what sort of madness is this?). They go for a 5 hour walk in the sun and return exhausted.

Most of the time they can't keep it up for more than say, 13 weeks, and, like me in 2000, put it all back on, and then some to boot.

So it needs to be sustainable. It needs to be for the long haul. That doesn't mean you can't make difficult decisions. Like giving up the piss if it is getting in your way (as it was mine). Like dragging your fat ass out of bed each morning to go for a walk for an hour. Like not eating the sausage rolls at morning tea. And you make this effort, doing these things, until they become a routine. Until they become part of your life, and much less effort is required because that is how you live each day by habit.

Once you think you are in the routine, that you are doing all you need to do for sustainable change, then you measure yourself to see if you are going in the right direction. It does not have to be fast change, because time is on your side (yes it is). But it has to be change in the right direction. And rather than putting on, say, 10kg in 5 years, you will be losing it in 5 years.

Anyway, I am getting distracted. The big picture for me. It has just occurred to me, in the last 24 hours, that rather than being 1/2 way through a year off the piss, I'm really 1/4 of the way through a two year healing period. A body reset period. A transformation to get much closer to the hill running demi-god than the fat middle aged disgrace I would be otherwise.

If I just repeat what I have done in the last 6 months another 3 times then I will have undone 15 years of hard living. At least to the extent that is possible, at my age and given the past 15 years. I need not go crazy, just keep doing what I am doing with continuous improvement. So if I'm walking fine, then I can improve by eating better, or eating less, or mixing the exercise up if I seem to be stalling.

No mad shakes, or deprivation, or trying to run till I cry. Just moving, step by step, on a two year journey towards a fit, vibrant, happy body that a 17 year old me would be proud of.

And as of next week, I'll be a quarter of the way through.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Day 173: Weight

I've been thinking about the weight side of it. I'm keen to lose some more. Indeed, that is really driving this whole year of the grog for me. I want to look like one of those fit, healthy, lean guys like the demi-god I see running around Mt Cootha in the mornings. Not the guy who looks as though he has spent too much time at a desk (like 10 years) while drinking too much and eating too much.

If I knock off this last kilo or so then it will be 15kg in 6 months. To be honest, I would love to do that again, and even again after that. Big ask. A bit big for the brain to handle normally. That's why I have tried to focus on the long term routine of it.

It is a mental challenge, health. I think it is mental stress or anguish that can cause people to seek refuge in a glass - who doesn't like easing the troubles of the world with a glass of wine at the end of the day. I think that is one of alcohol's great strengths, that sense of relief, and escape from the drudgery of routine, especially historically, when a day down the pits really was shit.

We have less to complain about now, at least in Australia. Life is pretty excellent for pretty well everyone, if you have the ability to see it in perspective.

Anyway, it can seem very slow, this weight loss, when you are no longer on a roll. When you jump on the scales and the number stares back at you. Routine, I dare say, is the key. Routine that results in progress in one direction rather than the other, and an ability to keep that routine up for long enough that you hit the mark you want to hit. It is that 'simple' from a logic sense.

But it is a marathon, and not a sprint. In fact, I think it is really a marathon that goes forever. This demi-god I see running up and down the hills of Mt Cootha is certainly not there to lose weight. I guess he wants to look and feel like a demi-god, and his routine involves sprinting up and down hills that would make a billy goat puke (to quote First Blood).

It helps to keep a little diary like this. It encourages you to think about it every day, and you can see your progress over time. And unless you are starving yourself (or even depriving yourself, which doesn't seem to work so well) then the weight will only start shifting when you are in a solid exercise routine and have kept it up for some weeks. The routine is the most important thing. In a sense it is the most sustainable thing too - who wants to feel deprived over time? I can't keep it up. But if you fill your life with other things - such as the daily exercise, or vegetables - then there is no deprivation as such but an addition that when sustained will result in you moving in the right direction, which is what you need, however slowly.

How does that fit with the alcohol deprivation? I guess, for me, it's different. I don't even feel deprived any more to be honest. Not really. That's why I don't write about it. I don't even think about drinking any more. We had a function last night. Piss. It didn't cross my mind to have something. In fact, I had a lunch yesterday: more piss. Again, I wasn't missing out. Didn't even think of having something. I would have been the guy slipping down 3 beers in 30 minutes and getting raucous. Now my only angst is over whether or not I should have the lemonade. Why can't they put out some sparkling water for people who don't want to drink piss or fizzy drinks?

Taking alcohol off the table - which you don't miss eventually - makes it easier to establish the routines that otherwise result in you looking and feeling better about yourself. It is before 5 in the morning as I write this. I will have to wrap it up soon - in fact, really soon - as my 'terminator' mother will be here in about 10 minutes and we will be off to walk the mountain again for 1.5 hours or so.

Do you think I would be in the mood to do this if I'd even had 2 beers last night?

Nup. And even if I forced myself - walking with a slight hangover, there will be a time when I have 6 beers instead of 2, or 10 beers, and there is no way in hell I would be walking after that. And so the routine - the precious, solution giving routine - would be broken, as well as all the crap you can eat when hung over and the like.

Anyway, in terms of re-establishing my routine, I've walked Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur and shortly Fri - and 5 of those 6 days will have been around the mountain.

If I keep this up the scales will be my friend again.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Day 172: Weigh in

Well, I hopped on the scales as I thought I was moving in the right direction. I'm still just over a kilo off what I was a month or more ago. But could have been worse. So first step I want to get back to the 15kg loss - hopefully in time for the 6 month mark which is coming up. Then I want to kick on for 20 and so on.

Main thing is I got on the fucking things.

Good news is I walked around Mt Cootha again. So that means I have walked every day since Sunday, and did Cootha all but one time. That's Cootha Sun (huge), Tue, Wed and Thur. And mum is due to come back again tomorrow so that will make it 5 times around Cootha in 6 days which is pretty fucking good.

Gotta knock that 1.3kg off so I'm back at the 15. Then onwards and upwards. Not to mention New Zealand, which is coming up in just over 3 weeks.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Day 171: Walk walk walk

Well I got up myself and wandered off into the beautiful bush with my empty backpack and big shoes. That means I've walked 4 days in a row, and am feeling virtuous.

I was a little hungrier this morning after my light dinner, which I think has to be a good thing.

I have not weighed myself for a while, but I know I am not down to my fighting weight (ie weight prior to me not walking for 2 weeks or whatnot) as my belt isn't on the same hole it was.

But I know that doing the walking I'm doing and trying to make healthy food choices means I'm moving in the right direction and it's only a matter of time before that belt moves again.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Day 170: Lighter dinner


I cooked thai fried rice today. I've been on a thai frenzy this week. It has been a pleasant change, and I think it might be a better choice for lighter meals.

Walking has been good. Walked Sun, Mon and today. Question is whether I will walk tomorrow morning.

I hope to.


Sunday, October 24, 2010

Day 168?: 24 weeks off the turps

Went for fuck off big walk around the hill today. 4 hours. You can't do anything wrong after doing that.

Walked with backpack, although there was nothing in it.

2 weeks, I think, till 6 months off the brown water.

I had 2 people tell me I had lost weight yesterday.

Cooked up a shitload of thai food this weekend.

UPDATE: This walk really took it out of me. Had a kip for a couple of hours but still exhausted. What a slow thing it is to build up proper hill fitness. No wonder I was rooted at kokoda a few years back when I did it.

UPDATE2: I was reading a bit over at Claire's http://myyearoffthepiss.blogspot.com/. It is well worth a look to see the sorts of issues she is grappling with.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Day 164: 4 days in a row

Good effort for me, 4 days exercise in a row. Just walked the hill with my backpack for the first time in a long time - it certainly makes it harder. I'll be loading it up with stuff gradually over the next month as I prepare for Milford.


Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Day 163: Back into it

Well, I've walked 3 days in a row now. Going to walk tomorrow, hopefully.

Watching a nice glass of wine on the TV just now. I could just take a nice big gulp of it.

Thinking about cooking some thai for a change. Diet has been Italian largely recently but a bit bored of it.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Day 161: 23 weeks

Wow 23 weeks. 3 weeks till half way.

Fuck me time passes. That's the one thing we can all be sure of. Blink, and fucking time passes.

Months of it.

Years of it.

Which is great if you are trying to make a change. Not so great if you are watching your life slip away.

I didn't end up walking yesterday. I did today though, so three cheers for me. And no piss for 161 days, thanks very much. I could hardly be bothered counting to 161 days, let alone not drinking for that period.

I have thought of grog a couple of times this weekend to be honest. I bought some wine for cooking yesterday, and I thought about it in the bottle shop. And today on my walk I thought about it.

Tell you what, I could get back on it quicker than you could say pissed as a fart. The first 5 schooners would not hit the sides, and within 3 weeks you wouldn't know I was ever off it.

Anyway, main thing is I went for my walk today, and haven't been eating shit this weekend. So let's try keeping that up in this, my 24th week off the grog.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Day 160: Stunning day

What an absolutely stunning day. We have had a shitload of rain this last week, but it has cleared and we now have beautiful sunshine with the wind blowing the trees back and forth. Jacaranda leaves are everywhere in little purple patches on the ground.

Have to go for a walk around the mountain later in the day.

I'm also going to make a new healthy food push for the next 5 weeks, along with the exercise push. No more crap! I also want Saturday to be seafood day.

To this end I'm about to go off to the rocklea markets. Fresh produce including seafood. I'm going to see if I can find some scallops.

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Day 158: Funny in the head

I think I've been a bit distressed again from the exercise. I went around the hill again this morning, with my new boots, but I was a bit mentally distressed during the day. I ate poorly, and was quite agitated. I think it is just part of my getting back into exercise. It goes, I think, if I keep the exercise up.

I'm off to NZ in 5 weeks, and walking Milford in 6. Exciting eh.

Going to try and ramp things up for that.

I dreamt I had a beer last night or the night before. I felt guilty.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Day 157?: Have boots; around the hill

Well, I went back out around the hill again yesterday for the first time in a couple of weeks. Hororah for that.

Still off the piss.

Speaking of piss, I still google it to see if what I am doing is insane. I found an article which I think is the best I have read. So many people, and articles, take an evangelical view of drinking or not drinking. I know when I drank I spent a lot of time educating people about the joys of alcohol, beer in particular, and introducing them to tastes and experiences that they have not come across before. I was a beer evangelist. Now that I am off the turps for 12 months - at least - I have to had to fight to not become judgmental or to lecture people about their drinking. Very difficult to do when you are in a room full of drunks. Where possible though, I have tried to put out the message that there is no right or wrong answer, and drinking or not drinking is a very personal thing.

Anyway, this is the article:

http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/what-should-you-eat/alcohol-full-story/index.html

Almost makes you want to have a (moderate) drink eh? But I guess that is the real question. Can you stop at just one, especially over time. Or would you descend into drinking perhaps more than is good for you, affecting your sleep, exercise, days after, mental health, liver etc.

Anyway, they say the benefits, health wise, are more important etc at 60 than 35, so I don't have to consider it yet. They also point out that you should only consider moderate drinking if you are thin, and so I have a way to go on that front as well.

My focus now is to get back on the horse, exercise wise. Glad to walk the hill yesterday as I said. I did it with my new hiking boots I bought on the internet from America. Thankfully they fit, which is a bit of miracle. I just have to get up to the level of fitness I had a month ago in the next month or so, and also start using my backpack to get used to that.

Making a beet salad today with beets I baked last night, and am baking an eggplant as I type. I think eating lots of delicious veges is important for this whole healthy living business.

Thursday, October 7, 2010

Day 151: Need to regroup

I'm back, and I'm still off the grog.

Exercise has fallen away. Out of the routine. Food slipping.

Going to worry about getting back into the groove before weighing myself.

Happened due to mild illness, and then just not being bothered to exercise.

It is very, very easy to do. You have a legitimate reason for not behaving (exhaustion, illness, injury or perhaps one blowout/relapse) and then you use the excuse to stop the whole campaign.

You have to get back on the horse. Slowly if necessary, to rebuild the routine. I started by going on a small walk yesterday. Want to go again this afternoon. Back into Cootha routine next week.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Day 141: 14.6kg in 20 weeks (.8 GAIN)

Well, my weight went up this week. Nobody ever wants that. I fell off the rails a bit at the end of last week. I didn't drink, but I was a bit sleep deprived and was stressed at work. I really felt strange on the Saturday - perhaps overtired, or something, and so have had 3 days off from exercise and may have today off as well.

It isn't fucking easy losing weight, and if you trip up at all it all goes right back on.

20 weeks off the piss though. That is something. I'm starting to get the sober man's perspective of grog, watching people get on it, and deteriorate, like on Friday night.

Whether or not what I am doing is right is something I question sometimes, but if my head is working I am clearly in a better position. And as for the weight gain, well, I guess if you do anything for the long haul you need to expect a few setbacks. So long as the trend is in one direction rather than the other you are doing ok.

So this week I'm looking for a walk after work, then back into the hill with my mother tomorrow. I would also like to keep the food good, with no slip ups.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Day 139: Bit funny in the head

Strangely tired today. Not at my best. Having it off again. Hope to do the big walk tomorrow.

Friday, September 24, 2010

Day 138: Day off

Well, I did Cootha again on the Thursday. I'm not sure if I posted but I was rooted and did it slowly. I also ate some fried crap - potato cakes, and some bikkies.

I am having today off to recharge the batteries. I don't mind, I exercised Sat-Thur, and will hopefully be walking two big Coothas on the weekend.

I think realistically if I just cement the 15k loss on Sun/Mon then I will be doing well. You can't rush these things.

Function last night - big conference dinner with wine etc. I didn't miss piss at all and dropped a co-worker off afterwards. Having said that, I think I did feel like a beer during one of my walks after work. It is a false friend, alcohol. At least when it comes to weight loss.

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Day 136: Too much

I was going a bit too hard there I think. I didn't end up doing the walk after work, or this morning, and had a bit of a late night munch of some bread and cereal as my body was in a bit of a panic.

But I'm not too worried about that. I think it is a sign of how well I am doing, and if my body wants a few more carbs to keep me powered around the mountain then that is fine. I will still go for my hour walk after work and go around the hill again tomorrow morning, which will mean I have exercised Sat, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed and Thur.

So long as I exercise almost every day and go around the hill 4 or 5 times a week that is fine.

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Day 135: Rain

Well, I walked off into the rain and walked around the mountain and did my stairs for 2 hours this morning. It is a solid effort.

I hope to go for a walk after work today as well to up the exercise to 3 hours.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Day 134: Rest day

I'm having today off from Cootha, as I did the two big walks on the weekend, and if there is any day it is smart to have a day of rest in relation to it is today. I would still like to walk for an hour after work to keep things ticking along.

I'm keen to keep up the good behaviour this week. I feel like my body is in a weight loss patch and if I just keep the fires stoked it will reward with the weight falling off, and me catapulting towards the 20kg. 15kg be damned.

I think the veges are important - good for calories, but more importantly I think make you feel better and help fill you up and stop you from eating other food.

I had a red beetroot salad yesterday, from beets I baked myself. Man, those things should come with some sort of a warning. I also ate red cabbage with my chicken for dinner. I've got some time now I think I'll use to bake an eggplant to take to work today.

I'm excited about the weight loss. You can go through periods that are flat or slow or backwards, and so when you find yourself - through hard work generally - in a position where the numbers are moving in the right direction, and you know that if you just keep it up then in 10 or 20 or 30 weeks or whatever you will look as you want to look, then that is a good feeling.

UPDATE: I went for my walk after work (1 hour+), and cooked a cauliflower soup and fried pork for tea.

Sunday, September 19, 2010

Day 133: 15.4kg in 19 weeks (1.9k)

Well, I smashed that out. And it is only Sunday and I normally have Monday as the official day (the day has increased 1 extra as I did a calculation on the net and must have been out). It is certainly 19 weeks today as I started this little venture on the Monday after a hungover Sunday.

It may be that I am slightly dehydrated from my big walk yesterday, but I drank a lot of water, and frankly, don't care. I managed to get a new number appearing on my scales, crossing a boundary that I really wanted to cross. So long as I keep moving in the downwards direction, I am happy.

15kg. All the exercise from the past few weeks is paying off. Perhaps too the veges are paying off.

I guess it is all paying off, especially, let's not forget, not getting pissed every week and having "one or two" every night. Weight loss is impossible doing that, for me.

Anyway, that is enough with the victory speech: what's next? This is just the start. Confirmation that my approach, which I might add involves no hunger whatsoever, is working, and I need to keep it up, keep it up, keep it up.

I really want to knock off another 10 before I do Milford - that is, 25kg is my goal for Milford.

But 5kg chunks are easier. So my next mini-goal is to get to 20kg. So how am I going to do this:

1) no crap;
2) cootha 5 or 6 times per week, 2 big walks on the weekend;
3) stairs following cootha twice per week;
4) obviously no piss;
5) try and cook and eat at least one vegetable a day.

Pretty motivating getting into numbers above 15kg. The weight loss is real, at this level.

UPDATE: Well I got of my fat, 15kg less arse and went around the hill for the second day in a row - the big one! It is a solid fucking walk let me tell you. I haven't been timing it, but it takes at least 3 hours - closer to 4 really. So that means I've done 6-8 hours of serious hill walking this weekend. I'm really motivated at the moment. Hope to cook seafood tonight.

Saturday, September 18, 2010

Day 131: Food musings

I had my day off yesterday. Food was pretty good. I baked the sweet potato in the morning and ate it on sandwiches during the day with avo and a little pork. I had a leave pass for tea and was feeling a bit all over the place and could have ended up eating anything. Instead I had a hankering for something wholesome and bought some lamb cutlets and ate them (pan fried with salt, pepper and olive oil) with a salad of lettuce and tomatoes (dressed with olive oil, red wine vinegar and salt) and broccoli salad (boiled and dressed with olive oil, salt and pepper). Delicious! I had some berries and yogurt for dessert.

All with some crusty bread of course.

Good healthy, sustainable, fabulous living there. Veges, salt and fat are the cornerstone of the mediterranean diets of the world in my view - specifically, using salt and fat (typically olive oil) to transform an inedible vegetable such as broccoli or an eggplant into something delicious you want to eat forever.

I did cook thai for a long time (5 years), but it is so hard and I've got a view that asian cooking is about flavouring rice with slight of hand, with rice being the heart of the meal, whereas in mediterranean cooking the vegetables are the heart of the meal (and are transformed using simple techniques involving salt and fat, as I said). I want to eat more vegetables than rice, and I want it to be easy. Asian cooking also uses a lot of mystery sauces out of asian factories that I'm not too fussed on either from a real food perspective.

What I hope for today is to do the long walk around the hill, getting back into it (after my day off). But I will wait until it is sunnier, as it is a Saturday.

This is of course a risk in that if I get too comfortable I won't do it.

I am feeling better, whether or not I lose weight this week. I feel smaller, and more alert. A co-worker claims to be on a crash diet for a health check and this week he has been ratfaced at least twice, including a full afternoon on the turps at a French restaurant. How on earth could you come out of that losing weight, being healthier or looking fitter? It is just impossible, and I do speak from some experience in relation to that having bashed myself up in a similar fashion for a decade.

That sort of hard living only leads in one direction.

UPDATE: Well, I did the long walk. I was much stronger than I was even two or three weeks ago, when I last did it. I think it is the stairs I am doing, as well as the other walks of course. Back and feeling fine. I hope to do the longer walk every Saturday and Sunday. It takes over 3 hours up and down the hills of mount cootha, and will sort anyone out.

Friday, September 17, 2010

Day 130: Not quite 15kg

I had a sneak on the scales this morning. I wasn't at 15. I never learn my don't peak lesson.

I should.

Anyway I'm having this morning off from the hill. I don't want to overdo it. I will walk after work perhaps or have the day off and try and knock out the big one tomorrow. For anyone interested in the food I had a tomato and olive pasta last night with some baked eggplant.

I did have a nice steak and chips for lunch though.

I'm baking some sweet potato now to take to work. I've found that baking is a really easy and delicious way to cook veges, which I'm trying to eat more of. Microwaved frozen veges make me want to puke and are no way to live. Baking with salt, olive oil and perhaps some garlic and rosemary is a much better way to make veges that are suited to baking taste good!

I'm certainly feeling like I'm losing weight, which is why I snuck on the scales like a loony. I think I'm feeling the effects of ramping up the exercise over the last 3 weeks. That really is the key, and drives good feelings and good behaviour.

It's a long game though, which is why it needs to be a lifestyle choice rather than a diet. I can keep up eating more delicious veges as a lifestyle, because I enjoy them. But I can't keep up microwaved steamed veges - within 2 months I would sooner poke a spoon in my eye.

Similarly with exercise. One thing I've done in the past is go out too hard and burn myself out within, again, 2 or 3 months. You need to build it up and be able to keep it up. You also need to enjoy it, at least most of the time. Otherwise you won't do it. And you need to do it for the long haul - it needs to become a lifestyle ie the way you lead your life on an ongoing basis.

Pretty simple I guess. If you want to look like the fit, healthy guy, then you need to lead the sort of lifestyle you expect the fit and healthy guy to lead. Does he get shitfaced on a Friday night and eat pizza, or does he eat normally and get up on Saturday and go for some exercise, feeling and looking better for it?

That's my thinking anyway. Not sure why i'm writing so much today. I also posted a comment on Claire's year off the piss blog which I'll also post here. It was in response to her getting shitty about people who judge people who don't drink:

I've been on both sides of the fence. Probably most normal people following this blog interested in their own drinking have. But I tell you, the perspective I'm seeing now is really changing my perception of drinking, and drunks. It is not pretty. You are not better looking drunk. You are not wittier, even though you laugh at your own jokes. You do not dance better. Often enough, you are a disgrace. At least by the time the witching hour arrives, and you have been on it for 3 or 4 hours, you are drunken mess, whether or not you realise it. Conversations mean nothing. Words are slurred. Some men get aggressive or obnoxious. Some women cry. It is not how I remember it - not at all.

And it gets much less cool as you get older. Ever seen your mum so pissed she can't speak properly, blubbers, shags a random, and vomits in the sink? You wouldn't want to. And there is no difference.

But, having said that, Jamie's point about doing some crazy ass shit on the turps is true. I've had my wildest outings drunk, including with the ladies. From a man's perspective anyway, if you don't tend to hit it then often the lady you are with doesn't either, and perhaps her inhibitions are not as cut as they would be if you were drinking (which combined with your dutch courage can really go places).

I see the good things about drinking that I am missing - and there are many - as collateral damage to a greater war to improve my quality of life (including my fitness). For many, this sacrifice would not be worth it and I'm no holier than any of those people. I think there is no right or wrong with drinking. But not drinking is a choice, and it is the right one for me at this time as I'm on a year long fitness campaign.

People who are really down on you making that choice do really irritate, even though chanting "join us" is the natural reaction of a piss head (which I can say with some authority).

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Day 129: Drinks function

We had the drinks function last night. It just occurred to me that I did not for a second think about having a drink, or feel I was missing out by not having a drink. Not for a second!

Instead I watched people have fun, and then slowly but surely descend into the abyss of slurring words and obnoxious behaviour. I had to skip from group to group, escaping drunken fools the way a pretty girl escapes from predators. Eventually I had nowhere to go - the stayers were all pissed and offensive. It was no place for a sober person.

Luckily I was able to drive home, and even give a young lady a lift.

It does sadden me a bit to think that I have been one of the drunken 'stayers' on many occasions. How many people did I offend with my raucous behaviour? Many, I suspect.

Even though I was late to bed I made the effort to get up from my deep sleep at 4.50, and join my mother around the mountain, and up and down the stairs, for over 2 hours again this morning. That is a bloody good effort, no matter who you are.

I've walked Sat, Mon, Tue, Wed and now Thur, with 4 of those efforts being around 'the hill'.

Had I gotten on the sauce last night there is no way I would have exercised today. None at all. And I would have had crap during the day for the hangover.

Instead I am one step closer to my 15kg goal.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Day 128: Going ok

Well, walked Mon, Tue and now Wed (mon and wed around the hill). I finished today with 10 stairs, built up from 1 over 5 weeks.

Cooked and eaten real food so far this week.

Got a drinks function for work tonight, but I'll be the sober one (even thought I had to pick the beers....). No dramas with that.

I've been eating quite a bit, but it has been honest food, not takeaway, which with exercise should see me in the right direction. Cooked a mean lamb stew on Monday night which I had for lunch yesterday with a salad and will again today.

Had an omelette and roast veges for dinner.

I've been thinking about the 15kg and 20kg. Would love to reach each of those as milestones. 15kg to show I'm serious and 20kg to show I'm credible and have made some progress.

You can't argue with 20kg.

Most things have to go right to lose. The main thing is the exercise and not eating crap. And keeping it up.

Monday, September 13, 2010

Day 126: 13.5kg in 18 weeks

Well, I am back to moving in the right direction, which is excellent. I might go out on a limb here and have a goal to lose 1.5kg this week by walking every day, at least once, not eating any crap, and trying to eat less generally.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Day 125: No walk!

You should always exercise at the first available opportunity. Today's an example of that.

Bit worried about having a weigh in tomorrow. Ate heaps on the weekend and just feel as though it won't be good. But over time the numbers don't lie, and a meal here or there doesn't make someone 10 or 20kg heavier. So I think I just have to do it.

I do want to walk in the morning though.

Wanted to do a lot of cooking today but didn't manage it.

Goal this week is to walk every day.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Day 124: Food

I ate a lot yesterday. I was exhausted and I bought some crap for dinner. Not horrific, but really if you buy something to eat up and premade salad you are asking for a bit of trouble.

I need to get better organised, and perhaps freeze some stew or something or always cook pasta or eggs if I think I am knackered.

Feel a bit like crap today I think because of the food last night. Want to try and go for my big walk (or at least the little one) today but I didn't sleep all that well.

Lots of complaints today hey. Guess you have good days and bad.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Day 123: Progress and musings

I have had a cracking week exercise wise. I ended up going for another hours walk last night and am generally feeling good. I even had an exchange in the kitchen which I will relay for anyone looking for motivation:

Fit girl: Have you lost weight?
Me: I'm trying to.
Fit girl: Well whatever you are doing, it's working

which is pretty exciting. One thing I have noticed about myself though is when I am really doing a lot of exercise (eg I do big walks 4 days out of 5) my body goes into a bit of a panic and demands that I eat calories/a lot of food/crap. I have seen it before and it happened again yesterday.

If I cut back on the exercise for a day or so then the distress goes and so do the demands.

I have seen this all before. What in fact happens is if I push through with the exercise, keeping up the intensity, then the distress my body is going through fades and the irrational demand for crap/calories goes with it. It's when that happens that I'm in "the groove", or golden exercise and weight loss/looking better and better by the day period.

So I don't feel too bad about yesterday. If I'm ever going to eat a bit of crap, doing it on a day I've exercised over 3 hours is probably a good choice.

I'm having a "rest day" today. I have been going like a champ all week, and it probably makes sense. I also have to go to work early.

Tomorrow though, I want to do the big walk again. And Sunday. If I can do these big walks on both days each weekend then I'll be in a good position. They are about 3.5 hours each, so that would be 7 hours of hill walking on the weekend. Pretty hard to do better than that.

I was speaking to a mate last night who asked me about when I missed the grog. I said I was pretty well over it but in some, limited circumstances I felt I was missing out. Generally though, I don't even think of it any more.

And I tell you what, I've got a good feeling about my weight in the next week or two. I think I can smash the 15kg barrier which would be a bloody good thing as it means I'm back in business and have 20kg in my sights.

I've got a lunch today with someone I used to have outrageous sessions with that descended into all sorts of things that you look back fondly on. It's a bit of a perspective change not drinking, and undoubtably not as fun or expectant.

But I count that as collateral damage. 15kg here I come.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Day 122: Fitness improving

I woke up a little sore today from my walk yesterday, but in a good way. 30 minutes after that I was walking off in the not so dark morning with my trusty mother. Was a little stiff around the hills but it ended up being a cracking walk that finished with 9 flights of stairs.

In all 1 hour 50 minutes of serious exercise up and down hills. Not bad any time, but a good effort before I go into work.

If I keep this up, and don't go silly with the food, the weight will fall off.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Day 121: Walk after work

Well, I walked Sun, Tue and now Wed afternoon. So not around the hill, but after work. I did do some hill work - probably 20 minutes or so up and down stairs I found in Kangaroo Point. No, not the cruel stairs I used when training for Kokoda. The friendly stairs I have found at the top of the cruel stairs.

Had a bit of a twinge in my calf going up the stairs, which is a shit, but there were no blowouts.

Ate some roasted veges during the day.

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Day 119: Cracker around the hill

I had yesterday off, but I had the best sleep of my life last night and just walked around the hill for 1 hour 45 minutes then walked up and down the stairs of the school across the road 8 times.

I feel great.

Jeeze that sleep is important. One thing about drinking I didn't know is that even a small amount can throw your sleep off. I noticed the difference after about 3 or 4 days, which is incredible, just as others noticed my increased fitness around the hills within 7 days.

Anyway, after my huge walk Sunday, and shoddy sleep Sunday night, I was tired last night and went to bed before 8.30. I pretty well slept until 4.50 when I got up to go for my walk.

All fired up to try and lose some weight this week. I think I'm back in the groove exercise wise and just need to try a little harder with the food.

I feel positive though and that's the main thing.