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.