Thursday, July 4, 2019

Week 9: Wednesday



Good morning!

I had a terrible sleep last night - still awake at 4am!  But I am up at 8am so time for my morning routine!

coffee
shower and dress
put on load of washing
reload dishwasher, shine sink, wipe benches and sweep

- finish budget (pay rego)

so I ended up on the phone to my sister all day and got nothing done!

Food:

coffee
2 boiled eggs, tomato relish and feta
tin of salmon
100g steak with some mushrooms and veg
scoop of peanut butter
cheese, baked beans, crackers, 3 mini mars bars, glass of milk

I read up on the Fast800 diet after my sis raved about it, but omg.  I could handle being hungry and managed to get to bedtime with 800cals with a great macronutrient spread. But come bed time I just couldn't deal with it and tried to just eat a little bit to help me sleep - and the last line of my food diary chronicles my decent into hell! lol

Seriously though, it's not normal to be that hungry at bedtime!  I was thinking of doing 12 weeks of this but no way!  I might just try doing 5:2 - so two days a week of restriction, and hope I get better at it! For now, I'm going to try being a little more 'keto' and see how that goes but really, it's just experimenting at this stage!

Wednesday, July 3, 2019

Week 9 Tuesday



Good news today, my work contact turned up so I need to get that printed and returned! Finally have a regular 6 mth casual contract for 30hrs a week!

Just a few jobs for today:

Kitchen
- stack dishwasher
- clean sink and wipe benches
- sweep floor

- tidy flours and breakfast cereals
- make list of containers needed
- tidy fridge

Lounge/Office
- sort excess stuff into piles to sort
- pick up rubbish

Storage area
- move Christmas tree
- pack away breakables for moving

Main Bedroom
- make bed 

Dining
- set table

Other
- list of lightbulbs needed for whole house
- dinner shopping list
- hang out washing

Food

coffee and oats for breakfast (at  noon!)
pie
choc rice cakes and seaweed
honey mustard chicken for dinner
icecream and milo for dessert
baked beans
milo and cheese/cracker snacks (x2)

step count under 5K
no exercise


Summary

Had a very blah day but still got things done!  


Tuesday, July 2, 2019

Week 9 Monday




Hello Monday!

As I am waiting for my new work contract, it's time to do some housework!

To do List for the morning


- clean and shine the sink
- wipe kitchen benches
- sweep floor
- mop

- put away clothes in my room
- vacuum my room

- clean up two boxes for clothes
- empty left side of storage cupboard and reduce my 'too small' clothes 
- pack too small clothes into boxes neatly and store by size!

- do laundry  2 loads

- tidy lounge
-  clear off coffee table and dust tv bench
- vacuum and sweep ( lounge as well)

Food Diary


2x coffee
oats (packet)

pizza with a glass of peps

hamburger with cheese


milk and cookies choc (3 rows)
choc rice cakes and seaweed
baked beans











Sunday, June 30, 2019

Food Diary: Week 8



I'm starting a bit late in the week so no diary for Monday through Thursday!

Wednesday Weigh-in: 72.2kg (down 2.7kg overall)!

Friday: 


School holidays start today!

Work  hours: none

Food:

Breakfast - egg on toast

Lunch - beef wrap with tomato relish

Dinner - Ginger Salmon Stirfry (12wbt)

Snacks

choc and tea
apple
choc rice cakes and seaweed
rice cakes (flavoured)

Water: 3 cups

Step Count: 10K

Exercise: 4km walk

Saturday:

Hockey game then off to the beach!

Food:

Breakfast - egg on toast

Lunch - chips and potato scollops

Dinner - Chicken Mac and cheese (12wbt)

Snacks

3x choc rice cakes and 2x seaweed
1/3 Mars Bar and a handful of Burger Rings
mandarin
baked beans

Water: 1 750mL bottle

Step Count: 11K

Exercise: Walked Bluff Point!

Sunday:


Food:

Breakfast - oats

Lunch - steamed fish and salad

Dinner - Roast Chicken with pumpkin and potato

Snacks

choc and tea
choc and rice cakes
seaweed
rice cakes

Water: none

Step Count: 5k

Overall Summary:

I think I need to watch my snacking and stick with more substantial snacks that fill me up rather then the rice cake snacks!

Saturday, June 29, 2019

My Health Journey: Tracking Progress


There is nothing like progress to motivate!

Which is why I want to keep track of my progress as much as possible.

I know what I want to track right now, and it will no doubt change as my priorities change.
Right now I want to keep track of my scale weight, my measurements, and my running goals.

I'm starting with an excel sheet for all the detailed information.

There are now about 26 weeks until the New Year (a Wednesday) so I've done all the tables up until then, and highlighted which weeks are part of the 12wbt challenge.  I have four weeks left on the current challenge.  I will need to lose about 1kg per week for 16 weeks then half a kilo a week for 10 weeks to hit 50kg on the 1st of January 2020.

Tracking my Weight Loss and Measurements

Having a Fitbit and compatible WIFI scales means I don't have to record my weight, I just jump on the scale each Wednesday morning.  I have my excel tracker as well so I will be updating that with my weight each week and it will give me my weight lost that week, and weight lost overall. I'm using my highest weight of 74.9kg from 1st May as my starting point.

Every four weeks I also measure neck, bust, arm, belly, waist, hip, and thigh. With those measurements I can calculate waist to hip ratio, and can do body fat calculations when I want to.  Note that I do belly and waist due to my natural waist being higher then my belly, and the measurements being significantly different!  

Tracking my Distance

I've renewed my Run Down Under (now Run the World)  membership which will allow me to easily track how much I run. I use my Fitbit to track my run, which imports to Strava and then RDU. I get the occasional reward to keep me going, and a medal each year.


I've currently travelled 564km with 27km to go on my Newcastle to Forster leg!
I'd have to do 17km a week to get up to 1000km by the end of the year. I wonder if I can do that? Four 4km walks a week, or three 5km training runs and a quick walk, and if I get in a few longer runs as the year progresses, I could get there!  I think that will be my fitness goal! But it will be challenging!  No missing any weeks!

I'm kind of excited to get started now!

I believe I can and will do this so let's go!

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

My Health Journey: Getting Prepared






It's time to recruit some experts to help me on my health journey.

I need some help with what to eat - recipes and lunch ideas mostly - and what exercise to do!

Where to exercise

I know myself enough to know that I won't workout at home, and I'm not a people fan, so running and the gym are my go-to for exercise. I want to learn how to run 5km again, but I really want to focus on strength training to build up my capacity to burn calories.

My nearest gym is a Good Life and they offer a 5-day free pass. There is also a gym at the university where I work.  I'm currently waiting on a new work contract and will be moving house in the next six months so I don't want to commit to a long term contract just yet, and Good Life also offers a monthly membership. It will be a few weeks before I sign up long term, but for now, I will try the 5-day pass at Good Life.

I already have running shoes and work out clothes so heading out for a run is easy.  I also have a fitbit and Strava on my phone for logging my runs with GPS and heartrate for calories burned.

For an added element of fun, I have renewed my 'Run the World' membership to continue my Run Down Under journey!

What to do

For my learn to run, the 12wbt with Michelle Bridges has a 'learn to run' program, but I want to start straight away.  I have a C25K (couch to 5k) app on my phone which I am going to use.  Starting today!

While I know the trainers at Good Life will provide guidance, but I do like the structure of the 12wbt workouts, especially the strength training so I will switch to that once the May round (which I have signed up for) begins. For now, I have some workouts saved from earlier rounds that I will dig out! A month of consistent training will have an affect on which program I feel I can comfortably do during the round and I would like to increase my weights as quickly as possible to build muscle.

What to eat

With the 12wbt membership you get access to not only a calorie suggestion and meal plan, but also thousands of recipes.  While I know I will be mostly ignoring the calorie suggestion, I will be using the recipe index based off a 1500 calorie  plan, so the meals are about 3-400 calories each, to write up my own meal plans.

Breakfast I will choose one or two week and pretty much stick to cereal or eggs on toast.

For Lunches I have selected a few wraps for taking to work that are quick and easy to make (think ham and salad with mustard, turkey and sprouts with cranberry sauce) and then stick to leftovers for the weekend or simple meat and salad.

For Dinners are a bit more complex to plan but again, I will stick to easy choices that fit in with our routine and lifestyle.

Monday, April 15, 2019

My Health Journal: Starting Measurements



It is important to mentally prepare and plan for a weight loss journey (aka lifestyle change) but there are also some fiddley things you actually need to do to kick it off.  These are not essential, but can help later on - or so I'm told by others who have successfully lost weight.

Unfortunately, taking measurements and photos are included those things.

Photos

While I am not making my proper pics official, I'll also be taking some fully dressed, casual pictures that will be useable on social media.

To take pictures that truly show your weight loss for motivation along your journey, pic a spot that you can use every month, keep the distance between you and the camera the same, have the camera at chest height, use good lighting, and a plain wall background. Dress in a standard black crop and cropped workout pants or bikini - nothing tight enough to hold you in, but also not baggy enough to hide.  If you need to go down in size, keep the style and colour the same as much as possible.

Take photos from the front, back and sides.  The big question is what to do with your arms. I find putting your hands behind your head allows your middle to be seen better in the side photo, and showing off your biceps enables the arms to be seen in the back photo.

A side note: for any official 'challenges' they will probably ask for a dated newspaper to be included in the picture to stop any cheating. That is not necessary for your own personal use though you can edit your photo to include the date and details of your measurements for your own records.

Measurements


There are some standard measurements to take, (bust, waist and hip) for women as these are generally what is used in sizing charts.  I also want to throw in a few extra for myself: the neck, as this measurement can be used in body fat calculators; my belly, as this is 'my problem area'; and my arm and thigh measurements, as these areas also carry excess weight.  You can take whatever measurements you like based on the way your own body carries weight. Take note of which side of the body you measure for your arm and leg measurements.

Here's mine taken this morning: 

Weight: 73kg

Neck: 39cm

Bust: 101cm
Waist: 97cm
Belly: 105cm
Hip: 108cm

Arm (R): 33cm
Thigh (R): 58cm

Sunday, March 31, 2019

My health journal.



I've decided to journal my health journey for accountability and to help me to keep focused on improving my health and well being.

To define my 'health journey', I will firstly say that I am referring to my physical health, not mental, while I will also acknowledge that the two are inextricably linked. My physical health is much easier to define and measure, and less private. I expect that as my physical health improves, so will my mental health and that, in turn, will help with my journey to improve my physical health.

How is my physical health right now?

Not good.  I am 20-25kg overweight, in the obese range for my BMI (but only just). Most of my weight sits in my torso increasing my risk factors for a range of lifestyle based illnesses. I have high cholesterol (the inherited kind), high blood pressure, suffer from panic attacks and poor sleep. I get restless legs from fatigue, indigestion, have severe eczema on my hands and feet (dishydrotic eczema), and have a tendency to retain water and get massive cankles. I have trouble walking with even slight inclines over a distance, even one flight of stairs will leave me breathless, my flexibility is so bad I have trouble putting on my shoes and socks in the morning, let alone picking up something off the floor or reaching into a floor level cupboard to find a container in the kitchen! Most recently, I went on a short 2km hike, granted it was a steep incline, but I had an exercise induced panic attack just before reaching the top at the halfway point.

This is in stark contrast to where I was just seven years ago. I reached a healthy weight, could touch my toes, run 10km, bench press 40kg and squat my body weight on the Olympic bar. My mental health was the best it had ever been after years of panic disorder and agoraphobia. I would go hiking and camping with my kids and loved walking trails, especially the mountain ones!

I don't really know what happened.  A series of let-downs in my study, people moving away, a few stressful events and I just slowly gained weight and retreated into old habits.

On the plus side for my health, I'm short and tiny and I love my body. I have a great metabolism which tends on the high side, which, while it means I am an anxious, fidgety person which I control though numbing myself with food and tv, it also means I have a high 'incidental energy' output and can eat a few more calories then would be expected for someone my size!

What do I want to achieve?

Like most people, I want to look good! Not just to look good, but so that others can see I am a strong and determined person who values their health.  I respect that in others, and I want to be respected for it as well. Mostly though, I want to feel comfortable in my body.  I want to be a healthy weight but also be capable of living in my body again. To be able to hike, put my socks on, open jars and carry boxes, arrive at a meeting without being out of breathe from the stairs!

I would also like my doctor to stop mentioned blood pressure medication and statins every time I visit. I'd like to not die from a heart attack before I'm 60 years old! I'd like to not die from cancer, or emphysema.

How do plan to it?

I'd like to buck the trend a little bit and say, I'm want to increase my calorie intake, or at least maintain it.  I like to eat.

The "calories in < calories out" equation is a lot more complicated then it sounds and when you look in more detail, cutting calories from food is only one option.

Calories in

If we look more closely at 'calories in' we find lots of ways to improve our health on this side of the equation without 'dieting' at 1200 calories. First and foremost is the quality of food we eating. We need our macros: protein, fats and carbs (the ratio of these vary hugely in 'natural' human behavior based on culture, season, and environmental fluctuations), but we also need our micronutrients and we need fibre. If we stick to actual food - meat, fruit and vegetables, greens, nuts and grains which are unprocessed for the main part, then we will get our macros, and our micros, and our fibre AND will be able to eat more of it to get the same calorie intake compared to highly processed food.  Yay! More food! How could that be a bad thing?

So, first step in getting healthy is improving the quality of the calories I am consuming. In doing so, I might end up eating less calories even though I am eating the same amount of food. Or I might just eat more food.

Food which is in it's natural form usually takes more energy to digest as well, adding a bit more weight on to the other side of the equation.  The common mantra 'eat less, move more' could be more effective as 'eat better, move more'

Calories out

This side of the equation is where it gets a lot more complicated! There are so many ways our bodies use the calories we eat. As I said above, just eating uses calories and some foods take more energy to digest then others (I'm looking at you celery!). Most discussions revolve around basal metabolic rate like it's this static thing that stays the same day in and day out. Hint: it doesn't! What we eat, if we are hot or cold, fighting an infection, anxiety, dreaming, breathing, and especially how much muscle we have can all effect our basal metabolic rate. These are all things that happen without our conscious control - it's just our bodies being alive.

It's  not very efficient from a survival perspective, for our bodies to maximise our base calorie expenditure given starvation has historically been a real risk! Any increases here have to be proven as worthwhile.  It has to save your life and you have to work to maintain it or your body will go back to the most efficient it can be. One way our bodies are triggered to increase our base metabolism is to lift heavy stuff. Remember, our bodies are designed to adapt to be the most efficient they can be and when we lift heavy stuff, it's better to build muscle then to risk hurting ourselves, and more muscle is more energy efficient at lifting the same weight - the trade - off, more muscle means we need more calories to survive. That means we really have to show our bodies we need this to survive and that we are not at risk of starvation!

That's step two of my plan! Increase my basal metabolic rate by eating more often and building muscle. This is the most often missed step when people are trying to lose weight. the mantra 'eat less, move more' skeps over this completely! It really doesn't sound as good to include it though.. 'eat better, build your metabolism, move more'

The other calories out aspect is our conscious  movement. The movement that we do consciously everyday (or even unconscious fidgeting!).  While I am going to say I want to increase this, the point is not use it as a calorie burning tool, but to become fit and healthy.  this is one area where we want to be more efficient at burning calories so we can increase our heart health, our general fitness level, and to get more out of life!

Step three of my plan, is just to get fit and move more to improve and then maintain a comfortable level of fitness, flexibility, and stamina!

Summary

While this a long post, it can be summarised very easily..

Eat better, Build muscle, Get fit.

An important addition to the conversation though, is balance. It's okay to eat take-out every now and then, or have a chocolate bar if you need a quick burst  of energy.