Thursday, October 18, 2012

Winning and losing. And gaining.

Sunday: 311.6 pounds
Monday: 314.2 pounds
Tuesday: 315.0 pounds
Wednesday: 316.8 pounds
Thursday: 317.4 pounds

Not cool, body.  Not cool.  It’s certainly frustrating.  I’ve had periods where I’ve gained a good amount of weight in a short time, but they’ve always coincided with a period of bad eating or inactivity, neither of which is a problem for me.  I had a great, ass-kicking spin class on Tuesday, and yesterday was my first real, honest-to-Sagan strength training workout in a very long time.  I’ve done some strength-type stuff, but I really pushed up some weights for the first time.  Yet, for the fourth straight day, the numbers are going in the wrong direction.  As I said, frustrating.

It’s not all bad though.  In fact, there’s a definite silver lining to gaining weight, at least in the short term, even when I’m eating right and exercising.  I need to separate the number on the scale from my feelings of success.  Yes, losing weight is good and I’m really, really excited to lose it.  But I also need to be happy about bettering myself, making myself healthier and stronger, without that feedback.  I need to be happy about getting healthy because I’m getting healthy, not because the number on the scale is smaller. 

In other news, I made some drastic changes to my appearance last week.  Thursday, I had Lasik, so I’m without glasses or contacts for the first time since I was in seventh grade.  It takes some getting used to; I’ve only had glasses for a couple of years, but they’ve become a part of my look, as it were.  I also shaved on Saturday.  My entire face.  This is, to quote Joe Biden, a big fucking deal.  I’ve had some sort of facial hair at all times since May of 2003.  It was not pretty.  I had some pretty serious Fat Face going on, and that’s the main reason I never shaved it clean again.  I shaved my beard really short at Thanksgiving last year and the Fat Face reared its ugly head again!  So I’ve been terrified of it.  But now that I’m only Very Fat and not Ridiculously Fat, I figured it was worth a shot.  After all, despite my Fat Face issues, I have never had a Chris Christie-like visage. 

Lo and behold, I look pretty good without a beard!  So much so that I’m planning to keep it this way, at least for the time being.  Other than that, things are holding pretty steady.  I’m still eating well, still exercising.  Really I’m just holding the line, waiting for my body to release this weight.  I appreciate the support and I’m glad to answer questions and I’m glad to know that I’m inspiring people.  So just got to keep on keeping on.

But before I go, I figured a quick before and after would help the morale:

Before:



























Now:

Monday, October 1, 2012

Clichés.

It’s getting harder to think of things to write about.  What do I write about when things are going well and there’s no horrible temptation or depression or negativity to talk about?

One of the things I do like to do with this blog is to counteract all the clichés that surround weight loss.  And they come from everywhere.  There’s the fat people saying “fat people don’t eat any more than skinny people”.  Now, this may be true for some, but if that’s a hard-and-fast rule, then it’s shocking how many fat people lose weight when they eat right and exercise.  Could it be that maybe they do eat more?  Or perhaps they’re burning less than active, healthy people.  You know why I gained weight?  I was a lazy fatass that ate too much all the damn time.  Not only that, I ate too much of the worst food there was. 

I also know from experience that a lot of fat people cut calories by starving themselves.  I’ve seen many a fat person sitting down to a lunch of a handful of bagged iceberg lettuce mix, throwing a little bit of dressing on and calling it a meal.  You know what I had for lunch today?  Two wraps packed to the brim with grilled spiced chicken, sautéed peppers and onions (with no fat but oil spray), hummus and feta.  Which one of us is more likely to binge?  Oh, and binge many will.  Binging is a secret of a great number of fat people.  When you skip breakfast, eat a salad for lunch – check that, eat some nutritionless iceberg and a tablespoon of dressing for lunch – and then head home for dinner, your body is sending urgent signals to find food, a lot of food, and fast.

So you find ways to get the food your body is demanding.  If you live by yourself, maybe it means grabbing a bag of chips and one of those giant sandwiches from Safeway on the way home.  By the way, those sandwiches blow and it doesn’t matter a bit.  Safeway is selling those things on nothing but evening work meetings and fat people.  Do you live with someone who’s making dinner?  It might even be a delicious and healthy meal.  No matter, your body needs food.  Time to stop by the McDonald’s (drive-thru, of course) on the way home, get an extra value meal and eat it on the way home, then pop a mint and sit down to a normal-sized plate of dinner.  Hell, since you’ve already eaten an entire meal, you might even stop before your plate is finished.  That’s a nice little ego boost, except most people possess the ability to feel shame. 

I’m not saying this as a way of shaming fat people.  But it is a shameful act, eating a meal while on the way to eat a meal.  So predictably, the weight goes up.  Not only that, you’ve expanded your stomach and increased your body’s calorie needs going forward, and you’ve done this without gaining any knowledge on the proper way to fuel your body, so you’re set up for another binge. 

Then there are the people that remain skinny “no matter what”.  These are the people that “don’t exercise, eat like shit, and stay skinny”.  The small problem with that is that it’s complete bullshit.  Look, it’s simple science.  Your body requires a certain number of calories to function and perform all the activities you do during the day, from sitting at the computer to running a marathon.  If you eat more calories than that number, you gain weight.  If you eat less calories than that number, you lose weight. 

So the skinny person you see eating a lunch with twice the calories of yours?  Maybe that person was up at 4:30 in the morning running six miles.  The guy you know that never works out, sits around watching TV and stays slim?  Maybe he’s so wrapped up in the TV that he forgets lunch and eats 1500 calories a day.  The guy at the party who eats and drinks everything but doesn’t gain an ounce?  When’s the last time you saw him that wasn’t at a party?  Maybe he lets loose because he eats right.  You know, when he’s not at parties.  There are variations in everyone’s metabolism but what contributes to healthy weight is the calories you eat compared to the calories you expend.  That simple.

The last bullshit cliché I’ll address today is the one that people use when they’re selling something to fat people.  “Eat more and you’ll lose weight!”  “Lose weight without feeling hungry!”  “Lose weight the easy way!” There are a few problems with this.  First, everyone seems to use “simple” with “easy” interchangeably.  Like I said before, losing weight is simple, but it definitely is not easy.  Losing weight by eating more is also disingenuous.  Something has to give when you want to lose weight.  You may eat more in the amount of food or in the number of times you eat per day, but you still have to either eat fewer calories or burn more calories.  You can’t cheat science.  Only God gets to do that.

And in reality, if you go from eating 4000 calories a day to eating 2000, you will get hungry.  This seems to escape everyone’s notice.  Do I get hungry?  Of course.  I do my best to avoid getting TOO hungry, since that’s what leads to binges.  But a whole lot of us fat people don’t really know what it means to be hungry.  Even now, at this very moment, I feel a hunger pang as my body is starting to digest my delicious lunch.  There’s no way my body needs food.  But the signals have gotten so crossed over the last 20 years that my body is telling me as I type this that I’m hungry. 

That’s the problem with sugarcoating weight loss for fat people.  One cliché about fat people that is true is that fat people are not lazier than the average person.  It’s true that many fat people don’t like working out and I know I’ve avoided it in the past.  That’s not lazy, that’s human.  Look at it this way: Let’s say you’re a terrible speller.  Not only are you a terrible speller, but you’ve been made fun of and discouraged from trying to improve your entire life.  Now you’re at work and you’re having a planning meeting, and the boss asks if anyone would like to come up to the whiteboard and write down the ideas that people have.  What are the odds that you volunteer for that? 

Now imagine being fat.  Not only are your fat, but when you try to work out, you have to deal with looks and giggles and people whispering to one another.  You’re with a group of friends and you all decide to go to a bar that’s about a mile away.  One of your friends has the idea to walk, since it’s not that far away.  Not only is this farther than you are used to walking, you know that once you get there, you’re going to be sweaty, a situation that will only be exacerbated by going into the hot bar.  So you try to convince your friends to drive, which makes you look lazy.

Fat people can work hard, and can lose weight.  Lots of people have done it.  It’s not laziness that stops us.  It’s being told that it’s easy only to find out that it’s hard.  If everyone around you tells you something is easy and then it’s not easy, you start suspecting that the problem is you.  So we need a complete change in tactics.  Losing weight is not easy.  Eating the fats and sugars our bodies were made to crave is a lot easier than eating right and exercising.  Fat people can accept this; we’re not weak and we’re not stupid.  Give us the tools we need to succeed.  Tell us about tracking our food, about exercising.  Tell us that walking is healthy without telling us that we can get by on 20 minutes, three times a week.  Tell us about protein and fat and fiber and how they make things delicious and filling.

Don’t tell us that it’s going to be easy, or that eating right will suddenly make the good food into our favorite foods.  Don’t treat fat people like children.  They have the ability to surprise you.

However, if you find yourself on a crowded elevator next to a fat person, I can’t argue with farting and allowing people to blame it on the fat guy.  That’s just good common sense.  

Friday, September 28, 2012

That's how it's done, son.

My body is weird. 

Today I lost 4.6 pounds.  Tomorrow I’m sure to gain some of it back, but for today, I’m over 80 and I’ll take it!  It’s like my body just holds and holds weight and then lets it go all at once.  

Also, today I want to talk about things that are not great about losing weight quickly.  The first one is clothes.  Today I’m wearing a shirt that was too small when I bought it.  Come to think of it, a lot of my clothes were purchased when they were too small for me.  I guess I’ve always been an optimist.  However, this shirt is enormous, I was just enormouser at the time, but now since I’m merely quite large, I’m swimming in this thing.  Not only is this just weird to wear, it makes me look worse when I wear it.  I think I own two shirts at this point that actually fit me, and I must say, I look excellent in them.

So I should probably make another run to the Burlington Coat Factory this weekend and see what else I can find.  Now I’m wondering at what point I’ll be ready to shop in actual stores.  However, having been too fat for real stores my entire adult life, I have questions for people who shop in those places.  For one, where do real people shop for clothes?  One thing I know I want once I can fit into it is a Powell’s Books t-shirt, but I’m fairly sure I can’t do all my clothes shopping at Powell’s (or can I?)  One of the few perks of being a fatty is that shopping, while a horribly frustrating experience, has always been relatively simple:  I have my one or two stores that carry things I don’t hate, and I find what fits me that’s not awful.  Now that I have to start thinking about finding clothes that I actually like and that look good on me, it’s a bit overwhelming.

What clothes actually look good on me?  I have clothes that I think look all right, and I’m pretty good at avoiding looking terrible, but I have a feeling that a whole mess of options out there (or I will soon at least) that really look good.  Or maybe I’ll just make the clothes look better than I did. 

OK, enough of that.  I’ve had some people ask me: How have I done it?  I personally find the question fascinating, and I think people find major weight loss fascinating in general because there’s rarely a good answer to why it works.  I’d wager that somewhere between 100% and 100% of people that have lost weight have tried and failed in the past.  It’s hard!  Not only that, it’s really easy to slip back into bad habits.  Why?  Working out is hard, eating unhealthy food is easy, and people are generally nice and won’t tell you when you’re slipping.   So when people suddenly succeed in losing weight and keeping it off, I find it utterly mind-blowing.  But now that I’m on my way to becoming one of those people, and I’ve had more than a couple people ask me how, I want to give a good answer that’s not just made up of clichés and platitudes.

So here goes:  Losing weight isn’t easy.  However, it is simple.  Let me explain.  The numbers behind weight loss are easy to calculate (even easier with smartphone apps) and generally pretty static.  It’s not hard to know what to do to lose weight.  But it’s a lot more difficult to actually make those changes, especially if you don’t know what’s healthy and what isn’t.  It’s not hard to keep your daily calories at 1800; most of us can do math, or at least have a calculator. But what do you need to eat to make those calories count?  How can you eat 1800 calories in a way that you’re not miserable?  If you’re miserable, you’re going to fail.

First thing on my list:  Track EVERYTHING.  No bullshit; everything.  On some days, when you’re doing well, you may have no problem keeping your calories down without tracking.  But when it’s 8:30, and you’ve had a long day and what you’ve eaten just hasn’t been enough?  If you think to yourself, “It’s ok, my brain’s got this,” you might look at what you’ve eaten and think, “That feels like 1500 calories or so” and reach for something that’s going to bite you in the ass later.  If you’ve tracked your calories and you know for a fact that you’re at 1826 calories, then suddenly a few slices of cucumber and a couple tablespoons of hummus (70 calories, plus 5-8 for the cucumber) seems a lot more palatable. 

Speaking of hummus:  eat it.  Eat the shit out of hummus.  It’s delicious, it can go on just about anything savory, it’s low in calories but has healthy fats, plus fiber and protein.  Basically, I focus on three things: What is the most fat, fiber and protein I can get for the least calories?  Go to the tortilla aisle sometime. Ah, Mission Brand Multi-Grain Wraps!  Sounds delicious, and healthy.  I could wrap that around some eggs, maybe throw on a little cheddar and there’s a healthy breakfast!

Here’s the nutrition info for one wrap :
1 tortilla
210 calories
6g fat
33g carbs
7g fiber
6g protein

Not terrible, but throw on two eggs and a quarter-cup of cheddar cheese, and you’ve blown through 460 calories just at breakfast.  That being said, you throw some salsa in there, maybe some spinach and Tapatio (always welcome in my house) and you’ve got a decent breakfast that may be a little high-calorie, but still comes in at 500 calories and should be doable if you budget accordingly the rest of the day.  Still, take a look at the nutrition facts for La Tortilla Factory Smart & Delicious Large Size Tortillas:

80 calories
3g fat
18g carbs
12g fiber
8g protein

5 grams more fiber, two grams more protein, and for 130 less calories?  Try that with just one eggs, two tablespoons of hummus (I recommend Sabra Roasted Red Pepper) and two tablespoons of feta and you have a delicious breakfast for 265 calories that packs a bunch of fiber, protein and good tasty fat to keep you satisfied.

OK, so that was a long way to go to point out one example, but it’s true, check everything you buy and track everything you eat.  Next is exercise.  I’m the kind of person that gets really into this and I start working out 5-6 times a week, which isn’t always possible for people with busy schedules (it’s not always possible for me).  Now, I could say that working out is easy, or you can just go for a walk three times a week for 20 minutes and watch the pounds melt away!  Not so easy.  You have to get out and exercise.  Walking is wonderful and not to be discouraged, but push yourself.  Have you ever walked four miles?  No?  Go do it.  Today.  Find a path, map it on http://www.mapmyrun.com and go do it.  It won’t be as hard as you think and you might even want to go further someday.  When I started, the idea of walking six miles was scary.  I’ve walked 13 now.  At once.  Go work out.  Try for three hours a week.  Is that hard?  Yes.  Losing weight isn’t easy.

Now the most important part.  This is the one thing that has made losing weight a reality for me, more than anything else that I’ve done. One word: accountability.  I started my whole change (I refuse to call it a “journey”) on May 20th of this year.  I made my first blog post on June 19th.  I tried half-assing the accountability.  I posted my daily change on Twitter, but never my weight, and I knew that I needed to make it known that this was happening if I wanted to keep this up.  So I put my weight online.  On June 19th, I weight 379.4 pounds.  That’s not an easy number to tell to your family and friends. But it made me think about every choice that I’ve made since then.  It would be easy to stop off at the burger place and gorge until I’m uncomfortably stuffed, if I didn’t know that the next morning, I have to step on that scale and announce to the world my weight.

So there you have it.  Track what you eat, exercise (more than a little), and be accountable.  You don’t have to do what I did.  I got the idea from Drew Magary, a writer at deadspin.  The Public Humiliation Diet is my way.  But you don’t have to announce your weight to the world.   Put it on your refrigerator.  Put it on your desk.  Make yourself accountable to yourself, if no one else. There’s no big secret to weight loss.  There’s only reasons why you haven’t.  Once you get rid of those, there’s no way to stop you.

Friday, September 21, 2012

Weight limit.

Today, for the first time in many years, I weighed under 330 pounds.  This is a surprisingly significant number for me. 
First, as you can see above, for the first time in a long time, my driver’s license is actually accurate.  In Oregon, I was actually registered with the state at 340 pounds, and when I got the Washington license, I for some reason decided that License Me had lost ten pounds, even though Real Me wasn’t sniffing 330 any more than 340. 
Second, 330 seems to be a cutoff point for a lot of things these days.  It seems that it used to be (back when it used to be odd to see a person over 300 pounds) that weight limits were set to 300 for most products.  330 seems to be the new number.  It makes me feel good that I can go buy a regular bathroom, spinny-numbers scale and weigh myself on it today.  I can also buy a Wii Fit.  Sure, I don’t have a Wii, but I could.  I’ve found hammocks, recliners, and zip line tours with weight limits of 330 pounds too. 
I’ve also been thinking about something else as it has become more and more feasible.  I haven’t been on an amusement park/fair ride (excluding Ferris wheels) since probably my senior trip to Six Flags in 2001.  I love roller coasters and other such rides.  But there’s no way that I’m getting in those lines without being awfully damn sure that that safety harness is going to fit.  I actually found a website where fat people submitted their experiences attempting to ride the rides at various theme parks that was helpful, but I still plan to wait until the ol’ State Fair next year to make my grand entrance to the ride scene.
That leads me to another question, though.  Who are these people willing to stick their pride out there and hop on into line, not knowing if you’ll fit?  I’m not asking to shame these people; I am impressed.  As a longtime fat person, I know the dread that goes into a lot of seemingly simple activities. It’s a very vulnerable position to put yourself in, and there’s no way I would have done it at 400 pounds.  I’d feel uncomfortable stepping up there at 329 pounds.
I’m also getting very close to a very good milestone.  When I reach 319.6 pounds, I will no longer be classified as Obese, Class III.  There is no Class IV.  At 6’3”, I’ll start dropping through the classes in neat 40-pound increments.  So at 279.6 pounds, I’ll reach Obese, Class I.  At 239.6 pounds, I will cease to be Obese and simply be overweight, and the pie-in-the-sky dream, which I fully admit may not be obtainable, is at 199.6 pounds, to be, for possibly the first time since my age was in single digits, at a normal weight.  Weighing under 200 pounds is an exciting thought, but so is weighing under 300 pounds.  I can’t get myself too wrapped up in the idea that there’s some weight that I HAVE to get to.  If I get under 200 pounds, great.  I should be in damn good shape.  If my weight stabilizes at 205 or 225 or 245, then I’m still miles ahead of where I was just four months ago. 
I’m miles ahead of that guy now, literally.  I have 222 miles under my belt, just from the miles that I’ve personally tracked.  I should have at least another 200 by the end of the year.  On Sunday, I’m going on a seven-mile hike with a 2800-foot gain on the way up, and while it’s going to be one hell of a workout, I’m not going to have a problem doing it.  I couldn’t say that four months ago.  I’m not at all sure that I’ve ever been on a hike before, and certainly nothing approaching seven miles.
So I may not get to that mystical number of 199.6.  But as great as my life was before I started losing this weight (it was), every day is even better (it is, and yes, you should be jealous).  It’s simple things, like discovering the place I want to go is six blocks away and being entirely OK with walking.  It’s walking up three flights of stairs and not having to catch my breath. 
Also, I’m finding that I’m enjoying working out again, but there’s a limit.  I’m starting to tire of walking and running, at least the walking and running that’s just on my own time.  I’m really excited to hike on Sunday, and I’m really looking forward to pushing myself at the gym.  I think I’m ready to switch it up.  I’ve lost 74 pounds doing the same routine, but now it’s time to diversify! 
Also, blogging won’t generally be this sparse; dealing with a back injury, being sick and work being crazy has really diminished my time for anything, especially when you throw in working out and my new commitment to eating in.  Basically, I’m super busy because I’m awesome and popular and important.  Enjoy the weekend!

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Even Batman needs help sometimes.

Me before Warrior Dash:


Me after Warrior Dash:


In between I found out that I’m pretty good at most of the obstacles. I also found out that I am not good at climbing walls.

Anyway, I came through nearly the first mile doing quite well. I was running most all of it, my breath was good, I wasn’t getting winded. I was feeling great. Then came the wall. It didn’t look so bad. It was about 12 feet tall, but there was a rope with several knots in it. How hard could it be? So I grabbed on, put my foot on the foothold, and pulled.

It’s true, I’ve lost 67.6 pounds. However, that means that I still weigh nearly 340. I can assure you, that’s a lot of weight to get up and over a wall, especially when I haven’t been strength training (more on that in a minute). I was surprised by the difficulty and had to go back to the ground. At this point, I was certain that I was not going to get over this wall.

However, I was helped out by my teammates. I was able to pull myself up to the first foothold on my own, then with a big assist from the Green Lantern and Captain America (my arms were literally unable to do any more work), I got up and over the wall.

So I was able to finish the Warrior Dash, but unfortunately, it was basically a total loss as far as time went. I had exerted so much effort with my muscles that all the oxygen I was taking in was going to them. Even walking, I was breathing heavily the rest of the race.

I’m glad I finished, but there’s no question that I have got to make strength training a part of my routine. Not that I wasn’t already aware of how important strength training is in my routine, but I needed a little bit of failure to kick me in the ass. So this week it’s off to the gym to sign up for a membership. I really should do it anyway, with the winter weather on its way.

Other than that, things are good. The bounces in my weight are starting to stabilize. Each week they’ve been getting better. I’ll lose a bunch of weight during the week and then gain a bunch back over the weekend. It all started with Mancave:

8/10-8/13: +8.4 pounds
8/14-8/18: -8.6
8/19-8/20: +5.8
8/21-8/24: -9.0
8/25-8/27: +4.8
8/28-9/1: -10.0
9/2-9/4: +3.8
9/5-9/8: -7.6
9/9-9/10: +2.6
9/11: -2.2

Each weekend has been getting a little better. And that’s important. I have a goal of getting under 300 by the end of the year (by my birthday on December 10th if I can make it happen) and that’s going to take getting my weight in some sort of order. I lost my first fifty losing 10 pounds about every 18 days. The last ten took almost a month.

So it’s time to shake it up, start upping the effort, start pushing my muscles, and next year, I’ll be the one helping other superheroes over the wall.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Giddy with anticipation.

Today is my third straight day without a workout, and it feels weird. Normally, I work out about 5-6 times per week, I rarely take consecutive days off, and three in a row is nearly unheard of. But I’m taking it easy for a few days. I’ve had some knee pain in the last week and with Warrior Dash tomorrow, I need to give it a chance to recover. I haven’t been doing anything too strenuous as far as exercise goes, but the truth is, even with 65 pounds lost, I’m still dropping about 340 pounds on my joints with each step.

The good news (kinda) is that for the first time in my life probably ever, I genuinely am not enjoying not working out. Oh, back in the day I could not work out like a motherfucker! But now that I’ve cut out watching TV and eating horribly delicious food from my daily life, being a lazy fatass just is a lot less fun. So for now, I am giddy with anticipation for Warrior Dash tomorrow, and I’m sure that that giddiness will last until approximately 9:03 am, when I’m about a quarter of a mile into the Warrior Dash and I wonder who would be crazy enough to run up an enormous dusty hill on a fucking Saturday.

Also, it’s probably time that I get myself a new belt. But I’m very reluctant. This belt has stuck with me through fat and more fat. Also, it has these loops in it with metal rings in the loops (though about half the metal rings are gone now), and it was always a great benchmark of how mindblowingly fat I’d become. Now it makes an excellent measure of how sexy I’m getting. I started losing weight when I was at the fourth loop. Now I’m at the stage where the ninth loop is just a little too loose and the tenth is just a little too tight. I think I’m going to keep this guy around for a little while longer. I think he needs a name though. All good items of clothing deserve names.

Oh, and a major bummer in my lack of workoutability over the last three days has been my inability to bust out my new shoes! Yes, I broke down and bought a pair of running shoes that required more thought than “what kind of size 14 running shoes does the Payless have?”. In fact, the new shoes I got aren’t even size 14; they’re 12 ½. Are my feet shrinking? Who knows? As long as that whole “guys with big feet” thing isn’t scientifically accurate, I’m not too worried. Wait, is it? Hmm…

Oh yes, the shoes. Here’s a picture:


Aren’t they pretty? They’d better be; I paid $95 for them. Actually, $95 isn’t a bad price to pay for good shoes. The real bitch is when I had to bust out $10 for a pair of god damned socks. Socks! And now I just want to get down to the business of running a hole into them so I have to buy more damn socks. Stupid knee.

But tomorrow is Warrior Dash! I’m getting through/under/over all the obstacles if it kills me. If it does, well, it’s been good knowing you all. Donate my body to a university or something. Just don’t let some asshole 18-year-old pose me with my hand on my crotch or something. Wait, what am I saying? Totally let him do that. In fact, make that one of the conditions of my donation. Happy Friday!

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Serenity now!

You know that AA serenity prayer thing? It goes kind of like this:

God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
The courage to change the things I can,
And the wisdom to know the difference.

Now, this is not to disparage Alcoholics Anonymous (I have other reasons for that, but that isn’t germane to this issue), but I find this to be at least partially bullshit. Accepting the things that you can’t change sounds like a shortcut to slacking.

So I gained 0.6 pounds on Sunday, 1.4 on Monday, and 1.8 this morning. That’s 3.8 pounds over three days. This was a good weekend, too. I really kicked ass. I went to a baseball game on Saturday, watched a football game at a bar on Saturday night, and went to the Bumbershoot festival on Sunday. And I stayed in line. I had no more than 2500 calories on any day, I put in a hell of a workout on Sunday morning at the hotel (seriously, my shirt plopped when I dropped it on the floor afterward) and I rocked six miles yesterday morning. This leads me to believe that as far as my weight gain goes in the early part of the week, I have no say in the matter. My body seems to like losing quickly during the week and gaining less that that back over the weekend. In the end, the result is still weight loss, right?

So I could accept that. It’s very likely true that even if I had done everything right – and really, all that would entail eating less salt and drinking less beer – I would likely still have gained some weight the last few days. So yes, I could accept that and be a little easier on myself. But let’s say I do that. I accept that weight gain over the weekend is something approaching inevitable. Let’s say that over the next few days, I lose six or eight or ten pounds, and on Saturday night, I’m hungry. I’ve finished Warrior Dash, I’m feeling really proud of myself, and I’m driving by a McDonald’s.

Now I know that McDonald’s is seriously unhealthy food, at least the things I like to eat there. I also will say that I find that shit to be delicious and I would eat it always in large amounts if it would not lead to me being dead. Eat shit Morgan Spurlock, long live McChicken!

So let’s say, again, that I’m driving by this McDonald’s, and I really want something. I know that I’m likely to gain a few pounds over the next several days no matter what I do, and several months of Quarter Pounder-free living has got me craving some fast-food goodness. Who’s more likely to skip it and head home to make some fish tacos? Is it the guy that has accepted that the weight is going to be gained? Or is it the guy that says to himself: 3.8 pounds? Well fuck that. The scale can kiss 3.8 pounds of my ass because I’m losing weight this weekend. I always perform better when I have something to compete with. Even if it’s myself. Even if it’s myself and some benchmark that I’ve contrived for no other reason than to motivate me.

Anyway, otherwise things are going well. I’ve been putting a lot of miles on the new shoes, to the point that I’m planning on retiring them after Warrior Dash after only a couple of months. This is partially due to the large amount of miles I’ve put on them, partially due to the large amount of weight that they bear, partially due to the strange way I walk exclusively on the outside of my feet, and partially because they are $25 shoes. This week I’m planning a trip to the Fit Right NW for a gait analysis and a new pair of shoes that will cost more than I ever intended to spend on shoes that would be used for exercise. However, I will look more like a real runner, at least from the ankle down.