My legs are stiff following the “hill run” of a couple of days ago, so I only managed to hobble through 8km today, at an 8-minute per km pace.
I drank 2-1/2 large cups of Coca Cola today.
I’m working on sorting photos for the house project.
My legs are stiff following the “hill run” of a couple of days ago, so I only managed to hobble through 8km today, at an 8-minute per km pace.
I drank 2-1/2 large cups of Coca Cola today.
I’m working on sorting photos for the house project.
Walk-jogged 12 km today, at an average pace of 7:30/km.
Sadly, I didn’t do as well avoiding Coca Cola, downing three and a half large glasses of the stuff while working on shuffling boxes around the house today. I get annoyed and depressed while shifting stuff around, as well as hot and thirsty, so there was a double reason for the cola.
Before and after photos of one of the rooms in the house:
And a bonus view of the lanai (porch or covered deck) at sunset this evening:
Back to it: only one glass of Coca Cola today; celery with peanut butter for lunch; jog-walked 22 kilometers, including a loop up Long Road (Mokuleia Access Road) from the bottom to the Peacock Flats campground gate. Average pace: 9 minutes per kilometer.
I made the mistake of looking at a couple of running blogs this afternoon. Nine minutes is the easy pace at which slow runners run a mile. Slow girl runners! My nine minute per kilometer pace is equivalent to 14:30/mile, or walking pace.
Here’s a fun* running blog: My Endless Summer: Adventures, Marathon Training, and Good Eats while Island Living. Yeah, it’s another blog by a gorgeous girl who bombs ultras like they’re nothing.
*Or, “discouraging,” when I consider my waddling fat-guy efforts.
When I’m on a “healthy eating & exercise” program, I generally set aside one evening a week, usually Friday, as “Cheat Night,” meaning I can eat whatever I want without guilt or repercussions during a set period. I limit myself to a time block, because I could, and would, very seriously abuse an entire “cheat day.” I like to set 8pm until midnight as my “Cheat Night,” which usually consists of some sort of serious concoction of ice cream, cookies, candy, and basically anything resembling chocolate or sugar. Then I sit down in front of the TV and watch old “B” noir or sci-fi movies from the 1950s. It’s awesome. The next morning I go for an extra-long run or walk.
Today, though, I kind of started early. As in, at lunch time, with an extra Coca Cola. You see, I was stuck in a work-related “training” all day today, sitting in an alternately freezing cold or stuffy and hot conference room being bored out of my mind and feeling irritable and annoyed by my not-so-professional peers. I mean, c’mon, people, can you just shut up already and politely listen to the presentation? It got so noisy the last half of the day with all the “side-bar conversations” and people messing around on their phones that I could barely hear parts of what the speaker was saying. And it just so happened that the last part of the day was the “important part” we were supposedly there to learn. Ah, but I digress. In short, I resorted to Coca Cola to keep me going through the day, and then, on the way home, I drove through the drive-up window at McDonald’s and picked up two double-cheeseburgers and a small fry, which I devoured at home along with yet another Coke.
And boy, did it taste good! And that supposedly unhealthy meal dramatically improved my mood and my general sense of well-being. Most of my frustration and despair evaporated. I say “most” because I’m feeling a little bit badly about not running now for two days.
But it’s the weekend! I can sleep in tomorrow morning. Then I will run. Or walk-jog. I’ll go further than I have been. No, it won’t entirely make up for the higher-calorie, lower-quality food or for the two days of not exercising. But I’m not giving up. And unlike previous times I’ve “fallen off the wagon,” I’m not going to let one blown day totally derail my efforts.
Oh, as for “Triple Cheat,” yeah, one was the extra Coca Cola; two was the McD’s; three will be the “regularly scheduled Cheat Night” ice cream and chocolate feast later this evening.
For now, I’m going to take a nap.
Thursday. “Weigh-in” day. 14 stone 5 pounds.
Another “only one Coca Cola” day.
Really tired after work. Feel badly about not running, but I don’t want to get sick. Even though I’ve been trying to get at least nine hours of sleep each night this week, I’m dragging. Taking an afternoon off from running. Three-day weekend coming up, so I should be able to make up the distance over the next few days.
Wednesday. The middle of the week. As is typical, I’m dragging.
Did not feel like running after work. Went anyway. So far, I’d like to think I’m refusing to allow that stupid job to drag me down and wear me out. If I want to wear myself out by jogging, fine. If I want to feel dragged out because of cutting out Coca Cola and junk food, fine. But that job… it isn’t worth it.
So yeah, I jog-walked, twelve kilometers today. I was so annoyed with myself for feeling so tired and crappy I pushed myself to feel even more tired and more crappy. Somehow, my average pace, according to the Nike+ Sportwatch, was 7:34 / km.
Only one Coca Cola today.
Tuesday. Managed to jog/walk yet again after work, 10k, 7:47/km
Only one glass of Coca Cola.
What’s it been, only three days? Feels like forever. I am really dragging.
I see there’s a new video post up at Steve Roy’s SingleDadFitDad blog that kind of addresses why I’ve spent these last four days being tired and irritable… errr… I mean, why I’m trying to jump-start healthier habits and trying to lose weight… again.
Monday. Actually managed to jog-walk after work, 10 kilometers, a little bit faster at 7:36 / km.
Also managed to limit my cola intake to one glass, which I had in the morning.
Jogged/walked 10 kilometers. Average pace, about 8:17 (slower than yesterday).
Successfully limited myself to a single cup of Coca Cola.
Working toward a mostly-Paleo eating plan. I’m eating “normal” dinners, although avoiding breads as much as possible. During the day I’m avoiding added sugar products, most processed grains, and most pre-prepared foods. Essentially I’m trying to eat only vegetables and fruits and a bit of peanut butter or a few peanuts during the day. I know peanuts are frowned upon in full-on Paleo circles, but I don’t quite understand that. Lots of nutrition in a small quantity, and a small handful of peanuts is a great appetite, and more importantly, a great craving, suppressant.
Got myself out for a jog-walk. Ten kilometers. 8:07 per kilometer, or about 13:15 per mile. Walking pace, basically. I walked a kilometer then jogged a kilometer. It was not pretty, it was not pleasant.
Painted some trim boards for the deck. I have come to realize that the stupid deck project will never be done.
Tried to go without Coca Cola today. Felt like a zombie, out of touch, irritable, depressed, sad. Finally broke down and poured myself a glass to have before dinner. I don’t know if this is gonna work. It’ll be tough when I go back to work on Monday.
Read all the posts on a new fitness blog, Steve Roy’s Single Dad, Fit Dad site. He’s got some good stuff on there already. It’s good to get in on a blog like this from the ground floor, so to speak, and to watch it develop. Steve seems to be more grounded in reality than a lot of lifestyle / fitness bloggers. In the fitness realm it’s hard to beat Steve Kamb’s Nerd Fitness site, but Steve Roy is targeting “midlife men” who are out of shape and looking to improve. It’s a niche audience that Nerd Fitness doesn’t fully address, catering as it does toward a younger, and increasingly female, audience, many of whom already are at a creditable level of fitness. Single Dad, Fit Dad isn’t for the already-fit crowd, but more about mid-life guys who might be self-conscious about being out of shape. Guys like, y’know, me, f’r instance!
Steve Roy has been running another site, Ending The Grind, but he’s currently scaling it back to focus more specifically on the fitness blog.
I tell you, though, the difficulty I have in cutting back on the processed sugar and the Coca Cola may totally preclude me from ever dropping the forty pounds I’ve gained in the last thirteen months, or the almost sixty pounds I’d like to lose altogether.