Leslie Sansone -- 1 Mile Walk


Leslie Sansone has created a Walk Social Website where you can register and keep track of the number of miles you walk and your weight loss. On this site, she has made available various videos to walk with (for free).

My Food Diary

Keeping track of what I eat daily and what I have done fitness-wise in order to lose weight.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

This Is My New Plan.... #679 probably

I've been planning to do something about getting more weight off since the first of February. February 1 was an arbitrarily chosen date based on my normal yearly schedule.

Holidays over.

Fellowship meeting behind me.

Inventory done.

But this year other factors contributed to the demise of my good intentions.

I've been watching a number of folks I go to church with get slimmer and slimmer. They are not all using the same method.

One chose the Idiot-Proof diet. Others are counting points. Others are just watching their portions. But a number of them are LOSING. And here I am still trying to decide what to do to start.

Last night I came up with an idea that I thought might work for me.

I lost the weight I did last year counting calories. I like that method but it really did take a lot of time to count up everything I had eaten every day and right now I just don't want to take that much time to count calories every day.

I have been trying to think of something that will work with my changing schedule. And I came up with this plan:

MY NEW PLAN

Get a three ring binder. (I bought a small one and the paper for it.)

Divide it into sections of Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, and Snacks.

Then divide each section into calorie levels, say of 200, 300, 400, 500 calories.


If I choose a 400 calorie breakfast, then I'll have to choose a lower calorie lunch. Or if I have a low calorie breakfast and lunch, I can choose a higher calorie supper. But I will have handy right there in my notebook the right calorie size choices that I need so that I won't have to be doing a whole lot of counting EVERY day. Meals with precounted calories. And I will have CHOICES to look at so that I'm not trying to figure out what I can eat as I go.

And, I will have a list of snacks to choose from that fall into the 100-200 calorie range and I won't be trying to figure out what I can eat that will be the right amount of calories.


All I'll have to do is go to my "handy-dandy notebook" and find something of the right number.

I can write my recipes for anything that is good down and put it right there in my notebook.

So, at least I've taken the first step.

I bought the notebook and paper.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

It's HARD to be overweight.

It's HARD to lose weight.

It's HARD to maintain weight loss.

You just have to pick your hard!



Friday, April 18, 2008

Good Habits

This post was taken from a Spark Message Board written by Tango5617 (Her post precedes all the comments so if you go there to find it, you have to go to the first entry.)

"Well, I've just checked, and as of April 4th, I've been a member of Spark people for over two years now. What has changed?

I've lost nearly 40 pounds so far, most of it in the first 7 months with Spark people. Then, I maintained that weight loss through about 7 different major life stressors (ended an engagement, quit a job, moved, death in family, serious illness in family, moved again, started new job). It's been an interesting year or two.

What helped?

My new good habits that Spark people taught me.




1. Start small. Every little bit counts (both in exercise and in nutrition).



2. Track everything. This helps you control what you can, while forcing you to realize what you can't control.



3. Develop good habits and it's harder to be derailed. If you're consistently tracking everything, it's easier to see that occasional off moments don't have to mean sliding completely off track. Just because I overate at one meal doesn't mean I've "blown it" and might as well take the rest of the week off. Tracking shows that all it really means is that you can start fresh the next day, or the next meal.



4. Take it one choice at a time. When I started, I didn't even know what I didn't know. Looking at my life now, I've changed in so many ways that it would take a LONG essay to even list them all. None of it happened overnight; all of it happened one choice at a time.



5. Be gentle with yourself. You can only do your best. Some days your best isn't as good as it is other days. Realizing that this is ok, and that it's a natural cycle has made such a difference. As I've learned to be more forgiving of myself, I've found my manner towards others also becoming more gentle. I like who I'm becoming.



6. Sharing with others really helps. It's scary to ask for help sometimes, and it can even be really intimidating to realize you need help. The positive community of all the Sparkers has really made a difference to me. I know that many times, logging on and chatting with team members made a difference. The accountability factor can be incredible. Most impressive? In my darkest night, when I was ready to throw in the towel completely, feeling that if I couldn't track everything every day then I should probably just quit and try again once my life settled down, I posted on the "Help!" thread. Almost immediately, two strangers took me to task in the most loving way possible, and called me on my behavior. Just because I couldn't do everything perfectly didn't mean I had to give up. Such a valuable lesson, and delivered at just the right moment. (I kept tracking as I could, despite my crazy travel schedule, and now I'm delighted to realize that I can estimate fairly accurately how much I've eaten. This, for a non-mathematical English major, is a substantial accomplishment, and one I would never even have aimed for otherwise!)



7. Scaffolding really works! The idea is that you can take success in one area and use it to build success in other areas as well. For example, my new awareness of nutrition in the grocery store has led to greater awareness of cost, which has led to better budgeting than ever before. Learning how to break down huge goals, such as "lose weight," into manageable chunks has helped me to begin breaking down another huge goal, "keep a tidier house." It all ties together!



So, on my second anniversary, Sparkpeople, I just wanted to thank you again for saving my life. My habits are much healthier and I've learned how to succeed. I'm lighter in body, stronger, and more able to tackle everyday challenges. I'm happier and more able to choose my happiness. I'm even a nicer person.



Thank you. I look forward to seeing what the next two years bring!"

-Tango


SPARKpeople is a weight loss website which provides community support, a nutrition tracker, fitness tracker, and weigh-ins FOR FREE.

Interested? Check them out.


A 15 minute "desk workout" from Sparkpeople

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

The Core Plan

The following is excerpts taken from an article About.com published on Sept 3, 2004

The Core Plan controls calories by focusing on a core list of wholesome, nutritious foods without tracking or counting. The list includes foods from all the food groups -- fruits and vegetables, grains and starches, lean meats, fish and poultry, eggs and dairy products -- to ensure that all nutritional requirements are met. People can also have occasional treats in controlled amounts on the Core Plan.

More Satisfaction, Fewer Calories
The Core Foods List was created to provide maximum eating satisfaction without empty calories. It emphasizes foods that have low-energy density, or few calories per unit volume.

"One of the key things scientific research has shown is that from a very young age, people are trained to eat a volume of food, not a certain amount of calories.

"To lose weight, people should eat foods that have low-energy density, that is, foods that are high in volume, but low in calories," said Weight Watchers Chief Scientific Officer, Karen Miller-Kovach.

"We also identified foods that are linked with overeating and removed them from the Core List. Once the Core Plan was developed, we tested it until we were convinced it allowed people to achieve healthy, effective weight loss, with no counting or tracking.

To learn more about Weight Watchers services, products and publications, visit WeightWatchers.com. To find the nearest Weight Watchers meeting location, call 1-800-651-6000 or click on the Find a Meeting link at the top of the homepage. Weight Watchers offers subscriptions for people wanting to follow Weight Watchers online.

This article was adapted from a news release provided by WeightWatchers.com.


I've been looking around at various "diets" to decide what way I want to lose more weight. I am thinking strongly about trying out this plan simply because there is not so much involved in trying to put some kind of number value on everything you eat. Whether it's counting points or counting calories, I just don't want to figure all that out right now.

The essence of the core plan, for those who aren't familiar with it, is that you can eat as much of the following foods as you wish (as long as you don't stuff yourself), while following some basic "good health guidelines", (which require you have a certain minimum daily intake of water, fruits and vegetables, dairy, and 2 tsp of "healthy oils" --olive, canola, flaxseed oil. Also, a multi-vitamin)

Here's the list of "allowed" foods:
~lean meats, fish, poultry
~nonfat dairy products, eggs
~whole grains (not whole grain products, just the whole grains themselves)
~sweet potatoes, potatoes, whole wheat pasta, brown rice
~beans and legumes, tofu
~more or less all fresh, frozen, or canned fruits or vegetables as long as they aren't in syrup(but not juices or dried fruits/veggies)
~coffee, tea
~most condiments (I've interpreted "most" as "all") and all herbs and spices, of course

"Limited" foods are:
~"healthy fats" 2 tsp required per day
~potatoes OR brown rice OR whole wheat pasta limited to one meal per day

Also, you get 35 extra "points" per week (more if you exercise) to spend on "non-core" foods at your discretion, if you want an occasional pat of butter, or a glass of wine or bump up your dairy from "non-fat" to "low-fat", etc.

Saturday, April 12, 2008

Got 10?

"Where did the day go?"

Is this a common question in your life? Many of us jam-pack so much stuff into our daily routines, seemingly there's no time to relax for just one minute, let alone exercise. Lack of time is one of the most common excuses for not having a decent fitness regimen. But do you realize that in the time it might take you to go through your e-mail, you could fit in a good workout? We're not talking about giving up 60 minutes either; all you need is 10.

Just 10?
Forget the "all or nothing" mentality when it comes to exercise. Fitness does not live or die by 60-minute workouts; there is middle ground. Short spurts of exercise, when they accumulate, have been shown to share similar benefits of longer workouts.

Your body will reap numerous benefits just by becoming more active. This approach is perfect for times when you don’t have time for a regular workout, or when you want to start off slowly and build up a routine.

Easier Than You Think
Treat these 10 minutes like you would a regular workout. Take 1-2 minutes to warm up and get the muscles ready, including stretching. Follow with at least 7 minutes of exercise at a medium or high intensity. Then make sure to include a 60-second cool down.

Since it’s brief, it’s important to work at a fairly high intensity to obtain all of the benefits. Work at raising your heart and respiration rates. Just like regular workouts, try to include cardio, strength training and flexibility work in your shortened routine. Either knock out all three during the 10 minutes, or plan a 10-minute segment for each area.

Example: Push out 10 cardio minutes on the stationary bike. For strength, do push-ups, wall sits, or lift dumbbells. For flexibility, it’s helpful to just stretch every day. Work different muscle groups and keep it simple. After 10 minutes, you will feel healthier and be on your way to developing solid fitness habits.

But I Still Don’t Have Time
It only takes 30 minutes a day, broken up into manageable chunks of 10. Start with a quick exercise when you wake up. The second session? A lunch break is possibly the perfect time to re-energize and get the blood flowing again. The last 10-minute blitz could come in the evening, even while you are watching TV. It’s an ideal way to involve the family as well. Go for a power walk after dinner with your spouse or ride bikes with the kids.

It is all about convenience; if you try, you can fit exercise into your schedule no matter where you are. Do it at home or at work, outside or in the living room. Start building exercise spurts into your daily routine and you’ll start feeling better.
Article created on: Spark Small Bits of Fitness Add Up
Exercise Comes in All Shapes and Sizes
-- By Liz Noelcke, Staff Writer 5/14/2004

Sunday, April 06, 2008

Small Changes Can Make Big Differences

Taken from an article found at Healthlink

"Most physicians and, I believe many of our patients, find the challenges of dealing with obesity overwhelming. Sadly, approximately 127 million adults in the US are overweight. Of those, 60 million are obese, and 9 million are severely obese. As the entire population of the US is just under 300 million, over half of all Americans weigh too much! When looking at the adult population over 20, the figures are even more disconcerting with just under 65% overweight or obese.

One common response is to go on a "diet." For most people, this implies an attempt to abruptly change one's eating habits and/or exercise patterns, often all at once and at great expense. Americans spend more than $33 billion annually on weight loss products (books, programs, pills, etc.).

The sad fact is that while some of these may yield impressive results in the near term, virtually all of the people who experience that first flush of success gain back all of the weight they lost within one year. Maintaining the needed discipline is just too hard for most people. In addition to the frustration that failure can bring is the accumulation of all of the weight loss stuff that you bought. They seem to end up in the trash or some dark corner in the cupboard. The equipment is stored only to emerge again at some future yard sale.

While I understand the desire for people to want to quickly lose weight, the reality is that just doesn't make sense. There is not one obese person in the world who went to bed one night thin and svelte and awoke the next morning to find themselves grossly overweight. If we didn't put the weight on overnight, why do we think that we can lose it that fast? Besides being unrealistic, it is also unhealthy and creates a cycle of failed attempts that result in profound discouragement.

My hope is that people would focus on the development of a healthy lifestyle as opposed to losing weight. If getting healthier is what you really want, you will lose weight as a byproduct. This means making small and sustainable changes that you can weave into your daily routine over time. It also is an opportunity to create a pattern of small and sustainable successes that build confidence through progress instead of undermining it.

I will list just a few things that you can do that will make a difference. Pick just one, and to start with, pick the one that will be the easiest for you.

1. Make an appointment to see your doctor for a brief physical exam to look for high blood pressure, diabetes, and elevated cholesterol as well as to get an accurate baseline weight and some initial counseling.
2. Have a healthy breakfast every day. People who skip breakfast often snack throughout the morning and are likely to eat a much larger lunch, thereby actually increasing their calorie intake.
3. Look carefully at the beverages you drink. Many people wrongly think that fruit juices are a useful when trying to lose weight, when in fact they are sources of extra calories. The same is true for sweetened ice teas and some "athletic" drinks. Water or diet sodas are preferable.
4. "Sneak in" some exercise. Stairs instead of the elevator, a daily walk after a meal or parking further from the door are all easy ways to begin.
5. Moderate your alcohol intake. One glass of wine or one bottle of beer per day is more than enough.
6. Slow down your eating - you will develop a sense of fullness that can reduce the amount that you eat.

In addition, weigh yourself no more than once per week and always at the same time. Don't get upset with yourself if you fail once in awhile - just keep going!! There are many more first steps out there - check out the website of the American Obesity Association for other ideas and strategies."

I emphasized the words in bold and did the strikeout.

The person responsible for writing the above article was not identified.

Friday, March 21, 2008

Ten Years Thinner -- Christine Lydon



This month's Woman's World has a diet --they have one every week-- that was created by Christine Lydon. It sounded reasonable.... So I went online and did a search for it because the Woman's World article was really quite skimpy with its details.

I found more information on a site at Health. It's very thorough in its coverage of the diet.

The Diet:
(Health, February 2008) For the next six weeks, follow these six simple guidelines.

For the next six weeks, you can create any meals you like as long as you follow these six simple guideline. That’s all—there’s no need to count calories or fat grams.

1. Eat protein and fruit and/or vegetables at every meal.
To supply all the amino acids you need to maximize muscle tone, have one of the following:
  • 3 to 4 ounces of skinless poultry,
  • lean beef (sirloin, tenderloin, or roast),
  • or seafood (fresh, frozen, or canned, the latter packed in water;
  • limit albacore tuna to 6 ounces per week because it contains more mercury than other types);
  • or one egg or two to three egg whites.

(After you’ve completed the six-week plan, include a variety of vegetarian protein sources in your diet for a broader spectrum of nutrients.)

Also, have one serving per meal of any kind of fresh or frozen fruits, vegetables, and/or legumes.

2. Snack on a half-cup of unsalted nuts or seeds plus fresh fruit, twice a day.
Yes, nuts are high in fat and calories. But they’re also great sources of protein, fiber, good fats, and antioxidants (to fight wrinkle-causing inflammation)—and, most importantly, they’ll fill you up.

Go for lower-cal nuts like almonds over higher-cal picks like Brazil nuts.

If you finish your last meal more than three hours before bedtime, eat a pre-sleep snack as well. Don’t like nuts or seeds? Try 2 tablespoons of organic nut butter instead.

3. Avoid dairy, soy, and grain products for the first three to four weeks.
These are the types of foods most likely to trigger food sensitivities, which may lead to bloating, low energy levels, and dry, unhealthy skin. “Food sensitivities cause a chronic state of low-grade inflammation that can hurt every system in your body, from your heart to your bones to your skin,” Lydon explains.

Beginning with week four, you can add up to 100 calories per meal of dairy or soy products (e.g., 7 ounces of low-fat milk or 4 ounces of tofu).

And starting with week five, you can also have up to 100 calories per meal of whole-grain-based foods (such as a slice of multigrain bread, 1/2 cup of oatmeal, 1/2 cup of whole-wheat pasta, or 1/3 cup of brown rice), potatoes, or sweet potatoes. If you notice symptoms like bloating after adding any of these foods, cut back again.

4. Cut out processed foods.
It’s best to do without cookies, chips, etc. for the entire six-week plan, and eat them in moderation after that. Why? Processed carbs contribute to inflammation and, thus, aging, Lydon says.

5. Drink 10 to 12 ounces of fluid every time you eat.
Go for water, sparkling water, or iced unsweetened green or herbal tea (add fresh lemon, lime, or berry juice for more flavor) instead of diet sodas. Good news: You can treat yourself to a cup or two of black coffee or tea a day.

6. Pop your vitamins.
Take a daily high-potency multivitamin for overall good health;
  • cold-water fish oil (2 to 3 grams twice a day) to fight inflammation, reduce sun damage, and improve skin;
  • calcium (350 to 500 milligrams twice a day) to build strong bones;
  • and magnesium (200 to 400 milligrams twice a day) to help your body absorb the calcium.
  • Also, be sure your multivitamin contains 5 micrograms of vitamin D to help with calcium absorption.
The Workout

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Delta Diet


An art teacher who has a class where I work shared the following diet with me. As I remember it she told me, "My Aunt Edith used to work for Delta Airlines. They had to keep their weight down. Whenever she would get over the limit, she would use this diet and quickly get her weight back down."

I'm putting it here so I can have it where I can find it if I want to try it.

Also, I was reading on 3fatchicks that they'd done a survey of 4000 dieters to see which diet -- of all they had tried-- that they preferred. Want to know the result? Check it out.


Thursday, March 13, 2008

Listen and Lose

By Heidi Reichenberger McIndoo, RD

These six tips teach you to spot hunger and eat to stay satisfied--so you control calories and shed pounds without "dieting."


1. Learn to identify your spot on the hunger scale

Do you really know what hunger feels like? Before you can rein it in, you must learn to recognize the physical cues that signal a true need for nourishment. Prior to eating, use our hunger scale below to help figure out your true food needs:

  • Starving
An uncomfortable, empty feeling that may be accompanied by light-headedness or jitteriness caused by low blood sugar levels from lack of food. Binge risk: high.
  • Hungry
Your next meal is on your mind. If you don't eat within the hour, you enter dangerous "starving" territory.
  • Moderately hungry
Your stomach may be growling, and you're planning how you'll put an end to that nagging feeling. This is optimal eating time.
  • Satisfied
You're satiated, not full but not hungry either. You're relaxed and comfortable and can wait to nosh.
  • Full
If you're still eating, it's more out of momentum than actual hunger. Your belly feels slightly bloated, and the food does not taste as good as it did in the first few bites.
  • Stuffed
You feel uncomfortable and might even have mild heartburn from your stomach acids creeping back up into your esophagus.


To slim down: The best time to eat is when you are "moderately hungry" or "hungry"--when you hit either of these stages, you've used most of the energy from your last meal or snack but you haven't yet hit the point where you will be driven to binge.

2. Refuel every 4 hours

Still can't tell what true hunger feels like? Set your watch. Moderate to full-fledged hunger (our ideal window for eating) is most likely to hit 4 to 5 hours after a balanced meal.

Waiting too long to eat can send you on an emergency hunt for energy--and the willpower to make healthful choices plummets. When researchers in the United Kingdom asked workers to choose a snack just after lunch, 70% picked foods like candy bars and potato chips; the percentage shot up to 92% when workers chose snacks in the late afternoon.

"Regular eating keeps blood sugar and energy stable, which prevents you from feeling an extreme need for fuel," says Kate Geagan, RD, a Park City, UT-based registered dietitian.

To slim down: If you're feeling hungry between meals, a snack of 150 calories should help to hold you over. Here are a few ideas:

Munch on whole foods such as fruit and unsalted nuts--they tend to contain more fiber and water, so you fill up on fewer calories. Bonus: They're loaded with disease-fighting nutrients.

Avoid temptation by packing healthful, portable snacks such as string cheese and dried fruit in your purse, desk drawer, or glove compartment.


3. Eat breakfast without fail

A recent study published in the British Journal of Nutrition tracked the diets of nearly 900 adults and found that when people ate more fat, protein, and carbohydrates in the morning, they stayed satisfied and ate less over the course of the day than those who ate their bigger meals later on. Unfortunately, many Americans start off on an empty stomach: In one recent survey, consumers reported that even when they eat in the morning, the meal is a full breakfast only about one-third of the time.

To slim down: Eat fewer calories by eating more food:

Start dinner with a salad, or make it into your meal (be sure to include protein such as lean meat or beans).

Choose fresh fruit over dried. For around the same amount of calories, you can have a whole cup of grapes or a measly 3 tablespoons of raisins.



Boost the volume of a low-cal frozen dinner by adding extra veggies such as steamed broccoli or freshly chopped tomatoes and bagged baby spinach.



5. Munch fiber all day long

Fiber can help you feel full faster and for longer. Because the body processes a fiber-rich meal more slowly, it may help you stay satisfied long after eating. Fiber-packed foods are also higher in volume, which means they can fill you up so you eat fewer calories. One review recently published in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association linked a high intake of cereal fiber with lower body mass index--and reduced risk of type 2 diabetes and heart disease.

To slim down: Aim to get at least 25 g of fiber a day with these tips:

Include produce such as apples and carrots--naturally high in fiber--in each meal and snack.

Try replacing some or all of your regular bread, pasta, and rice with whole grain versions.


6. Include healthy protein at each meal

When researchers at Purdue University asked 46 dieting women to eat either 30% or 18% of their calories from protein, the high-protein eaters felt more satisfied and less hungry. Plus, over the course of 12 weeks, the women preserved more lean body mass, which includes calorie-burning muscle.

To slim down: Boost your protein intake with these ideas:

Have a serving of lean protein such as egg whites, chunk light tuna, or skinless chicken at each meal. A serving of meat is about the size of a deck of cards or the palm of your hand--not including your fingers. For more on sizing up protein portions, visit prevention.com/hand.

Build beans into your meals Black beans, chickpeas, and edamame (whole soybeans) are low in fat, high in fiber, and packed with protein.

Copyright 2007, Prevention By Heidi Reichenberger McIndoo, RD

Friday, March 07, 2008

Detox Diets--More from Spark

The following is copied from Spark. I get emails from them regularly and this one was entitled: "The Truth about Detox Diets." I've heard a number of folks talking about doing a detox so my curiosity was piqued. When I read something and want to keep the information garnered in a handy location for future reference (on the subject on dieting), I put it here so I can find it easily.

Detox Diets: Helpful or Full of Hype?
Get the Truth about Detox Diets and Colon Cleansing
-- By Becky Hand, Licensed & Registered Dietitian

There it was, posted on the SparkPeople message board: "Need encouragement for 21-day detox".

A member was feeling tired and run down. She had decided to cleanse and detox her body as well as jumpstart her weight loss program by using a special diet. By eating only fruits and veggies and drinking tea for the next 21 days, she was convinced that she would be ridding her body of damaging toxins. She was asking for feedback on her plan and support and encouragement during her 21-day detox adventure.

As the dietitian for SparkPeople, I could provide neither. On its own, a healthy body is designed to take care of toxins. Various detoxification programs, colon cleansing, and water irrigation devices are not needed and at times can be harmful or dangerous.

Most toxins reach the bloodstream when we swallow or inhale them. Others pass through our skin. Still others are released by dying cells or invading bacteria. The liver is the body’s purification plant. Toxins are filtered and removed from the blood and broken down in the liver before they can do harm. Toxins are also broken down by the kidneys and eliminated in the urine. Digestive acids and enzymes neutralize toxins which are then eliminated in the feces. Toxins can also be exhaled out of the body. The large intestine also contains hundreds of beneficial bacteria which also help to reduce toxin activity and side effects. As you can see, the body is designed to protect and cleanse itself. Here we'll discuss some of the most popular body cleansing programs: detox diets and colon cleansing.

Detoxification Diets, or detox diets for short, seem to be the current buzz word regarding health. According to these theories, by restricting certain foods and drinking specific beverages, you can clean and detoxify designated body systems. These programs can last anywhere from a few days to a few weeks. Some people do report feelings of energy, lightness, better attention and focus, but this is likely a placebo effect—people believe they are doing something good for themselves.

Other people who detox may report large amounts of weight loss. This weight loss is primarily water loss and dehydration; it is not permanent weight (fat) loss. There is no medical evidence that detox diets actually remove toxins from the body. And although they are not necessarily unsafe, they are far from being nutritious and healthy for the body, and they are a terrible way to lose weight.

Colon Cleansing uses herbal ingredients, laxatives, enemas, colonics, and/or irrigation devices. These can disrupt the normal functioning and balance of the large intestine, resulting in electrolyte imbalances, diarrhea, dehydration and damage to the protective bacteria in the large intestine. Doctors don’t recommend colon cleansing for improved health and well-being or for the prevention of disease. The colon doesn’t need to be cleansed. In fact, the only appropriate use for colon cleansing is in preparation for a medical procedure used to examine the colon.

Rejuvenate Your Body the Healthy Way
Of course, eating fresh produce, drinking water, and exercising regularly will help you feel healthier and more energetic. But meeting your body's nutritional needs for protein, calcium and other nutrients is also important. Any "diet" that recommends eliminating certain food groups entirely is risky and nutritionally unbalanced. Since detox diets and colon cleansing lack medical evidence to prove they are successful (and can be dangerous), what can you do to improve your health and start losing weight? Enjoy a balanced diet and healthy lifestyle. These are the best ways to revitalize and rejuvenate the body.

Include in your diet:

* Fresh fruits and vegetables. These are rich in vitamins and antioxidants, promoting a healthy body. Read The No-Excuses Appeal of Fruits & Veggies or Easy Ways to Eat 5 Fruits & Veggies Each Day for more tips.
* Whole grain breads and cereals, whole wheat pasta, and brown rice. These "good" carbs meet your body's energy needs while providing more fiber, protein and vitamins than processed carbs like white bread. Skeptical? Check out The Truth about Carbohydrates to learn more.
* Lean meats and/or other healthy protein sources including beans, lentils, nuts, seeds and soy products. Protein plays several important roles in the body. Learn about all of them in our Reference Guide to Proteins.
* Low-fat dairy products or other calcium-rich foods. Calcium does more than strengthen bones. Get 15 Ways to Boost Your Calcium Intake.
* Adequate water and fluid intake. Water transports nutrients and helps rid the body of toxins. After all, Water is a Secret Ingredient for health.

In addition, the following practices will help your body perform at its best and reduce your risk of disease:

* Take part in moderate exercise all or most days of the week.
* Avoid smoking and inappropriate drug use.
* Get plenty of sleep every night and take steps to reduce stress and relax.
* If you choose to drink alcohol, do so in moderation.

Remember, your body is designed to purify itself. When you are healthy—eating a healthy diet and exercising regularly—your liver and kidneys will do the job they're supposed to do. If you're feeling tired or are having trouble losing weight, talk to your health care provider. Using the steps above (and ruling out any underlying conditions) will help you feel your best. Your body will thank you! Article created on: 10/18/2006

Saturday, March 01, 2008

What About Carbs?

The Million Dollar Question
How do you include carbohydrates in you diet in a safe, effective, and controlled way? The “Please KISS Me” (Please Keep It So Simple for Me) plan for carbohydrate control is a wonderful tool that only contains 3 simple rules:

RULE 1: Include the following in your diet:

* Fruits: 2-4 servings daily
* Vegetables: 3-5 servings daily
* Whole grain breads, muffins, bagels, rolls, pasta, noodles, crackers, cereal, and brown rice: 6-11 servings daily
* Legumes, beans and peas: 1-2 servings daily
* Low-fat and non-fat dairy products: 3 servings daily

RULE 2: Limit the following to less than 2 servings daily:

* Fruit Juice
* Refined and processed white flour products (bread, muffins, bagels, rolls, pasta, noodles, crackers, cereal)
* White rice
* French fries
* Fried vegetables

RULE 3: Eliminate the following from your diet or eat only on occasion:

* Sugary desserts, cookies, cakes, pies, candies
* Doughnuts and pastries
* Chips, cola and carbonated beverages
* Sugar, honey, syrup, jam, jelly, molasses

That’s it! A simple, effective carbohydrate-controlling plan that, when combined with your SparkDiet, allows you to reap the countless benefits of complex carbohydrates and fiber while enhancing your health and maintaining a healthy weight. The long term result will be a healthy you!

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Why We're Fat

The following blog entry was created by Craig Harper. I wanted to reproduce it here because I wanted it in a place I could find it and read it easily from time to time.

"If you live in Australia, the US, the UK, Canada or New Zealand, then you live in the same place as me; Fat City. Fat City of course, being more of a collective mindset, and a culture of eating too much and moving too little, than any geographical location, or ‘literal’ place. And while it’s not a literal place, it is very real. If you know what I mean.

The weight of the average Australian increases by about 0.4kg (1lb) per year, every year, and it’s a pretty similar figure in most Western countries. It’s predicted that Australia (where I live) will be a totally obese population by 2050. There’s a thought. What an achievement. This is the forecast, despite the fact that we are now more educated, more informed and more aware, than we’ve ever been before. The truth is, in 2008 we are constantly bombarded with more and more information and education about diet, lifestyle, exercise, obesity, general health and all its variables, yet still, we grow.

As an Exercise Scientist, observer of humanity, and ex-fat bloke, there are plenty of things which fascinate me about living in Fat City (the culture, the habits, the behaviors, the thinking, the excuses, the lies, the marketing, the trends, the media), but here’s my short list:

1. We’ve never be more informed, educated, resourced or equipped to combat obesity, yet we’ve never been fatter. We live in the information age, yet we do nothing with it. I’m amused by those who suggest that obesity is primarily an education problem, when in reality, it is (for the majority) a self-control problem. Self control: yes, that crazy, outdated notion I’ve spoken of many times before. We are inundated with education but we choose not to learn. Real ‘learning’ would have resulted in a large-scale positive change in behavior, and of course, decline in obesity levels. It hasn’t. In fact, if there was a positive correlation between the increase in education and the decline of global obesity, then we would see virtually no obesity at all. But… if we wanted to be cheeky and use ’selective science’ (as many ‘experts’ do), we could actually conclude that the increase in education may have resulted in the increase in obesity. After all, there is a direct relationship: more education, more obesity. Yes I’m being sarcastic, but you understand my point. When it comes to diet and exercise, we know what to do, but we don’t do what we know.

2. I am constantly amazed at our ability (as a society) to complicate the simple. How many more books, programs and breakthrough weight-loss discoveries do we need? Really? Here’s a wacky concept, increase energy expenditure (exercise, general activity) and decrease energy intake (stop eating so much crap). A little scientific I know, but hey, it just might work. Of course it’s simple, but it requires genuine and consistent effort. Simple, of course, not to be confused with ‘easy’. And therein lies the problem. Which leads me to point three.

3. Our obsession with the quick fix. We don’t wanna work for those results. We want someone or something to do it for us. We are precious and lazy. We are addicted to the shortcut. Give me the pill, powder, potion, product or surgeon that will make me beautiful. I am allergic to sweat and hard work it’s so ‘1985′. We are a culture obsessed with ‘easy’ and sometimes creating amazing requires a little effort. Or a lot. And we hate that. Sorry about that. I’ll try and change it.

4. We love playing the ‘blame game’. We would rather justify, rationalize, explain and blame someone or something for our obesity, than take complete responsibility for our fat selves. Of course it’s not our fault. We are poor victims of situations, circumstances and genetics. So not fair. If what we do to our body (lifestyle, food, exercise) is the biggest influence on our level of fitness and fatness (which it is), then obesity is typically the result of poor decision making, rather than poor genetics. Even people with poor genetics can get in great shape, if they work with their genetics and manipulate the variables the right way.

5. I laugh when people get grumpy at me for telling the truth; what they don’t want to hear.“Okay John, it will only take two weeks to lose that hundred pounds and that huge gut you built over the last thirty years, and yes, it will be easy, fun and painless. You will definitely look incredible by next Tuesday. Wednesday, tops. In fact, just leave your body here; I’ll do it for you.”

6. I marvel that people pay thousands of dollars per year to walk/run on a treadmill with a built in TV, radio and fan, when they could get the same physiological benefit (or better) heading out their front door and returning thirty minutes later. No driving to the gym, no petrol costs, no waiting for machines, no travel time.

7. Our inability to finish things. We start jogging. We stop. We go on a diet. We go off it. We join a gym. We go five times. We make resolutions. We don’t follow through. We lose fat. We regain it. We start. We stop. We get fit. We get unfit. We operate on emotion. We always find a ‘reason’ to give up. We experience momentary motivation, but we never truly commit. Real commitment (”I will do this no matter what”) creates life-long change, not temporary weight loss or occasional fitness. We’re great at starting, crap at finishing.

8. The Victim. “But you don’t understand my life, body, time restraints, problems, situation, history, challenges, injuries, medical conditions.” Your problem isn’t your body; it’s your thinking. Get your mind in shape and your body will follow."


Credits:
Craig Harper (B.Ex.Sci.) is a qualified exercise scientist, author, columnist, radio presenter, television host, motivational speaker and university lecturer. For the past 25 years he has been a leading presenter, educator, motivator and commentator in the areas of personal and professional development. You can visit Craig's blog at Motivational Speaker.

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Change One

I'm trying to think of SOMETHING... anything... that I can do right now to get me headed in the right direction for weight loss.

--even with my all mixed up, filled up schedule.
--even though nothing I think of appeals to my sense of taste.
--even though I have no idea what I would like to do.

Reader's Digest came up with a "change one" idea. The thought behind it was develop one new habit a week that changes the way you are presently doing things. Maybe they still promote that. I'm not sure.

I do know I'm not willing to pay RD to tell me what to change every week. Surely if I'm willing to change, I can figure that out myself. I thought of some good places to start:
  1. Walk 15 minutes a day.... for a starter.
  2. Drink 8 80z glasses of water a day.
  3. Eat 2-3 servings of fruit a day.
  4. Eat a specified number of vegetables per day.
  5. (The idea being EAT these FIRST... then wait awhile to see if you still want anything else.)
  6. Create a chart that gives caloric values to foods I eat regularly so I'd have something to pick from to easily keep within a range I want.
  7. Limit the number of carbs I eat in a day (Make a dessert count as a double carb).
That's seven changes I could make and I thought of those without hestitation.


Sister Kelly has decided to count points. That sounds good if I had a easy way to determine the points. (Come to think of it, I do. It's here somewhere.... Some day I might run across it.)

For Christmas, my brother gave me a gift certificate to Walmart which I intended to use to go out and buy low calorie dinners with and start a diet that way, but my gift card disappeared. So, I will have to be committed to doing it with my own money. Since Christmas I have not even had time or energy to go to Walmart and look at what they have to offer in premade dinners.

But I need to START.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

PeerTrainer

I went to Sister Kelly's this morning and did a One Mile In Home Walk with her and Leslie.

We talked about what we wanted to do to lose weight. She said she was going to try out PeerTrainer. I thought I'd take the time to check it out today, since I have the time today... a day off from work.

I like the way it's set up.
And since I've decided I'm not going to spend a whole lot of time figuring out calories, it's approach should work for me as well.

So STARTING FEBRUARY 1 I am going back on the wagon..... and begin my program to take off some more weight.

Oh by the way, I liked what they had to say here. It kind of goes along with what I've been saying about making changes in increments.

Take a baby step: Commit to one change, for only 7 days.

When people begin to focus on their weight loss efforts and their health, they often want to do a complete and immediate overhaul. They want to change everything. They want to switch from having fried and fast foods and a relatively sedentary lifestyle to only eating salads, fruits and vegetables, with running/strength training every day. Additionally, they decide that very day to commit to drinking 8 glasses of water a day, 8 hours of sleep along with taking a mulitvitamin along with 5 other personal goals, and only then, they feel like they're ready to get started. While those all might be good habits, this kind of thinking usually sets you up for failure.

Take on one challenge and start small. Maybe its something like, this week, I will not eat chocolate. Only commit to one thing. If other healthy habits start to take hold, wonderful but for now, only commit one challenge. This usually prevents being overwhelmed and subsequently, saying, I just can't do this. As you begin to master that challenge, write it down daily. Day 1, no chocolate! , Day 2, no chocolate. On day 5, you start to feel really good about your ability to make a positive habit happen and that gives you confidence to tackle the next step. Once you feel like you've mastered that challenge, then you can move on to the next one.

Don't Believe the Myth That You Can and Will Lose 2 pounds a week.

Losing 2 pounds per week, every week, is not the norm for everyone. I've seen people lose a pound a week and actually become disappointed, even if they haven't lost weight in 2 years. They are set on the expectation that they can lose 2 pounds a week and anything less becomes upsetting. Every body is different and one sushi dinner can up the scale by 3 pounds. Often times you'll lose a couple pounds one week, one pound the next week and sometimes you'll gain a pound the following week. What is important is the trend. You didn't gain the weight in a measured fashion of 2 pounds per week, you're most likely not going to lose it in the same way. Recognize the trend and chart your progress week to week to notice the overall loss. I've seen very successful weight loss efforts with diligent plans have an average loss of 5 pounds a month.

"Lettuce Lose Weight"

You know you have taken more time off from weight loss than you needed to, when you can't even remember the password to your weight loss journal.

I stopped my diet back when I went to campmeeting in September.

Thankfully, I maintained my weight loss ....

Well, I did until the Christmas/New Year's holidays.

I added some back then.

I do not look upon my new year as beginning on January 1-- my new year for implementing resolutions, that is-- because after the holidays, I go straight into working huge amounts of overtime to get ready for inventory.

So I have arbitrarily set my own new beginning as February 1.

That gives me a little bit of time to catch up on some stuff I got way behind on...
like housekeeping
and grandchild "sitting"
and getting back in contact with friends
and... whatever.

And also it gives me time to think about just what NYRs I want to implement.

The "experts" say keep it down to one or two. Get those established as habit before moving on to something greater. If not, you are "doomed to failure". Most of us are just not good enough at making radical changes in our lives to incorporate a half dozen at one time.

I could make a list of a dozen that I'd like to implement immediately.

But I think weight loss and exercise need to be high on my priority list. The exercise gives me energy. And, of course, it could be used as a tool for weight loss also IF I'D DO ENOUGH OF IT, but that ain't likely to happen. Energy is enough. I need energy.

I took a lot of time when I was doing my 1600 Calories a Day blog to look up the calorie count of everything that I ate and faithfully record it. If you read my blog, you know that I said more than once that keeping that blog was like taking a second job. It took me awhile to do that.

I really don't want to put that much time into weight loss at this date. I think that I should be able to make some headway even if I don't count every calorie.

Or, by eating meals that have been precounted.

One thing I learned from my 1600 calorie effort was that I did not have to stick to 1600 calories EVERY DAY. I could have some Wendy days. But, on the other hand, some days I ate less than that as well.

I turned back to Spark to see what they might have to offer. I liked Sparks motivational articles. But I abandoned their program when I found Calorie-Count because C-C fit my needs so much better.

Spark-- or at least their advertisers-- inspired my title. "Lettuce Lose Weight One Meal at a Time" was the slogan used by Fit N Fresh, advertisers on Spark.

I'm going to throw in here a part of a eulogy I read by a Spark member. It comes off her blog but I liked it. It has applicability in many directions--even in the area of encouraging those who want to lose weight. This is her eulogy; this is what I took from it:


I told her [her, being her grandmother] that I was seeing suffering in everyone, that everyone was in pain, and I couldn’t help everyone. I just couldn’t find beauty in anything. I was feeling very overwhelmed.

She looked at me and said, “Honey, God knows there is suffering and pain in the world. However, He created us to see the beauty and joy in His creation. God is big enough to take all the suffering on himself. Just give it over to him every time.”

Then, she went on to say, “I just read a story in my Guidepost. A man was walking the beach after a huge storm had swept hundreds of starfish onto the shore. He saw another man up ahead pick up a starfish and throw it into the ocean. He watched as the man did that several times.

Curiosity got the best of him and we went to talk to the man.
‘What are you doing?’ the man asked the one throwing the starfish back into the ocean.

‘I’m helping them get back into the ocean.’

‘How can you possibly make a difference when there are hundreds on the beach?’

The man picked up a starfish and threw it into the ocean and said, ‘I just made a difference in that one’s life.’

Nana went on to say, “Kristi, it’s God’s job to save the world. You just have to make a difference in someone’s life.”


Sunday, October 28, 2007

Still on hold

I've lost my zeal for calorie counting.

And, not only that, right now I don't have the time to do it.

And, not only that, I am finding that the "delicious" little lunch I was eating every day seems to be as distasteful to look forward as going back on the South Beach was.

I had lost well on the South Beach diet but when I went off of it because of a change in my life, I just couldn't bring myself to go back to the "deprivation" of it. That is why I chose to count calories.

So, now I'm trying to think of something that will get me through the winter -- like that plain ol' sandwich and veggies got me through from July until September. I think it's going to be Progresso soup. I chanced upon some bargains at Kroger and stocked up and find that I am enjoying them in this cooler weather.

Now I've just got to find something to get me through the evenings. I'm working long hours or have other things that are taking my time so I need to have something easy and healthy. I bought some pre-done dinners for my DIL when she had her baby and they really looked good. I might just have to go by Wal-mart and get some of those for myself.

I'd really like to lose ten more pounds THIS YEAR. For sure, I do not want to regain.

I have also been thinking that if I'd just hold my weight loss and increase my activity level I could move down some that way.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

I haven't given up...

But a good sign that you've taken too long to do another post is that you almost forget your password to sign in.

Now that would be bad.

I went on vacation first-- and gained weight. I got that off.

Then I started working overtime to catch up at work.

Now, this week, we're having revival.

One thing I've said about counting calories is that "it's like taking on a second job". I haven't had the time to sit down here and hunt down my calories.

Besides not having time to put a lot of thought into what I eat, some pundit at work has decided it will be a "good idea" for us to have pot luck dinners every other Wednesday. The damaging thing about that is all the desserts that get brought in that sit around for a couple days afterwards.

Anyway, it is my plan as soon as this revival is over (Do I really mean TOMORROW?), I am going BACK ON my calorie counting eating plan.

I am not unhappy with the results of being "off" my diet. I have pretty much kept my weight down close to what I lost to. Maintained is the popular word. Anyhow, I don't think it hurts to maintain awhile, then go back to losing more.

I may not be able to lose another twenty before I go back into maintenance again. (Inventory time is overtime again.) But hopefully , I can lose another ten.

Monday, October 08, 2007

Monday 10-8

I fasted twenty four hours, from 2:30 yesterday until 2:30 today.

I did that because Wednesday is not a good day for me to fast and that is our "designated" fast day for the revival. The work I have to do on Wednesday is just too strenuous for me to do without eating.

I did okay with my fast but evidently there is something about eating that keeps me energized. I have wanted to go to sleep ever since I got home from work.

I had already had my lunch break when my fast time was up. (I prayed on my lunch break.) But at 2:30 I took a 15 minute break and ate an apple with yogurt, four snack crackers with peanut butter, some sugar free lemonade, and some kind of strange confection that a co worker had brought in. I don't really know what it was. It was not too sweet. But it was definitely in the pastry "family". Lightweight. Crispy. I wish I did know what it is.

I went by Walmart to buy coffee and also got some lowfat sour cream and nonfat cream cheese. I am trying to get adjusted to the taste of lower fat stuff. I was never willing to even try to do that before.

When I got home, I ate a piece of toast with pimiento cheese spread (and some olive oil spread) and later I had some chicken (the rotisserie chicken Walmart sells) dipped in Hellman's lowfat mayo mixed with Hot sauce.


Also about a half cup of milk.

I'm trying to stay awake long enough to make out a dinner plan.

Well, I guess this is easy enough. I just need to keep my memory jogged. I looked back to my older posts and it looks like I have already tried to set myself up for success.

Two Week Meal Plan
Fish twice a week
Monday (Work 8-4:30) -- fish
Tuesday (Work 12-close)--chicken breast
***
Wednesday (Work 8-4:30)--fish
Thursday (Work 8-4:30)-- Vegetable plate (beans, potato, etc)
***
Friday (Work 12-Close)
***
Saturday (Off)
Sunday (Off--Company for dinner)

Monday (Work 8-4:30)--fish
Tuesday (Off)--chicken breast
Wednesday (Work 8 -4:30)--fish
Thursday (Work 12- Close)
***
Friday (Work 12-Close)
***
Saturday (Work 9-5:30)--taco salad
Sunday (Off)

***Snacks after working until close (Sandwich at supper time):
low calorie soup, or
salad, or
cottage cheese and pineapple, or
greens and boiled egg, or


Snacks after eating evening meal at home
popcorn and milk
cereal and milk
piece of toast with marmalade and milk

C. Low Calorie Entrees (commercial)
It also wouldn't hurt me, now that I've been doing this a few weeks, to write myself up a two week plan for eating (as a guideline.) Breakfast is a no-brainer... and so is lunch (at work) and my snacks (at work). But meals at home and evening snacks tend to be a pitfall for me. If I knew ahead of time what I was going to eat, it would help.

One way to do this would be to investigate low calorie entrees I could buy and add something to them.

Healthy Choice

Lean Cuisine

* Cafe Classics
* Cafe Classics Bowls
* Casual Eating Classics
* Comfort Classics
* Dinnertime Selects
* One Dish Favorites
* Spa Cuisine Classics
* Casual Eating Favorites

Smart Ones
South Beach

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Counting Calories is like having a second job

And for TWO MONTHS I worked my second job faithfully. And lost over 20 pounds.

But then I went to campmeeting.... no time nor expediency for counting calories.

Then when I came back, I had work to catch up on at my first job...which involves overtime. That not only took the time I would sit here and search for calories, it also meant I did not have time to go shopping for the "right" foods to eat.

Also something came up in the family that required more of my "second job" time.

So, I've not been counting my calories.

I did get the gain off that I had during campmeeting... and I am maintaining that. So I'm not discouraged.

But, I don't foresee that in the near future I'm going to have any more time as we are having a revival coming up and I may continue to work overtime until then.

Hopefully from around the third week of October until the Thanksgiving I can jump back on the wagon and get a few more pounds off.

As I see it, the way I am going to be able to proceed with my weight loss is to make out some menus for myself to follow (precounted menus) so that I don't have to sit here and search out calorie counts.

I pretty much eat the same things in rotation anyway so it shouldn't be hard to come up with some Breakfasts, Lunches, Suppers, and Before Bed Snacks that keep me in the range of calories I want to be in.

And I need to find some stuff to keep on hand so that when I get the "munchies," I have some low calorie munchers. Like rice cakes. Or 94% fat free popcorn. Or celery and carrot sticks.

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Sun (9-30) Over the top again....

Coffee
Fried egg and cinnamon swirl toast with some olive oil margarine

Hard candy: three pieces

Excellent and delicious dinner at Sister Katie's--an unexpected invitation which came after I got home and had already pulled out salad fixing's
I ate as much as I wanted of everything.
Ham, Macaroni and Cheese, Salad with Ranch Dressing, and Cornbread
I also had one half of an ice cream sandwich and another cup of coffee (decaf) with creamer

After church I ate again.
Popcorn and milk.
A couple or so radishes.
A carrot.
A piece of celery.
Oh, and the hearts of a bunch of celery.
(I was cutting up my radishes, celery, and washing the carrots so fixing lunch would be quicker this week as I'm in for a really busy week.)
I ate some of the baked snack mix that Sam's was passing out samples of. It's 120 calories for 2/3 cup.
I also ate one cookie and drank milk with my popcorn, snack mix, and cookie.
I ate some snack crackers too.


I very much thrilled that I got my campmeeting weight gain back off.
And I was able to get to Sam's Saturday after work to restock my lunch meat and cheese so I can get back to eating my basic lunch of sandwich and veggies -- which runs less than 300 calories total. I also got more yogurt.

I can make it pretty good through my days by snacking between breakfast and lunch and between lunch and supper.

It came to me that I'm up something over 16 hours every day and I'm targeting to limit myself to 1600 calories. That means I can only eat the equivalent of 100 calories an hour. If I eat 300, that's three hours.

It's going to be VERY IMPORTANT to have alot of LOW CALORIE FOOD in the plan. That's the only way to keep from feeling deprived. I don't want to be thinking about hunger. And if I'm hungry, I do.

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Sat (9-29)

Coffee (40)
Two boiled eggs and one piece cinnamon swirl toast (300)

Chunky Chicken Salad Frescata 460

Nuts (100)
Luna Bar (180)
Banana (105)
Egg Sandwich (300) 1/4 cup milk (40)
Taco Bell Burrito Supreme (440)

To this point: about 1965 That's NOT a diet.

Nutrition Facts: Luna Bar
Serving size 1 bar (48g)
Calories 180
Calories from fat 45
Total fat 5g 8%
Sat Fat 2.5g 13%
Dodium 125 mg 5%
Potassium 190 mg5%
Total Carb 26g %
dietary fiber 3g 12 5
Insoluble fiber 1g
Sugars 9g
Other carb 14g
Protein 9g

Fri (9-28) Looks like 1950

Coffee (40)
Scrambled egg, toast with scant margarine and sugar free marmalade (260)
String cheese (60)
Seven Layer Salad from Walmart Deli (5 serving @225 each serving=1125-210=915=150=1065) I think the dressing was most of that because it was 210 for every serving of 2 Tbsps and they included 4 servings. I probably didn't eat but three so I guess I could minus 210 from that 1125 BUT I just remembered, I ate snack crackers with it at 15 calories a whack. So add 150 back.
Yogurt & apple (110+85=195)
Frosty (330)
That's all I remember right now.

At campmeeting I ate pretty much what was fixed plus desserts with each main meal. I gained about six pounds.

I came home and cut back but not to below 1600 and quickly lost five pounds. Right now I'm sitting at 188 and staying in that area even though I have not cut my calories back to "diet" level. I probably won't do that until week after next because this week and next week I am still working more (overtime) and I don't want to figure out what I can eat that is lower in calories. Besides I'm running out of lunch meat and I haven't had time to go to Sam's. I can do that after work today.

Taking a "maintenance break" might not be such a bad idea anyway. It gives my body time to get used to being 20 pounds lighter. I have about twenty more to get off. It is probably not going to come off quickly.

What I am going to have to do is TAKE TIME to write me up an eating plan and make sure I have the food HANDY so that I don't have to figure all this stuff out every day.

By now I should have an idea of what I can and cannot eat.


Nutrition Facts: Great Value Reduced Fat Snack Crackers
Serving size 10 crackers (31g)
Servings per container about 10
Calories 150
Calories from fat 45
Total fat 8%
Saturated Fat 1.5 g 8%
Cholesterol 0%
Sodium 270mg 11%
Potassium 35mg 1%
Total Carb 21 g 7%
Dietary fiber less than 1g 3%
Sugars 3g
Protein 2g

Friday, September 28, 2007

Thu (9-27) TOTAL CALORIES: 1525

Coffee (40)
Breakfast: Toast with a little butter and sugar free marmalade (150)
Small apple (85)
Lunch: Subway BLT with black olives and jalepenos. No mayo. (340)
Snack: Yogurt (110) Nuts (100)
Supper: 7 layer salad(200) with carrots (20)
After work: Fried egg sandwich (300)
Home snack: 94% fat free popcorn milk (180)
Total: 1525

Nutrition Facts: Baby Carrots
Serving size 3 oz (85g, about 14 pieces)
Serving per container 5
Calories 40
Calories from Fat 0
Sodium 45 mg 2%
Potassium 305mg 8%
Total Carb. 9g 3%
Dietary fiber 2g 8%
Sugars 5g
Protein 1g
Vitamin A 290%
Vitamin C 10%
Calcium 2%

Wed (9-26) Shame on me--over 2500

I didn't even write it down. Two days later and I can't remember.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Tue (9-25) TOTAL CALORIES: 1785

So, now's the time to decide how to go forward with weight loss when my schedule does not co-operate.

I just took a week off from my diet when I went to campmeeting.

And I gained six pounds.

WOW.

I was wondering how long it would take for me to get back to where I was before vacation. Two days made a difference. I was back down by FIVE POUNDS this morning! That was pretty good, but then I went into work at 7AM and didn't take lunch with me.

That didn't mean I didn't get hungry. My eating today has not been "on track"

Coffee (40)
Honey 'n' Oats bar (180)
Coffee (40)

Two boiled eggs (200) and Lemonade (10)

Mixed nuts ... I dipped in about three times. (300???)

A banana (105)

A hot dog (180) and a smoke sausage (230) from Kangaroo's (the buns would be 220)

Looks like I'm at 1505 at this point.

Yesterday I ate pineapple and fat free cottage cheese. Something unexpected happened. I really didn't drink anything after work. But I had to get up TWICE in the night.... and I got rid of a lot of fluid.

I was wondering if it was because of the pineapple and cottage cheese. It seems like I remember reading the one day water loss diet had pineapple and cottage cheese.

I had another round of pineapple and cottage cheese (280). So that shoots me over 1600







-

Monday, September 24, 2007

Mon (9-24) maybe 1500

Coffee 40
Breakfast: Luna bar and coffee 180 + 40
Later: a banana 105
Lunch: Sandwich and carrots and radishes 240 + veggies (30)
4:30 Several Peanut butter crackers (probably half a dozen anyway, say 350) , an apple (100) and lemonade (10)

I was told I could work overtime and I didn't bring anything to eat, thus, I ate peanut butter crackers--which I had in my locker.

Home: Cottage cheese (160) Pineapples slices (120) a few nuts (probably 100)

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Sun (9-23) TOTAL CALORIES: 1531

Today's fare
Coffee, two cups (80)
Breakfast: Raisin Bran Cereal (1 cup probably-188 calories) with one banana (105) and milk (122)
Lunch: Steak(260) with green peppers(20) and onions(41), Asparagus(47), pears (70)
I put some of that Hellman's light mayo on the asparagus (80) Milk (122)
Cup of coffee (80)
Candy (20)
After Church: Healthy Choice Soup. I think it was some kind of gumbo. It was 200 calories for the whole can. I added Tabasco sauce, one packet of sweetener and a dash of salt. I ate less than 100 calories of wheat saltines (12 calories each, probably about 84-96 altogether)

So I did okay. Not great, but okay.
80+188+105+122+260+20+41+47+70+80+122+80+20+200+96= 1531

By the way, I gained right around five pounds on my vacation.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

A Week without Counting

is a week of GAINING....

We're not talking about a little lapse here.

We are talking about a week of eating everything put before me. I ate what was fixed and had desserts with it. I did choose to drink water with most meals until the last couple days.

Of course, I gained. I'm going to wait until in the morning and tell you how much then.

BUT...
starting tomorrow, I'll be back to my old vigilance. I will get the gain off and I will lose what is left to lose until I get down to 170.

VACATION IS OVER... and I won't get another one until .... for MANY months.

Even Thanksgiving and Christmas will not be shoving as much food at me as going to campmeeting did.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

On vacation Sept 16-23

I started my vacation from work today. I'll be out of town all week and probably not have access to a computer. I won't be listing my calories here, although I have thought it would be a good idea to go see what a place like Book A Million might have that is SMALL, gives calorie counts, and a place to record daily calories.

I suppose I could make my own.

Now, why tell me if you can, was the first thought I got after I typed the above: "I can go eat what I want to and nobody will know." I'm serious. I actually had that thought go through my mind. JUST HOW RIDICULOUS IS THAT!!!!! But it gives me an insight into one thing. Keeping this record has helped me keep myself "in line".

That is something that it is good to be aware of. NOT counting calories could make me lax about what I eat. Hmmmm. I guess I'll just have to find a way to easily keep track of what I eat in a BROAD way for the rest of my life on MOST days.

I'm getting pretty good at estimating how many calories I'm getting in what I choose to eat. And I joke with myself about it that I'm warding off Alzheimer's because calculating and recalculating all these food values in my mind all day is really MENTAL exercise.

From Obese to Overweight

I notice on my ticker bar that the calculation for my BMI has gone from 32.4 to 29.0

I suppose that is something I should shout about. I can now say I'm "overweight." I'm NO longer "obese". At least that's what the folks who figure these things out say.

I will have to reset my goal weight to get to what they are willing to call a "healthy weight". The highest they will allow me to carry is a lot further down than I have any intention of trying to reach at this point. (I'd have to go down to 158 and I really don't have any desire to WORK to get there.)

I'm running out of steam at chasing down the caloric value of every bite that goes in my mouth. But I have a plan.

I have counted calories long enough now that I know I have a general idea of how much is in what I eat NORMALLY. I can make out some meal plans that keep my calories in a certain range MOST DAYS.

If I can eat as much as I did on Friday and THEN GO BACK TO REASONABLE EATING and not gain weight--which I didn't-- then I think I should be able to have a day a week that I just don't have to watch what I eat.... within limits. I mean, I don't need to eat 10,000 calories or anything like that.

When I make it to a point on the scales that I get on it three times and it says the same thing, I claim that position. I do that even though my weight goes back up a pound or two during the day, or even stays up after a splurge day. I figure I must have done something right or I could never have gotten DOWN to that point, so I claim it. And I find that as I keep on watching what I eat I keep going down.

I'm determined to not "burn out" on this diet. I have to keep this weight off. MY KNEES ARE SO MUCH HAPPIER NOW. Actually I feel better in every way. Not only that, I feel more like exercising. I'm not doing it as much as I hope to later. I'm hoping to switch the time I spend searching for caloric values to exercise time later on.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Sat (9-15) 1510

Coffee 40
Two bananas 210
Luna bar 180
7 layer salad 200
Sandwich 230 Veggies 30
Nuts 100
Total so far: 1080

Scrambled eggs 200
Mushrooms 30
Onions & peppers 30
Margarine 70

Milk 1/2 cup 60
Cereal 1/4 cup 40 (Golden Graham)
Total: 430

Grand total 1510


I can see that one thing I'm going to have to figure out a way to deal with is what to do when I get the "munchies". I don't get them every day. But when I do, I just want to keep on eating on something... first one thing and then another.

Riding home from work today, I noticed that eating the celery sticks and baby carrots I had left from lunch seemed to satisfy my desire to munch. But what I'd really like is a BIG bowl of cereal. Or popcorn. With MILK.

I wonder sometimes if it is brought on by putting off my snacks and working until I get worn out-- like I did today. I really wanted to go buy me a candy bar. But I did NOT do it. I told myself that I needed to remember how many calories I ate YESTERDAY and not go for a repeat performance.

Nutrition Facts: Mushrooms, canned
Serving Size 1/2 cup with liquid (121g)
About 2 serving per can
Calories 25
Fat Calories 0
Total fat 0
Cholesterol 0
Sodium 400mg
Total carb 3g
Fiber 1g
Sugars 0
Protein 3g
Vitamin C 2%
Iron 4%

Friday, September 14, 2007

Fri (9-14) Maybe 2850

It's going to be hard for me to count my calories today.

I ate some leftovers Josh brought in from Olive Garden. I don't even know what it was and he couldn't remember what it was called either. It was very good. It seemed to have some kind of dumpling like ingredient in it and chicken and red (sweet) peppers in a sauce.

WOW!! I looked up what Olive Garden has to offer and it looked like the Chicken & Gnocchi Veronese. (Sautéed chicken with traditional Italian dumplings and roasted red peppers in a parmesan and ricotta cheese.)


Later I had a grapefruit. But that Olive Garden stuff took me way,WAY, WAY up.


PLEASE GO SEE WHAT THE DAILY PLATE SAYS ABOUT HOW MANY CALORIES ARE IN THIS DISH!!! It's no wonder we have a whopper size population in this country. Even if what Josh brought home was just HALF of it, it would have still taken me over 1600 calories!!

NO WONDER IT TASTED SO GOOD......
Coffee (40)
Olive Garden chicken and gnocchi (1750)

Later: I ate a grapefruit before I went to work but that wasn't enough to keep me from getting
hungry until lunch time. (120)

So I ate some yogurt and an apple. 110 + 100 (210)

Then later I had lunch. 110+50+70 or 230 for a sandwich plust veggies (30)

When I came home, I got pretty hungry. I figured since I'd blown my day anyway, I might as well cook myself a hamburger(400)...which I did, eating it with a glass of milk. (200) Then I ate FOUR peanut butter cookies. (200)

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Down 22 pounds this morning!!!!! 1418

Goodie for me.


However, having said that, I can still tell I have some more to go to get back to where I WAS in 2004!

By the way, I did a run down on my calories and the median amount of calories that I have eaten is 1429. I'm not sure what the average is, if it falls lower or higher, but I've eaten as many above 1429 as I have below. However, that also means that half of those days I ate BELOW 1429.

I didn't break my fast until 11AM. Then I had a grilled chicken breast (260) , slaw (50) , and pears with a little cheese and mayonnaise on top. Hellman's lite. (130)

At work I had my usual sandwich and veggies (270) and later one string cheese (60)

Total 'til now: 670 plus a cup of coffee, making it 710

No wonder I'm beginning to feel very hungry tonight. I think I'll go have me a baked potato with onion and cooked bacon and green peppers (240)

That will get me up to 950 so I guess I'll drink a cup of milk with it. That will get me up to 1062.

That would have been good, if I would have stopped there. But I ate one tortilla chip because Josh left the bag right where it had tempted me MUCH while I was fasting. And I had MORE than a cup of milk. Probably more like two cups. (Add 122) And I had more than one slice of bacon. (Add 70) And a couple tablespoons of cashews. (1 oz is 160. ) I'm not sure how that translates into Tbsps.

Add 352 to 1062 ... I guess that will be close enough. 14 18

So what does that add up to? Hmmmm. The bacon was probably 70 more. 122 for the milk.

***************

There is ONE THING I noticed as I was walking around work today. (We have aisles of huge mirrors that I pass from time to time.) I noticed when I glanced at myself walking by that this skirt I'm wearing was actually LOOSE around the rear. It has NOT been before. It wasn't tight, but it sure didn't have any looseness. And I could actually pull it out from me and see that there was room to spare. GREAT!

Like my co-worker said awhile back: "It looks like you're carrying less luggage in your caboose."

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Wed (9-12) TOTAL CALORIES: 1298

Today we fast for campmeeting but I can't really start my fast this morning because of it being freight day at work and because I have a HUGE order to get out. Much of my freight is heavy to deal with (boxes of albums, paper and paper packs) and I heft it around all morning. That is, after we get everyone's freight to the floor. Until about 10 o'clock I'm "hefting" everyone's freight. Then I have mine. Okay, now that I've explained that, you will understand why I am eating much early and then nothing later.

Coffee (40)
Breakfast: Steak (406) on a hamburger bun(110) with a glass of milk (122)
Morning Snack: Two Luna bars (360), Lipton Green Tea (160), Cashews (100)
Total Calories at this point: 1298

Can this be right?

Nutrition Highlights

Rib-eye steak (cooked), 8oz. (227g)
Calories: 260.9
Protein: 21.2g
Carbohydrate: 0.0g
Total Fat: 18.9g
Fiber: 0.0

The Daily Plate doesn't agree.

According their assessment, each ounce would be 58 calories, or 464 for an 8 oz. rib-eye. Mine was probably more like 6 oz., or 348. Just in case, I'll split the difference and call it 400 for 7 oz.

Diet Bites makes it even higher. 191 for three ounces or about 64 each. About 448 for 7 ounces.

BY THE WAY.... this site at Diet Bites looks like it could be a very helpful site for information counting calories of beef products and there is other helpful information they offer there as well.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Tues (9-11) TOTAL CALORIES: 1680 estimate

Coffee (40)
Banana (100)
Breakfast bars and more coffee (180 +40)
Yogurt and an apple (210)
Luna Bar and a diet Mtn Dew (180)

From Walmart Subway-- getting an oil Change-- a Veggie Delite in a wrap. (230)

SO FAR SO GOOD: 980

spaghetti (400)

Grapefruit: about three (240)

Celery: I got the "munchies" and wanted to just eat something so I got out my celery and ate and ate and ate. Probably three or four stalks.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Mon (9-10) TOTAL CALORIES: 1632

Coffee, two cups (80)
Breakfast bars (180)
Banana (100)
Lunch: Progresso Chowder soup (400) crackers (100)
Cookies: (40)
Yogurt (110) Apple (100)
Sandwich and Veggies (270)
Popcorn and milk (130) and (122)

Sunday, September 09, 2007

Sun (9-9) TOTAL CALORIES: 1690 approx.

Coffee, two cups (80)
Breakfast: 1 fried egg and two pieces of cinnamon swirl toast with margarine (320)
Hard candy: three pieces, and a few cheddar cheese potato chips (200)

Lunch: Hamburger with onion, cheese, ketchup, mustard, mayo and dill pickles
Salt and Onion Potato chips...hmmmm, maybe a good handful. Diet Mtn Dew (750)

Caffeine free coffee (40)

I finished up my evening with a snack of half of a hamburger patty, with onions on one slice of wheat bread. (300)

Of course, I bounced up a little after what I ate on Saturday, but I noticed I was coming back down this morning. Monday Morning: back down more.

I am not looking on these high calories days as "failures" in my diet, but as "reality" days. Without having some places to "indulge", I am sure that I could not keep this up long term and even if I have a small backset because of eating high calories for one day or two, I feel that I will be "setting myself up for success" by building in days when I don't feel like I'm depriving myself. One reason I was not able to go back on my former diet was because--AFTER I STOPPED WATCHING THE CARBS-- I could never bring my mental state back to a point that I was willing to say YOU ARE NOT GOING TO EAT THAT. That is why I chose to count calories this time. I don't tell myself I CAN'T EAT anything. BUT when I look at how many calories are in some things, I CHOOSE to forgo lots of things that I gobbled on down before because they take up too much of my "spending allowance".

Saturday, September 08, 2007

Sat (9-8): NO WAY Day

I was DOWN TWENTY POUNDS this morning!!!!

Coffee, two cups
Two pieces of toast with marmalade
Later: two peanut butter crackers
Lunch at Ruby Tuesday's. I had their quiche-- which was wonderful-- and an awesome salad.

No way I can figure out how many calories were in that salad I had at Ruby Tuesday's
I took several kinds of lettuce, added cucumbers, two kinds of peas, cherry tomatoes, a sprinkling of cheese, about a teaspoon of sunflower seeds and of dried cranberries. Then I dipped into the avocado ranch dressing, and the honey mustard dressing, and another dressing and drizzled them all around. It was DELICIOUS.

I went into work after lunch. I had a Luna bar around 6 o'clock.

At home I had Tyson chicken wings, cooked apples, and a stick of celery with MILK. Any time I feel like I've "blown" my diet, I say to myself: I might as well just go ahead and have a glass of milk. I love milk.

Sat, Sep 08 2007
Ruby Tuesday's quiche 735
Tyson Hot Wings, 6 440
Ranch done right, 2 Tbsp 24
Celery - Raw 6
milk 122
Cooked apples with a cookie 210
Luna Smores bar 180
Toast, 2 slices with sugar free marmalade 220
crackers, 4 48
Peanut Butter, Chunk Style 94
Ruby Tuesday's Salad 400
Total Calories Consumed 2,479

Friday, September 07, 2007

Fri (9-7) TOTAL CALORIES: 1352

Coffee (40)
Breakfast: Oats n Honey Bars (180)
Coffee(40)
Lunch: 4 oz ground beef patty, baked potato with onion, collards Milk
Coffee (60)
Snack: 2 string cheese (120)
Snack at home: Cereal with banana & milk

Calorie Count Log:
Fri, Sep 07 2007
collards 35
baked potato, small 100
Onions - Raw 29
Oats&Honey Breakfast bars 180
coffee 40
coffee 40
Milk, 2% 183
coffee 60
1 string cheese 60
1 string cheese 60
Golden Graham cereal, 1 cup 160
Bananas 90
milk 122
Beef, Ground, 85% Lean Meat Patty - Cooked, Pan-broiled 193
Total Calories Consumed 1,352

Thursday, September 06, 2007

Thu (9-6) TOTAL CALORIES: 1263

Coffee(40)
Breakfast: Fried egg, one piece of toast (193)
Snack: Protein bar(200)
Lunch: Sandwich and veggies (270)
Snack: String cheese,(60)
Supper: Fish (125), Collards, 1/2 baked potato with bacon, onion, green pepper


Calorie Count Log:
Thu, Sep 06 2007
coffee 40
Egg, Fried 93
toast 100
coffee 40
protein bar 200
Sandwich and veggies 270 270
1 string cheese 60
collards 50
fish 125
potato, 1/2 75
bacon 50
onions and peppers 40
grapefruit 120
Total Calories Consumed 1,263



Nutrition Facts: Kellogg's Special K Protein Meal Bar
Serving size 1 bar (45g)
Calories 1990
Total fat 5g *%
Sat Fat 4g 20%
Choles 5mg (2%)
Total Carb 25 g (8%)
Fiber 2g (9%)
Sugars 17g
Protein 10g (20%)

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Wed (9-5) TOTAL CALORIES: 1334

Coffee
Breakfast: 2 fried eggs, 2 pieces toast with Fleishmann's margarine
Coffee
Lunch: sandwich and Veggies
Supper: tilapia fillet, slaw, asparagus
After a nap: one cookie and a tiny bit of milk
After church: Glory cooked cabbage --the whole can 4 servings at 25 calories each

Calorie Count Log
Wed, Sep 05 2007
Egg, Whole - Cooked, Fried 93
Egg, Whole - Cooked, Fried 93
Toast 2 slices 200
Fleischman's olive oil margarine 70
coffee 40
coffee 40
Sandwich and veggies 260 260
Lipton Green Tea 160
Lemonade 10
tilapia, 1 fillet 49
slaw 70
asparagus 35
asparagus 35
cookie 50
milk 30
Total Calories Consumed 1,234
Glory cooked cabbage 100
Total calories consumed 1334

Announcement: I'm over half way there!!!

I was 188 this morning. That means I've lost 19 pounds. I have 18 to go to make it to my goal of 170. That's 19 pounds in 7 weeks. Ten the first two weeks, eight in the next five, which calculates to just over 1 1/2 a week. I had hoped to lose 20 by the time I went on vacation on the 16th. I might just make it.

Goodie for me. "So far so good."

Caffeine content in soft drinks

According to an article ( by Kate Brumback, AP writer, Sept 4, 2007) citrus sodas' caffeine content tops cola. I already knew that. What I didn't know was that store brand content of caffeine is not consistent with that of national brands.

Caffeine content of well-known national brands include: Coca-Cola (33.9 milligrams), Diet Pepsi (36.7 milligrams), Dr Pepper (42.6 milligrams), Diet Dr Pepper (44.1 milligrams), Diet Coke (46.3 milligrams), Mountain Dew (54.8 milligrams) and Diet Mountain Dew (55.2 milligrams).

By comparison, according to the American Beverage Association Web site, a 12-ounce cup of coffee has between 156 and 288 milligrams of caffeine, and the same amount of tea has 30-135 milligrams.



When I started to work, I started drinking Mtn Dew because it was not an easy task to find a cup of coffee. I didn't particularly like Mtn Dew when I started doing this but I knew that my taste would change over time because of the desire to get the caffeine. It did. I'd generally just drink one in the mid-afternoon. Looks like it would have taken me drinking three or more to get me back up to what I was getting with my "cup" of coffee. (Since most cups have switched to mugs these days, I'm not sure just how that plays out.)