Friday, August 14, 2015

All-Juiced 14th: Post-Mortem.



Day 45 (of 45) –Last day of the fast! At the end of July, I never thought I'd make it this far. Then, the days started rolling by, and here we are!! Gets me thinking...

Five things I will miss about the juice fast. Knowing exactly what I’m going to eat every day. Knowing that I’m just not able to have the foods that usually tempt me to eat poorly, or to overeat. Not having to wash a bunch of dishes after dinner (although I do still help my wife clean up after herself and the kids fairly regularly). Not being tempted to have thirds, or even seconds, since I don’t make more than one juice per meal. Seeing weight just fall off my body every time I step on the scale (present plateau excluded).

I just really, really love beets, y'all.
Five things I will NOT miss about the juice fast. Cleaning up the juicer after making meals. The sheer volume of water consumed over the course of a day, and having to get up and go to the bathroom every two hours at night as a result. Speaking of the bathroom – the effects that beets have on digestion (even though I absolutely love beets). Hitting a wall during workouts because my body doesn’t have as much fuel to burn as it does when I’m eating solids. All of the “experts” who think juicing is harmful, who ignore not just the dramatic weight loss but also the way my bloodwork has completely cleaned up as a result of juicing (and eating vegan).

Tell me I'm not the only one who remembers Sport Billy?
Sorry this post is arriving so late, but it’s been a Sport Billy kinda day for me. I’ve been absolutely filled with energy lately, and I wanted to get as much of it out of me as possible on this, the last Friday of my thirties. So I woke up at 6am on the dot, no snooze. Got dressed and headed out to the golf course for 18 holes, which is always a good morning. I shot a 95 and played BTBG (better than bogey golf) on the back 9. Then I went to the local juice bar and got my last few juices of this edition of the fast. Of course, I had to share my story with the people working there, one of whom remembered me from the last time I came there and she was working. She convinced me that a cashew nut blend was really a juice, although many people on one of my juice fast support boards thought it definitely was a smoothie. Whatever the case, it tasted pretty good.

The guy working there had coached people through the transition from a lengthy juice cleanse to eating solid foods again, so he gave me some tips on how to make sure I don’t throw my body into utter chaos in the next week or so. One of his tips was to eat lots of soft local fruits, like watermelon and honeydew melon. Which is a pretty lucky thing, since I happen to have some of those very fruits left over from juicing! I was going to have a fruit salad as my first meal anyway. I have no idea what my wife has planned for my birthday party tomorrow night, but I’m guessing I won’t be eating just fruit. Not that I’m going crazy with ten whole pizzas or anything, but I’m going to allow myself to have, for instance, a beer. You’ll definitely get to read about it Monday!

Rachel, the young lady who works there, likes to give high-fives, and I gave her about three because she was so pumped about my extreme success with my weight, health, bloodwork, etc. She even gave me a couple of free juices and wished me a happy birthday on the way out! All in all, a pretty neat visit, and not the last time I’m going there.

My last few juices for a little while, courtesy of SambaFRESH!


Came home a little hungry, but I had planned to give myself at least six hours’ worth of rest between meals, so I didn’t eat yet. Not only did I not eat, but I helped my wife get the kids in the car to go run errands and hit the road for a run! I went somewhere near 4 miles in total, but I don’t know for sure because my RunTracker ran out of juice somewhere in the middle of the run and didn’t record the whole thing. Oh well. My legs and knees know exactly how far it was, if the app doesn’t.

The whole ordeal took about 50 minutes to complete, which put me right at lunchtime when I came home. Drank my lunch juices: the Belo, the Samba, and half of a Turmeric/Filtered Water combo called Agua de Ouro. The first two are old faves; the third one was one of the two I got free for my general awesomeness (I guess), and is, ahem, an acquired taste. I’m a huge fan of turmeric, just with a bunch of other stuff. I know I’m going to love it in the cheese sauce I’m planning on making sometime next week!

I guarantee that I did NOT look like this mowing the lawn today.
But I wasn’t done! I had promised my wife that I would mow the lawn before I showered and sat down to relax and watch some of the PGA tournament online. I did two things I’ve never, ever done while mowing the lawn. One, I took a break from mowing our lawn to mow the neighbor’s front lawn. Before you think I’m some sort of good Samaritan, stop. She had mowed our lawn when we were in Florida, so I was just returning the favor. Besides, I was chock-full of energy, and the mower was chock-full of gas, so why not? Second, somewhere in the middle of mowing the backyard, I decided that my shirt was waaaaay too sweaty to continue to wear, so…I took it off. It has been a long, long time since I took my shirt off outside and felt anything approaching comfortable with it, but today was definitely one of those days. The air was cool enough for it to be a relief of sorts – a definite contrast to wearing a heavy, sweaty cotton shirt.

After I was done and showered, I decided to weigh myself, just for kicks. It doesn’t mean much, since it’s a post-workout, completely dehydrated weight, but…still.



It’s nice to see the scale move like that, even if I know that once I drink water and have my dinner juices I’ll be back up somewhere near my plateau weight of 196 and change. Low one-nineties, though! What a lovely little sight.


I’m looking forward to solid food again. I really am. I’m going to take the juice bar guy’s advice and eat melon all day tomorrow, until my party. Then I’m not going completely nuts at dinner. Sunday it’s fruit again for breakfast, a nice salad and zucchini noodles with a potato-based cheese sauce for lunch, followed by some sort of veggie burgers and fries for dinner. Planning out the week’s meals on a full stomach Sunday evening. Enjoy your weekend, because I know I will enjoy mine. We'll pick up with Harvey and Marilyn Diamond next week, I promise. Thanks so much for reading. See you Monday!

Thursday, August 13, 2015

All-Juiced 13th: "Die-yets" Don't Work!



Did your cabbage soup diet die yet? It's already on life support by Day 1.
Day 44 (of 45). If I look down, I can see the end credits beginning to roll. We’re that close to the end, folks. I’m starting to plan out meals and mentally craft shopping lists, as this is one of the ways I’m going to prevent Fat Me from taking over the controls for any extended period of time for a long, long while. If I know what I’m going to eat, and when I’m going to eat it, then I don’t have to fret for long over either of those things. The first Lean Habit is to eat three or four meals per day, without snacking, so I can forget about those little Ziploc bags of veggies I used to bring and munch on over the course of a day (unless, of course, those things constitute my afternoon meal). As someone who is just not accustomed to quantifying his meals in such a discrete fashion, this seems like a fairly daunting habit to master right out of the gate.

My fat cried buckets yesterday. Gotta bust it on that treadmill to lose weight!
Yesterday, I re-discovered the foolproof method to get that scale moving again. First, if you’re juicing, it is an absolute MUST to confine your consumption of fruit juice to the early morning. I mean, no later than 10am. Anything else means that your body will be burning the massive amounts of fructose you just drank for fuel, rather than your excess body fat. Second, make sure not to eat much past 6pm. Sometimes the realities of life dictate that we’re sitting down for dinner a little bit later than that, and for me that’s fine. But I know that if I’m still thinking about getting one last little taste in at 8pm, then I’m officially cheating on my eating regimen. The longer you can allow your digestive system to rest between dinner and breakfast, the more your body will use what’s already on hand for energy – namely, the stuff you want to burn anyway. Third, don’t forget to bust your hump in the gym! Or, on a day like yesterday, in the great, glorious outdoors. I’ve been dealing with a bit of tendonitis in both knees, so I chose to hit the treadmill instead of pounding the pavement outside. When the knee pain goes away, then I’ll be back outside. For now, thank goodness for that moving rubberized road! In a half an hour, I managed to get in a full 5K, where before our vacation I wasn’t quite getting 3 miles in the same amount of time. After a few sets of weights and a short sauna session, I had worked up quite a nice sweat. And sweat means weight loss.

Afterwards, I had to celebrate a non-scale victory. I’m having to get used to the fact that I wear size 32 pants. Oh, sure – they’re just a little bit tight in some places, when I first put them on. But I know that I’m in a definite transitional phase, so there’s no reason for me to buy anything bigger than that, because – as demonstrated with the shorts I bought for Disney at the end of June, which I’m now folding way over because they’re HUGE on me – I’m heading towards smaller sizes, not larger ones. I ran into Target yesterday and pulled two pairs of size 32 shorts off the sale rack without even thinking about it. After my workout, the only bottoms I had to wear were one of those shorts. Part of me wondered whether I would even be able to get them buttoned (since I had never even tried 32 shorts on before). And it was slightly difficult to do that, I’ll admit. But they got buttoned and stayed buttoned fairly comfortably after that. I even wore them to go hit balls at the driving range, without incident. Victory!

Just one of the many ways I tried to diet, that didn't work.
On to the story. Yesterday, I started to hash my way through my personal history with diets. Or, as I like to say, “die-yets.” As in, “Did it die yet?” Meaning that diets, by their very nature, have a clear expiration date. What happens after the diet has died becomes crucial. Whenever I’ve been on a diet, I’ve limited my intake of calories or types of foods until I get to a point at which I say, “Okay, I’m good,” and abandon this eating style in favor of the Standard American Diet (SAD) in massive quantities, which leads me to pack the pounds back on, plus interest. This goes on for a few months, or years, until I get sick of seeing a blubbery reflection in the mirror and find a new “die-yet.”

Basically, I go through phases with diets, depending on how long I stick to them. First, I “buy it.” Meaning that I encounter a set of principles that resonate with me at any given time, and try to change the way I’m eating to adhere to that set of principles. It could involve the purchase of a gym membership, or a book (like the Atkins book), or attendance at weekly weigh-ins (Weight Watchers), or signing up to receive a month’s supply of pills, powders and potions (like we did first with Herbalife and then with Visalus). Either way, at the beginning of this process, I’ve felt like I’m “all-in.”

Next, I “try it.” Kinda speaks for itself. I throw myself into the plan, following it to the letter, for a time. More often than not, that time has been extraordinarily short, before I “modify it,” because it’s too difficult to do the way the creators of the diet have designed it. I mean, they don’t know me! They don’t understand that my blood sugar gets low if I don’t eat a certain amount of meat and/or cheese every day! So I drink the vanilla shake, and have a turkey and cheese sandwich (c’mon, it’s wheat bread). Or two. And another one while watching “SVU.” Oh, and every good sandwich is made even better with jalapeno kettle chips. And you can’t forget about Diet Dr Pepper, can you?

Get the picture? Two weeks in, we’re ordering pizza every Friday night and I’m eating at least six large pieces of it, plus whatever my kids didn’t eat from their pizza. And stopping at the drive-thru on the way home. Wondering why I haven’t lost any weight drinking those shakes. At this point, I usually just “deny it,” convincing myself that this diet might have worked for tons of people, but it’s just not going to work for me, for some reason. I end up “fly[ing from] it,” back to the way I’m used to eating, the one that is most comfortable for my tyrannical taste buds and expanding belly, and “cry[ing about] it,” lamenting the fact that no one has ever constructed a diet that works for me, personally, to adhere to for the rest of my days.

End stage dieting, before I discovered juicing and WFPB.
I wonder if anyone else has experienced something like this cycle? I suspect a few other people have, because way back in the mid-90s, Harvey Diamond had identified the phenomenon and titled the very first chapter of his ground-breaking book Fit For Life “Diets Don’t Work.” Because they don’t! And, I would argue, they weren’t designed to “work,” not the way most people who embark on diets want them to. Not the way I wanted any of the diets I’ve ever done to work.

Annnnnnd…I managed to transition back to the next part of my diet journey in time to run out of words for this post! Yesterday’s post clocked in at about 2500 words, which is just too long. I’m confining myself to about 1200 from now on, which means I have to save the one in which I extol the virtues of Fit For Life and continue to relay my life-long struggle against my weight for tomorrow. I hope you found some light in this one, though. Peace and blessings to all!

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

All-juiced 12th: Journeys.


This is a story about a long and winding road...

Day 43 (of 45). Hi, kids! The word of the day is antepenultimate. That’s just a fancy way of saying “next to the next to the last one.” I’m in the antepenultimate day of the fast, and really, REALLY looking forward to being done. Especially since I’m still just inside the borders of OneDerLand, on the outskirts of the state of Emotional Bliss, just in sight of the road to Healthy Body Image, on my way to the county seat, Goalweightsburg. I weigh juuuuust enough to be here without eliciting many curious looks, but too much to advance much farther inland unmolested. 

This morning, the scale told me I gained weight from yesterday, which heaps enough frustration on my head to make my blood boil. I know I have to change something up in the way I’m drinking my juices – less fruit? Fewer juices? Drinking too late? – but I also know that there are only a couple of days left, so what’s the point? It’s only 9:45am, and I’ve already had several pointed conversations with my adversary over some of the food I’ve prepared for my family this morning. “Why not eat the rest of that oatmeal? You’re not losing weight anyway, and it will probably jump-start you towards weight loss these last few days…!”
Two more days, after today. Finishing strong means something a little different than it did a week ago.

The point, of course, is to finish strong. I had hoped to ride a straight line of weight loss down to a wonderful transition to eating solid food, which would have me at my Ultimate Goal Weight by Labor Day. Clearly, it’s not going to happen that way, but…you know what? I didn’t commit to 45 days with an asterisk (unless I stop losing weight a few days short of that, or it’s hard, or I don’t want to anymore). I committed to 45 days. That’s forty-five days. Not forty-three, or even forty-four. Regardless of what that stupid scale says from now on, I’m in it to cross the line with my arms held high in triumph.

This looks a lot like my mom's "grapefruit diet" from back in the day.
So that settles at least one little mental debate. One more thing that has been going through my mind lately has to do with how I’ve gotten here, all the way from the primeval past. I’ve been thinking about my history with dieting quite a bit lately. My earliest memories of any sort of diets come from my parents and the way they dealt with the excess weight that crept on their respective frames over the course of their early to mid thirties. One of them would bring home a typed sheet of instructions on everything they should eat on a three-day diet, guaranteed to lose them at least ten pounds. Or my mom would eat grapefruit halves sprinkled with sugar and coffee for breakfast. Or my dad would mix up a massive ceramic bowl of salad with iceberg lettuce, tomatoes, onions, and slathered with thousand island dressing. I’m not sure if any of it ever worked for them, because my mom steadily gained weight, though little by little. My dad always carried a few extra pounds for someone his size, although he was nowhere near the heaviest or least athletic person I knew. In fact, he worked extremely hard to keep our yards clean and mowed, and even cultivated a pretty righteous garden while I was in high school. The one thing I inherited from him, though, was his ability to sweat buckets whenever he did even the most basic calisthenic activity.

Personally, I never really cared all that much about how much I weighed until the summer before 10th grade. I was coming off of a knee injury that took me out of the football and basketball seasons my freshman year, and I was determined to make a comeback. I remember starting my own impromptu summer training program in June at about 250 pounds. My mom would drop me off at school on her way to work, and I would go to the athletic center with an old-school red, white, and blue ABA basketball, a couple of sandwiches and some pieces of fruit, and all the water I could drink from the fountains inside. I took myself through conditioning and shooting drills until signs of life began to trickle in. Sometimes those signs of life involved my friend and uber athlete Preston, who was also one of the few rising 10th graders old enough to drive. Effortlessly, he was already better than I was at my absolute best, and he actually ended up playing D-III college football. Even so, working out with him pushed me to do things better, with more intensity, and longer. Well, as long as I could. I soaked through several outfits a day with my own sweat, and managed to work myself into the shape of my life, to that point.

Even then, at my strongest and arguably fittest, my diet was still awful. Between basketball and lifting Preston and I would head to the Burger King nearby and I would get what ended up being called “the usual” – a bacon double cheeseburger, large fries, and a Dr. Pepper. Sometimes I would vary it up with an order of chicken tenders. At home, it wasn’t much better. My dad’s signature meals were spaghetti with meat sauce and homemade macaroni with cheese. This latter dish would be made either with about two pounds of cheddar cheese, or half a container of Velveeta. I ate either one with equal gusto. My mom made some pretty amazing dishes in her own right, when she cooked. But we also spent quite a few Friday evenings dining on take-out foods: Chinese, pizza (toggled among Pizza Hut, Domino’s and Little Caesar’s), and Ukrop’s amazing fried chicken and potato wedge family dinner packages. [Everyone from Richmond knows exactly what I’m talking about.] What was in it, you ask? A 10-piece bucket of chicken and about a pound and a half of wedges. Southern-style potato salad and cole slaw, plus about a dozen soft, sweet rolls. Most of it a distant memory by the end of dinner time. Most of it by my own Herculean efforts to eat my parents out of both house AND home.

That little white glove was the source of many a meal in my youth.
Since both of my parents worked, by the time we could cook for ourselves, we usually did. Simple stuff, like boiling noodles for pasta, at times. Eggs and pancakes for breakfast, but usually just three big bowls of cereal. Or, even worse, I’d make anywhere from four to six sandwiches involving toast, mayo, sliced processed American “cheese food,” and some sort of deli meats. And you can’t forget to add chips in there, either. Not even the good chips, because kettle chips weren’t even around until about 1992. Although we did get Pringles from time to time (back when you could sustain some serious injuries from the top of a Pringles can). Nope – we usually ate the greasiest, cheapest chips available: either Lay’s, or some local knock-off of Lay’s that was a few cents cheaper at the local grocery store. The first thing I learned to make from start to finish was Hamburger Helper, and believe me – I made more than one pan of Cheeseburger Macaroni Hamburger Helper, that is intended for a family of six to share, and finished it all off myself in a night.

A broad approximation of the diet roller-coaster that began when I was about 15.
Flash-forward to New Year’s Eve, 1990. I’m fifteen years old and supremely unhappy with everything life represented, which isn’t too far off for the vast majority of fifteen-year-olds, but since I had only been 15 once, there was no way for me to know that. Anyway, I tended not to express my thoughts out loud but to write them down in some sort of journal. Part of my resolutions that year, for the first time, was a number. A goal weight. One that I would try with all of the strength I could muster to achieve by the end of that year. I have no idea how much I weighed at that point, but the number I wrote down, 175, seemed far enough away to make my shoulders slump even further than they already were in my angsty mid-teens. The resolve of the moment was stronger than it was at any moment after that, and I never made it to my goal weight that next year. However, my trip on the rollercoast-uhhhhh. Of weight…[say what?] began with that simple numeric declaration.

I even tried hypnosis, and I think some of it might have worked! My sister had these tapes that played subliminal messages for you to listen while you meditated or slept. On one side was a man’s soothing voice, guiding you through the process of self-hypnosis. On the other side, new age-y instrumental music accompanied by the sound of ocean waves crashing gently against the shore. I think this might have been where the subliminal messages were buried, but of course I can’t be sure. I “borrowed” them one day and listened to them for a few weeks. To this day, over 20 years later, I can still remember the man’s voice telling me that sodas and white bread “do not look good, they do not smell good, and they do not taste good.” I haven’t been a fan of either white bread or full-sugar sodas since those sessions, although the rest of it obviously took some serious work.

I ate a TON of these packages in the mid-'90s. What college kid can argue with 6 for $1?
I hovered between about 220 and 240 through my freshman year of college, and then I made a pivotal decision to spend my summer out west, selling books door to door for the Southwestern Company. I didn’t make any money, but I also didn’t pretend like I was selling a bunch of books and fill out fraudulent orders (like one of our contingent), either. The 12-plus hour days of walking the hills of the suburbs of Portland, Oregon and eating a light breakfast, then two pieces of fruit and two sandwiches for lunch, then ramen noodles for dinner – wash, rinse, repeat – resulted in some pretty dramatic weight loss. At my yearly physical I weighed in at 215 lbs., which was lower than I had been since about 8th grade. I remember getting a ton of compliments on my appearance during those first few weeks back at school, and feeling increasingly confident that I could make my hazardously low calorie intake last.

Alas, it didn’t. College life got in the way, and before I knew it, I had ballooned up to 270 which, as you recall from the previous paragraph, represented my heaviest weight through high school, plus a few pounds’ worth of interest. Fortunately for me, I lived in a house with two guys who were in pretty good shape, and one who was in super-insane shape (he was a cheerleader and a fitness fanatic besides that), so I found that it was easier to rein it back in by going to the gym with those guys. I managed to get down to about 250 and add muscle by the end of the year.

Meanwhile, the rest of my life was going off the rails. I had earned an extremely prestigious full-ride academic scholarship, based on my performance in high school, but I lost it due to several factors. First, I picked the wrong major! Kids – do yourselves a favor when you go to college. Pick the right major. In this economy, pick one that will guarantee you a career when you graduate. I picked chemical engineering, and the shoulders of every history and English teacher I ever had slumped visibly when they found out. My AP English teacher, one of the best I’ve ever had to this day, said, “What a waste of a great brain…” I had my reasons, though. One of my distant relatives was an engineer, and he was making a lot of money. I cared about making money, but I also knew that talented people doing amazing things with their actual talents also made a lot of money. I got some poor counsel that I couldn’t refuse, as it turns out. I had even attended a summer science program for minorities at MIT before my senior year of high school – and received my highest accolades for my writing skills. Keep your silly signs to yourself, I said. Full speed ahead…into the abyss.

Probably should have spent more time here, in hindsight...
Second, I wasn’t ready for the social scene. I had really missed out on having much of a social life in high school, so when it came down to making the choice between hanging out with the friendly and extraordinarily attractive coeds who lived a few floors up or studying for classes I didn’t particularly like in the first place, there really was no choice at all. As a result, I never learned how to balance my social life and my academic life. To my dismay upon reflection, in the two-plus years I lasted there, the time I spent in the beautiful, information-rich libraries of this, one of the oldest universities in the country, could be measured in minutes, not hours. But the time I spent in fraternity houses, in various states of consciousness, and the time I spent not in class because I was recovering from those late nights in fraternity houses? That’s where I received my true education, the first time around.

...and less time here!
Third, the arrogance of youth got in the way when I could have taken a life boat out of my situation instead of going down with the ship, so to speak. At the end of my first semester in this prestigious scholarship program, my grades were just below the cutoff line to avoid any sort of academic sanctions that could include losing my scholarship. In a private meeting to discuss my progress, the director of the program asked me if I wanted to transfer out of the engineering program and into another major that might have suited me better. I don’t know what the process for transferring out of the E-School is at my abortive alma mater today, but back then the director was implying that he was willing to pull some serious strings to get them to make a rare exception to save my academic and career bacon. I thanked him for the offer but was convinced that I could do better as an engineer, which was never, ever true.

This book changed my life forever.
So the summer before my third year in college, I knew that unless I changed many things radically, I was headed towards a cataclysmic failure. That’s when I opened a drawer at my mom’s apartment (the one she rented after my parents had separated and, ultimately, divorced between my junior and senior years in high school) and found a book that would play a huge part in the way I viewed eating for the rest of my life.

But, as I have far exceeded my word count…that’s a story for tomorrow’s post!