Friday, April 13, 2007

An Exercise In Irony

Stolen from Here



But Wait, There's More!
Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

I had to post it SOMEWHERE

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Is this thing ON?

Dudes - anybody weighing in this week?

Lemme know in the comments, or e-me.

We're still 3 months or so away from the finish line - let's DO this thing.

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Resource

I'm a resistor.

Traditionally, I've resisted Conventional Wisdom in lotsa regards, but especially when it comes to weight management. I once attended a conference and shared a room with a doctor. I asked him how to lose weight, hoping for some magic or pills or ancient Chinese secrets. His reply: "Sew your lips shut." Not what I wanted to hear.

Truth is, diet and exercise really do work. And on the diet part, a dose of reality goes a long way, especially in guaging portion sizes.

Here's a resource that might help with the food diary from the last post: Fitday is a free online fitness tracking service. I'm sure it does much more than I'd ever want it to, but the feature that has me excited is the food journal. You tell it what you ate, and it tallies the nutrition info from a vast database. It shows a pie chart (not sure if that's clever or mean) showing the proportion of fats, carbs, protiens, etc. Something not listed? You can add it. The cool part is that it remembers what you've entered, so your regular foods become available in a drop-down menu. Pretty neat, huh?

I've just signed up, and I'm thinking if I stick with it, I could start to see where my trouble spots are.

Monday, April 2, 2007

More Helpful Hints

This is an excerpt from an article on MSN today. I'm sure this practice would shed a lot of light on my reality... and thus have not done it. Up until now. Running out to get a little green book today...

Step 3: Track Yourself

In those first meetings, Jan and David also received what was to become their most powerful tool for losing weight—a daily diary, dubbed "the little green book." Their assignment was to carry it with them everywhere, to write down everything they ate and drank, then tally up the calories at the end of each day. And, whenever they made a conscious effort to exercise, they were instructed to write down what they did and for how long, estimating how many calories they'd burned. It all went into the little green books.

For David, a self-confessed "junk-food junkie," the results were a sobering shot of truth serum. "I was drinking almost 1,000 calories a day just in sodas." Although he had calculated that about 3,000 calories daily would keep his current weight steady, the diary revealed he was actually taking in about 3,900 calories—while getting virtually no regular exercise. In the weight-management world, that amounts to a perfect storm for gaining.

"For me, it was a kind of ignorance, really," admits Jan. "Not knowing what a portion size was, not thinking about how calories added up." She remembers, "I'd love to get a bagel and cream cheese in the morning. I had no idea it was over 400 calories."

With program director Gold's guidance, the group learned to measure out everything they ate until they were able to recognize sensible portions. "In this culture, people tend to eat two to three times a normal portion without blinking an eye," says Gold. "I think working hard to be as accurate as possible really worked in Jan and David's favor."

The simple act of writing down behavior, in fact, is a key component of successful weight control. "Having the evidence right in front of you makes you accountable for your behavior," explains Harvey-Berino, "and it can point you to what you need to change." Besides his soda revelations, David's journal documented that he often skipped breakfast, setting himself up for uncontrollable hunger later in the morning. "I'd come into the office and grab a doughnut and a soda," he recalls (a little wistfully). Now, after acting on suggestions from Gold, David starts most days with a bowl of whole-grain oat cereal. He has also switched to diet sodas—not exactly breaking the soda-drinking habit, but saving him nearly 1,000 calories a day. "Calories are calories without judgment," explains Gold, "so we encourage any change that decreases caloric intake."