The Art of Losing & Gaining Control of Your Life

It’s so funny when you have an idea for a post, but then don’t know how to weave it in to your blog and then fate helps you out…whether you like it or not.

You see, I had this idea for a post about how the app Timehop can inspire someone to appreciate how far they’ve come along in life. I’m not just talking about fitness either. I look back at some of my old posts and think “wow, I’ve come a long way in four years…” (Grad school, marriage and a big-boy job will do that to you I guess.) But when I looked at my photo from a year ago, I had a complete inverse reaction.

photo 1A year ago today, I weighed 225.8 pounds. Essentially my lowest weight. At that weight, I felt fit. I felt comfortable. I felt normal. When I got on the scale this morning, I weighed 261.8 pounds. I have roller coastered my way up 36 pounds. Now granted, I haven’t been this heavy for the whole time. In fact, I was down to the 233 in January. But with vacations, an inordinate amount of stress this summer, and high level of complacency, I am letting the rope slip out of my hands as I am watching it all fall apart in front of me. I feel sick about that number. For the first time in three years, I am out of the “century club”. I will have to lose at least 5 pounds until I can say I’ve lost 100 pounds again.

After I got off the scale, I went through the stages of grief, but I didn’t pout and sulk for too long. You see all summer I’ve been out of whack. My eating has been the best it has ever been (I can make an epic low point salad) and then it was Obese Nathan bad (thirds on desserts, anyone?) My exercising was great and then lethargically terrible. Frankly, this past year has been a season of feeling just lost emotionally, physically and spiritually for me and I hate it. I somehow lost my focal point amid my new job and everything else. And maybe that’s been it, I have just been too busy to lose weight. When I say that, I say it knowing good and well it’s because I’ve replaced that time with eating out and binge watching TV, not counting points and going on long runs.

Whew, now that I have that inner-dialogue therapy session all written out…

photo 3After I got off the scale, I took freakin’ control of my life. I had a sensible breakfast, went to church, and came home and organized my life. For the first time ever on my own, I made a meal plan for the week. I didn’t give myself any wiggle room. I know I have at least two variables in my week, but that is it. Then, I went to the grocery store and bought everything I needed for the week. Again, nothing extra. I always get caught up by extraneous purchases because usually they are carbtastic so I binge the crap out of them. So since I can recognize my triggers, I need to set myself up for success by just abstaining from chips and crackers and other stuff like that. Anyway, I got home and cleaned up the kitchen so I can’t use the ol’ “oh no, there are three dishes in the sink. The kitchen is too messy to cook. Time to order a pizza!” excuse. Then I just cleaned around the house so I would have control of my spaces, instead of feeling helpless in my own house (I’m going to do the same thing with my office tomorrow.) Even those simple actions reduced my stress enough for me to feel calm and relaxed.

photo 5So here’s the deal. I’m going to try something a little different this week. A loooooong time ago, I used to track and post my points on the blog everyday. While that was awesome and helpful, it definitely got stressful and tedious for me because sometimes a screen is the last thing you want to see when you get home. So here’s what I’m going to do. I’m going to take a screenshot of my Weight Watchers app every day this week with my total points and post it to my Instagram account. It will help me actually track and it will hold me accountable to you, dear reader. Here is my tracker for today. For those of you tracking at home, I have modified my points down to 43 daily points because 55 is too many. When I made the transition from old to new, I went from 28 daily points to 54 so trust me, I’m not gaining because I’m not eating enough…

I kind of feel like I’m starting over again with this, but I really am. At the very beginning, I told myself that if I could pass the 6-week mark of tracking, then this would stick. Consider this week one. See ya on Instagram.

 

 

 

8 thoughts on “The Art of Losing & Gaining Control of Your Life

  1. I did the cleaning of my kitchen yesterday too and am making a point of drying and putting dishes away instead of just leaving them in the drying rack. It’s amazing how having a clean and organized kitchen changes your mentality.

  2. Are you inside my head? For reals. I feel like I could have typed out everything you just said.

    Life got too busy, I let things slide, didn’t open a tracker, thought that when I was up 5 pounds, that it was not big deal and I’d lose it in no time. Then the 5 became 10…then 15….then 20.

    Here’s to us being trackstars, getting our mojo back, and realizing that a healthy way of living is SO MUCH BETTER!

    We’ve got this, buddy!

  3. Congrats on taking control! I know that for me, I woke up one day and had lost the 30lbs I had gained and have been fighting for the last year to try and take it off finding very little luck. Hopefully your campaign will inspire me too!

  4. Way to get back on track! Your story = the last 10 years of my life!

    I LOVED what you said about spaces- I never even thought about my space until this round of WW- it has dramatically improved my healthy living efforts.

    Good luck with the next six weeks- you can make it habit again! 🙂

  5. This post hits home on so many levels. Been there, done that. Weight loss, no matter how much you have lost and/or need to lose, is an ongoing battle. Many moons ago, I felt like I would lose weight and that would be it. WRONG. Losing weight and keeping it off, will be a lifelong battle. I love food too much to know that I will never be able to just eat anything and everything as I please. I have to find a balance of enjoying the foods that I love so that I am not deprived and eat mindfully.I have lost and gained back the same pounds – and then some – over and over again throughout my 42 years. I *know* you can do this, my friend. You have been crazy busy and sometimes I think we need to change things up. We get too complacent with what we’re doing and it just doesn’t work for us. However you need to be accountable to yourself is what you need to do. Tracking, photos, whatever. Do what works for you. I will be here cheering you on!!!

  6. It’s so damn hard to track every day, but as you note, the alternative is gradual weight gain. Good for you for finding a way to reinforce the tracking habit. I’m not quite brave enough to share my points with the world but I do need to make sure to keep up with tracking as it’s the ONLY thing that works for me.

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