Losing Weight When You’re Old…

I’ve lost a significant amount of weight over the course of the last couple of years. In August of 2020, I weighed 210 pounds. I’m 5’7″, so I was in the obese category. I’ve been short, fat and ugly for as long as I can remember, so I decided to do something about the one part of that trio that I can actually do something about.

I joined Noom and I started taking what I eat seriously. I’ve dieted before, and I’ve lost weight before, but Noom helped me change the way I think about eating. Although I still am able to eat things that aren’t necessarily good for me, I don’t eat nearly as much as I used to at one sitting, and I don’t crave crap that will put more weight back on.

To be honest, getting COVID helped. I started Noom in August, 2020, and the Rona got me in October, 2020. I completely lost my senses of taste and smell for months, and it’s much easier to eat healthy when you can’t taste or smell anything. By the time my lost senses started to make their pathetic return, I had made my eating practices pretty habitual. There were (and still are) lots of salads if we go out to eat. Lean proteins, vegetables, and rice are pretty common in the dishes I prepare at home. Even the wife tries to cook meals that are healthier, and the one kid we have left at home is usually fairly on board with the healthy eating.

My lowest weight at the end of my Noom program, which hit in April of 2021, was 145 pounds. I hadn’t weighed 145 pounds since grade school (and I’m talking like probably pre-sixth grade). I was around 170 pounds when I entered my freshman year of high school. What the hell was wrong with me?

A short aside on Noom: Noom worked for me, but I took it seriously and was 100% committed to following the program. If I had half-assed it or given up during one of the many plateaus I experienced during my weight loss journey, I know it wouldn’t have worked. Did I ever fall off the wagon and cheat? Hell yeah, I did! But the next day, I was right back on the program and I didn’t beat myself up because of a momentary weakness. I would never recommend any weight loss program to anyone who isn’t committed to making it happen. And diets are stupid, because they create temporary results that stop when the diet ends. You really have to change the way you eat on a daily basis… forever, and that’s not nearly as horrible as it sounds.

So, since my all-time low weight as an adult, I started doing some regular weight lifting. Nothing serious, but I’m consistent. I’m not trying to be a muscle head and I don’t have megarexia. I am by no stretch of the imagination “buff.” I have a little more muscle than I have had through the rest of adulthood. My weight bounces around in the mid-150s, and I’m pretty okay with that. I feel like I’m probably the healthiest I have been since, again, grade school.

Here’s the thing about losing a relatively large amount of weight, much of which you have carried around for most of your adult life: your skin stretches. The large majority of my weight was carried in my stomach. I felt like I looked like a pregnant dude for as long as I can remember. I’m guessing that, if I had considered trying to be less gross earlier in life, my skin would have firmed back up. Young skin is more supple. Seeing as how I was in my 50s before I decided to take my fitness semi-seriously, my skin isn’t very supple or elastic. It’s not tightening; my skin just hangs there. And there’s a lot of skin. And, yes, my hanging-skin cummerbund bothers me!

It’s weird; I wanted to lose weight to be healthier, but I also to be more confident in my body. I’ve always had horrible body image, and that has affected so many things in my life in a negative way. Confidence is the key to success. Lack of confidence will lead to some pretty crappy jobs and a career path that is less than financially rewarding. I had hoped to turn that around somewhat.

Now, although a lot of the fat is gone, I have all the hanging skin in it’s place. I still have to avoid looking at myself in the mirror after a shower until I get a shirt on. If I happen to need to pick something up off the floor and I happen to have my shirt off at the same time, I need to avoid looking in the general region of my mid-section. If I forget about “not looking” and accidentally catch a glance, it’s like The Blob is trying to detach itself from my stomach.

It’s horrifying.

So, the huge gain in self-confidence and positive body image that I was hoping for weren’t found on this journey. But I can tell you this: the small boost in my opinion of my appearance (with shirt on, of course) feels so much better to me than any food on this planet will ever taste. So instead of ordering a Big Mouth Burger and fries at Chili’s, I’ll opt for something off of the Guiltless Grill Menu. Instead of close to 2000 calories for a meal, I’d be looking at closer to 500 calories, and it fills me up without being stuffed.

And as much as the loose-skin blob on my belly bothers me, it’s still better than having that horror-movie abomination filled with fat…

Losing Weight Sucks…

Have you ever tried to lose weight?  I have, but  I love the taste of good food too much and I despise anything that makes me too sweaty.  Needless to say, the loss of weight has never been easy for me.  Why is it that all of the goals that have a positive impact on your life are so stinking hard and take so much stinking work?  Every… single… one.  Being a good parent is hard and takes work.  Relationships are hard and take work.  Making money is hard and takes work.  Just getting through an average day isn’t exactly a walk in the park.  And being healthy is absolutely sucktastic.

Theodore Roosevelt is quoted as saying, “Nothing in the world is worth having or worth doing unless it means effort, pain, difficulty… I have never in my life envied a human being who led an easy life. I have envied a great many people who led difficult lives and led them well.”  Why exactly in the hell do we quote this man?   If your life is full of effort, pain, and difficulty, you are to be envied.  What is the purpose of living a life like this?  What joy can be found in a life like this?  I guess if the effort, pain, and difficulty result in some sort of reward, there is a silver lining.  Silver is overrated.  I want my lining to be gold.

Life would be so much easier if you could just eat whatever you wanted with no negative consequences.  Why isn’t life like that?  Why does everything that tastes good have to be bad for you?  Why can’t turnips cause cancer and aged cheddar cheese lower your cholesterol?

There is going to be some healthy jerk who reads this and thinks something like, “Oh, nothing tastes better than fresh arugula sautéed in olive oil with organic pine nuts and a touch of sea salt!”  This person has never tasted bacon.

There are those who say that our bodies crave “junk” (i.e. good food) because that is what they are used to eating.  If we would just change our habits, we would come to love the taste of fresh greens and other low fat crap which are really what our bodies crave… our bodies just don’t know it.

… uh, sure…

Then why did almost all native people risk their lives in the pursuit of wild game?  I’m sure there were all kinds of leafy greens that could have been gathered with minimal risk of death.  They wanted meat!  They wanted roasted meat and charred meat and raw meat.  They wanted to bite into the still beating heart of their latest kill!

“The fat of the land” refers to the best part of something… because fat rules!  I don’t remember reading anywhere in the Bible, “And take your father and your households, and come unto me: and I will give you the good of the land of Egypt, and ye shall eat the brussel sprouts of the field.”

And then there is the whole “eating in moderation” train of thought.  Eating in moderation is all good and well if you don’t mind walking around hungry all of the flipping time.  I hate being hungry.

Of course the whole secret to losing weight is taking in less calories than you burn.  Exercise helps burn calories.  So, in theory, if I could just exercise all of the time, I could probably eat whatever I wanted.  But I can’t exercise all of the time.  First of all, exercise sucks.  It’s hard and it makes me tired.  Second of all, even if exercise didn’t suck, there is no way I can do it all of the time.  Why?  Because I have to work a job to make the money to buy the food to put in my mouth to intake the calories that need to be burned by the exercise that lay in the house that Jack built… or something like that.

Needless to say, I’m trying to lose weight.  At a mere 5’7″, 200 pounds puts me on the verge of obesity.  Once I can actually call myself obese, I am left with no choice but to pitch a tent in the sporting goods department and live out the rest of my life at the local Walmart.  I don’t want to live in Walmart, thus the weight loss regimen.  I’ve been “dieting” for almost a month.  The pounds are very, very, very slowly coming off.  I track my caloric intake, I track the calories burned through exercise, and I constantly crave a bacon double cheeseburger.  Losing weight sucks…   and I wrote “pitch a tent”… heh heh heh…