I did a little dance with the binge monkey on Sunday and let him step on my toes, not in a grand way, but enough to get so far beyond my daily point allocation that I gave up counting. My son and his family had come for a barbecue and, at some point when I was already pretty close to points' poverty, I decided to free myself from the distraction of accountability. This decision was both a cause and an effect of my wandering into the land of excess. It started with my nibbling 2 or 3 almonds and the same amount of corn chips. That was my first non-points-counting transgression. For lunch we had burgers (a vegetarian one for me) and cole slaw with watermelon for dessert. After Ben and his family left, I felt deprived because of the absence of a more desserty dessert. I have half cup servings of gelato in my freezer which I can usually indulge in and still stay "on program." The vanilla, which tastes like coconut, has 140 calories and the chocolate hazelnut, which tastes amazing, has 200. I grabbed one of the chocolate hazelnuts even though I knew that I couldn't eat it and still have a satisfying dinner without going over my daily points. The obvious solution was to give up on counting points for the day. This gave me a free pass to cruise up and down consumption alley. In the course of the evening I ate both a vanilla and a chocolate hazelnut gelatto, as well as a large bowl of cereal and more. Earlier, when I gave myself leeway with the almonds and chips, I had convinced myself that I could eat reasonably without having to count each and every point. Once again, I proved that I need the structure that points provide. And once again I was reminded that eating is not the appropriate response to fatigue and that the family room couch is the site of much self delusion.
But . . . I've got a huge whip that sent the monkey racing back to the jungle the next day. My elliptical cross trainer is the whip. It has turned me into a raging exercise machine. Every day, except for Sunday, I have been putting in a minimum of one hour on the elliptical. My average heartbeat for a session is 135 beats per minute (bpm). This includes the 3 minute warm up and 3 minute cool down parts of the session. Once I'm in the groove, I have to keep myself from getting into dangerous cardiac territory. I try to keep a 134 to 136 bpm range; I get scared when the read-out is 141 bpm.
The Weight Watcher scale this evening validated my hard work. And ignored my Sunday missteps. Well maybe not entirely. Maybe I'd have gotten rid of a few more ounces had I stayed on track Sunday. Even so, I'm delighted to report that I've dumped another 2 lbs. The reading on the WW scale was 197.2 lbs., a total of 10.4 lbs. down the drain and out of my life since I rejoined WW on May 1. I am within 3 lbs. of reaching a significant milestone, the weight that I was when I began my successful journey to my goal weight on 10/22/01. As to my home scale, this morning it read 194. This is 2 lbs. above the reading of my home scale when I began that successful journey. I am 10.4 lbs. into another (and final) successful journey to my goal weight. And this time, I will successfully maintain that goal weight once I reach it.
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2 comments:
Congratulations, I am proud of you. You are back under 200, and you are getting close to being under 190.
I cannot tell you how depressing it was for me when you gained so much weight. even though we do not know each other personally, you are one of the first people who ever encouraged me when I started blogging. Seeing your difficulties was painful to me. I pray for you, and I hope to see you continue succeeding. It makes me feel good to know you are getting it done!
Thank you so much Spider. Your comment just about brought tears to my eyes. I hadn't realized the impact that my re-re-regaining the weight had on you. It really means a lot to me to know that you care. I have also felt a connection to you and still remember when you were above 300 lbs. and decided to suspend your blog until you got below that point. Much best wishes for your success in meeting and beating the challenge with which we both deal.
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